A mini-project curriculum designed to empower young students to become local community changemakers. It guides them through brainstorming, planning, and executing simple, impactful action projects for local libraries, animal shelters, or parks.
An introductory history lesson on the key events leading to the American Revolutionary War, designed specifically for third-grade English Language Learners (ELL). It includes a visual vocabulary cloze worksheet, interactive matching cards for learning events, and a comprehensive facilitation guide for teachers.
A comprehensive lesson exploring Mexico's physical geography, diverse climates, and distinct economic regions. Students engage in structured side-by-side reading, vocabulary analysis, and DOK2/DOK3 text-dependent analysis.
An investigation of Senegal's national soccer program (Lions of Teranga), French-African economic ties, and community soccer academies.
An exploration of Norway's soccer renaissance, wealth from North Sea oil, and its high-income equality model in professional sports.
An investigation of Algerian soccer (Fennec Foxes), the geopolitics of French-Algerian dual citizenship, and soccer as a historic symbol of anti-colonial resistance.
An exploration of Jordan's rise in Asian soccer, regional development, and the geopolitical role of sports infrastructure in the Middle East.
An investigation of France's elite soccer academies, the economics of Ligue 1, and the geopolitics of suburban Paris soccer.
An exploration of soccer, national identity, and post-war reconstruction in Iraq, analyzing the Lions of Mesopotamia national soccer program.
A collaborative civics lesson where 4th-grade students explore the core pillars of good citizenship and create individual, interlocking puzzle-piece templates to assemble into a colorful community mural quilt.
A complete history webquest lesson bundle designed for late elementary students to independently research diverse historical figures. Students act as research detectives to discover the lives, struggles, and lasting legacies of inventors, activists, and leaders.
An inquiry-based social studies lesson where students explore primary and secondary sources by curating a classroom time capsule. Students analyze modern artifacts, select items representing their epoch, and write persuasive letters to future historians.
A game-based, ELL-friendly lesson exploring colonial American life including settlements, schools, and community work. Includes a visual vocabulary slide deck, a printable board game, and a scaffolded graphic exit ticket.
A highly accessible watch guide lesson linking The Wizard of Oz (1939) to Gilded Age politics (Populism, the Gold Standard, and industrial workers), designed specifically for middle school students reading at a 1st-grade level using visual matching, word banks, and literal multiple-choice questions.
An engaging, multicultural lesson introducing students to four rich global celebrations: Diwali, Día de los Muertos, Lunar New Year, and Eid al-Fitr. The lesson explores cultural significance, seasonal customs, symbols, and values, supporting global citizenship and empathy.
A middle school history lesson exploring Martin Luther's role in the Protestant Reformation, focusing on key biographical events, critical vocabulary, and cause-and-effect historical analysis.
An interactive, historically grounded lesson exploring the significance of Treaty Day, focusing on central ideas, summarizing, and historical vocabulary. Students analyze the nature of treaties as sacred, ongoing agreements and practice identifying key themes and context clues.
A lesson focused on the division of families during the American Civil War. It includes a simplified reading passage detailing the true story of the Campbell brothers and a structured RACE (Restate, Answer, Cite, Explain) response graphic organizer with student writing lines.
Students investigate the physical backbone of classical empires, comparing Greek structural harmony with Roman concrete engineering and infrastructural feats like aqueducts and roadways.
Students trace the economic veins of the Mediterranean, mapping how Greek ceramic trade and Roman maritime highways linked continents, exchanged technologies, and forged a globalized ancient marketplace.
Students explore classical philosophical inquiries through Socrates, Plato, Aristotle, and Roman legal codes, examining how these intellectual frameworks defined ethics, civic duty, and the pursuit of truth.
Students investigate the birth of democracy in Athens and the development of the republican system in Rome, comparing citizen participation, power structures, and modern democratic connections.
A comprehensive lesson focusing on the transition of European society from the rigid feudal systems of the Middle Ages to the cultural, scientific, and religious revolutions of the Renaissance and Reformation.
A guided lesson on latitude and longitude using structured, color-coded pathways. Students master horizontal latitude (red) and vertical longitude (blue) through step-by-step visual scaffolds and targeted practice.
An immigration end-of-unit mini-project lesson for fourth graders, built around a creative Choice Board. Students explore push and pull factors, challenges and opportunities, and the skills or inventions immigrants brought to their new homes.
A middle school civics lesson exploring the historical struggle for voting rights in the United States and the modern importance of active civic participation. Students will analyze how voting shapes communities and why every vote is vital to a democracy.
An engaging academic trivia game based on "Are You Smarter Than a 5th Grader?". Includes five comprehensive rounds of questions across five grade levels, complete with an interactive presentation, a print-ready student booklet, and a teacher's answer guide.
Days 7-8 of the project. Students write a persuasive proposal advocating for their settlement design and present their final 3D or 2D blueprints to the town council during a project expo.
Days 5-6 of the project. Students explore Massachusetts weather patterns, analyze risks like blizzards or storms, and design functional systems (wells, irrigation, structural reinforcement) utilizing forces and simple machines.
Days 3-4 of the project. Students design their settlement layout, calculating area and perimeter of buildings and fields on a grid map, and partitioning a Three Sisters garden into fractional sections.
Days 1-2 of the project. Students study Massachusetts geography, climate, and how the Wampanoag people adapted to local ecosystems, focusing on shelter construction (forces and motion) and seasonal migrations.
An immersive geography and social studies project where fourth-grade students research a state, region, landmark, or historical era and showcase their learning through a double-sided creative postcard, complete with an expedition planning sheet and a complete grading rubric.
A differentiated history lesson analyzing three major Gilded Age political cartoons. It features student-facing worksheets with low-readability texts, visual analysis grids, a synthesis assessment, and a comprehensive teacher guide with full solutions.
An engaging introductory lesson on American Revolution espionage, focusing on the Culper Spy Ring, secret codes, and stealthy tactics used by George Washington's network. Students learn historical analysis through code-breaking, word puzzles, and critical thinking challenges.
An immersive fourth-grade social studies research project focusing on the Southeast region of the United States. Students explore geography, history, and culture through guided state-by-state profiles and a creative choice board.
A rewritten direct-instruction lesson for CKLA Grade 4 Unit 4 Lesson 1 (Eureka! Student Inventor). It structures the introduction of inventions, innovations, and the patent process through teacher-led visual modeling and individual student responses, removing the default group activities.
A comprehensive instructional toolkit for analyzing editorial and political cartoons. Features a versatile double-page graphic organizer and a structured assessment rubric adaptable to any historical era.