Engage in a simulation of monetary policy tools—reserve requirements, discount rates, and open market operations—to stabilize a fluctuating economy.
A comprehensive history sequence focusing on 20th-century communist revolutions in Russia and China. This sequence uses Crash Course videos, detailed worksheets, complete answer keys, and accessible vocabulary flashcards to explore the collapse of old empires and the rise of communist states.
A vibrant 40-minute lesson for second graders focusing on the meaningful symbols and celebrations of Juneteenth. Through interactive slides, a visual worksheet, and structured teaching prompts, students learn about the Juneteenth flag, red food traditions, uplift music, and festive community parades.
Une séquence complète d'activités clés en main d'Éducation Morale et Civique (EMC) pour la classe de Terminale, conforme au nouveau programme 2026. Elle se concentre sur les défis du numérique : intelligence artificielle, désinformation, espace public numérique et souveraineté technologique.
An introductory lesson exploring the immigrant experience and systemic barriers through Suli Breaks' spoken word poem 'Fences'. Students engage in a structured movement and discourse activity to analyze literal and metaphorical barriers, connecting themes to their own lived experiences.
An inquiry-driven social studies sequence investigating Ancient Greece and Rome across four core pillars: government, philosophy, trade, and engineering. Students engage with primary sources, architectural achievements, and ethical dilemmas to construct arguments about classical legacies.
A highly flexible, scaffolded final project workspace for 9th and 10th-grade history classes, allowing students to demonstrate their historical knowledge through creative channels. It includes structured pathways, a comprehensive graphic organizer pitch sheet, a grading rubric, reflection prompts, and introductory slides.
A three-day social psychology sequence exploring conformity, groupthink, and social influence. Students analyze foundational experiments, compare compliance versus internalization, and dissect modern digital peer pressure and media dynamics.
A high-impact bell ringer and analysis activity where 10th-grade history students analyze primary source excerpts from the French Constitutions of 1791, 1793, and 1795, sorting them into the core revolutionary ideals of Liberty, Equality, and Fraternity.
A comprehensive history lesson for 10th-grade students examining the global and modern legacies of the French Revolution. It features interactive slides and a highly organized graphic organizer that covers the end of the revolution, global democratic movements, and modern government statistics.