Explores how consumers make decisions to maximize utility and how markets respond to price changes through the lens of elasticity.
A cohesive morning routine framework designed to engage students immediately upon entering the classroom. This lesson integrates daily administrative templates with historical quote analysis, map literacy, and current events discussions to prime students' minds for social studies learning.
A comprehensive classroom simulation and analysis lesson about the assassination of Julius Caesar. Students examine historical perspectives, engage with primary sources, and debate civic duty through a mock trial and a three-page investigative document.
A grade 11 history and SEL lesson examining global trade, local labor, and economic interdependence. Students analyze complex global scenarios using multi-perspective lenses and cultural competence.
A comprehensive 5-day history unit exploring the Age of Exploration, cultural exchanges, technological innovations in navigation, the Transatlantic Slave Trade, and encounters with East Asian empires.
An in-depth exploration of the factors that drove European powers to seek new trade routes, introducing the GREASES framework for historical analysis of global expansion.
A comprehensive study bundle designed for high school students preparing for the Iowa-required civics exam. The materials use chunked information, visual aids, and scaffolded structures to support rote memorization, quick recall, and structured independent study of the official 100 citizenship questions.
A deep dive into the structural principles of the U.S. Constitution, focusing on separation of powers, checks and balances, and federalism, culminating in a standards-aligned unit assessment.
A close analytical reading of the Declaration of Independence and the original United States Constitution, detailing the historical grievances and the structural compromises of early American nation-building.
An analysis of early American regional geography, resource distribution, and economic systems, investigating how physical geography shaped the development of distinct Northern, Middle, and Southern colonial societies.
An exploration of how European Enlightenment thinkers like John Locke and Baron de Montesquieu, along with historic English documents like the Magna Carta, shaped early American beliefs about government and individual liberty.
A comprehensive lesson investigating redistricting, packing, and cracking to evaluate if legislative branches truly represent the will of the people. Includes a slide deck, a structured DBQ worksheet, a professional teacher guide, and an interactive exit ticket.
A service-learning and community activism lesson localized for Southern Oregon. Students explore the spectrum of community impact, brainstorm local issues, and research a self-selected cause using guided organizers.
A collaborative research lesson on WWII Pacific battles. Students work in intelligence teams to analyze military strategy, island-hopping, and geographical barriers, exploring how these battles shifted momentum and led to the atomic bomb decision.
A lesson centered on the landmark civil rights case Tape v. Hurley (1885), examining the Tape family's fight for public education in San Francisco and its historical links to Mendez v. Westminster and Brown v. Board of Education.
A high school/college level history and literature lesson focused on James Baldwin's documentary 'I Am Not Your Negro'. It examines literal comprehension and recall of key historical figures, events, and Baldwin's core arguments about race, media, and American identity.
A deep dive into Solomon Asch's classic conformity experiment, examining behavioral mechanisms, neural pathways of peer pressure, experimental design flaws, and quantitative data analysis.
An Honors US History gallery walk exploration of the Civil War home fronts, examining the social, economic, and political experiences of civilians, marginalized groups, and frontline medical pioneers.
The final quarter assessment and answer key covering New Jersey state government, Essex County government, Newark municipal structure, and contemporary local policy issues.
A Grade 10 History & SEL lesson focused on active listening and respectful communication during structured stakeholder dialogue about community environmental space use. Features a complete slide deck, a student worksheet, a teacher facilitation guide with scripts, and a self-reflective exit ticket.
A multi-faceted historical and geographical investigation of Europe, examining critical physical features and key crises from the Middle Ages to modern environmental challenges.
A lesson exploring Europe's geography, rich history, and modern institutions through a detailed reading passage and comprehension packet.
An engaging, high-energy classroom trivia game reviewing Topic 7 through Topic 10 of the Economics curriculum. Includes a visual slide deck with questions and answers, a student team answer sheet, and a detailed teacher facilitation guide.
An inquiry-based lesson exploring how the demographic crisis of the 14th-century Black Death disrupted feudal structures in Europe. Students analyze labor scarcity, roleplay economic shifts, and evaluate primary sources to understand how catastrophe led to working-class empowerment.
A lesson covering the outbreak of World War II, tracking the path from European invasions to the expansion in the Pacific and the attack on Pearl Harbor, based on historical lecture slides.
A lesson comparing the strategies and philosophies of major Black rights activists across three distinct eras: Abolitionism, the Jim Crow Era, and the Civil Rights Movement.
A highly scaffolded, SPED-accessible lesson exploring the pros and cons of gentrification from the perspective of an inner-city family. Features chunked readings, visual vocabulary, sentence starters, and structured discussions.
A scaffolded reading and vocabulary lesson about the history and significance of Memorial Day, designed specifically for High School ESL students at the Transitioning and Expanding proficiency levels. Includes an informational reading passage, vocabulary activities, and visual task cards.
Planning de révision structuré sur 3 semaines pour préparer efficacement l'ensemble des matières du Brevet (Histoire-Géographie, EMC, Physique-Chimie et SVT).
Fiche de révision recto-verso sur les signaux physiques pour communiquer (signaux sonores, lumineux, ondes, vitesse de propagation, relation d = v x t, fréquence et hauteur d'un son).
Fiche de révision recto-verso sur l'énergie et ses conversions (énergie cinétique, potentielle, mécanique, sources et transferts d'énergie, circuits électriques, puissance et énergie électrique).
Fiche de révision recto-verso sur la mécanique (vitesse, mouvements rectilignes et circulaires, forces, modélisation des actions par des vecteurs, gravitation, poids et masse).
Fiche de révision recto-verso sur l'organisation et les transformations de la matière (atomes, ions, molécules, constitution, pH, réactions chimiques, combustion, métaux, solutions aqueuses).
Fiche de révision recto-verso sur l'EMC : la Défense nationale (JDC, missions des forces armées) et le fonctionnement de la vie démocratique en France (vote, pluralisme, médias).
Fiche de révision recto-verso sur l'EMC : les valeurs, principes et symboles de la République française, ainsi que l'acquisition de la nationalité et de la citoyenneté française et européenne.
Fiche de révision recto-verso sur la construction européenne de 1951 à nos jours, retraçant les grandes étapes économiques (CECA, CEE) et politiques (traité de Maastricht) de l'Union européenne.
Fiche de révision recto-verso sur les régimes totalitaires soviétique et nazi dans les années 1930, leurs caractéristiques communes (embrigadement, terreur, culte du chef) et l'expérience démocratique du Front populaire en France.