Students explore family traditions and stories as treasures that connect them to their past and each other.
A complete educational board game package designed for 3rd-grade English Language learners (ELs) studying the causes of the American Revolutionary War. Features simplified text, visual supports, and sentence frames to assist language production.
A 20-minute introductory lesson exploring community, cooperation, and human connection inspired by Bill McKibben's 'We Are Better Together'. Students examine how our unique differences and teamwork allow us to build a better, stronger community, culminating in a creative sketch and reflection activity.
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 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.
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.
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.
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 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.
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 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.
A step-by-step journey through Europe's unique geography and history, written at an accessible 600-700 Lexile level. Students explore how the physical landscape shaped historical civilizations from Ancient Greece to modern Europe.
A scaffolded geography lesson exploring push and pull migration factors, global trade, and tropical deforestation with extensive visual supports and sentence frames designed for IEP accessibility.
A modified, highly accessible economics assessment package tailored for students with IEP accommodations. Features simplified reading level, reduced multiple-choice options, bolded key terms, clear visual icons, and an intuitive match-by-letter format instead of complex grids.
A comprehensive lesson on the Culper Spy Ring during the American Revolution. Students read about the historical secret agent network, master key espionage vocabulary, and analyze literal and inferential comprehension questions in a structured, multi-page intelligence file format.
An exploration of extraordinary immigrants who shaped the modern United States through groundbreaking inventions, scientific discoveries, and iconic architectural feats. Students analyze the lives of Nikola Tesla, Alexander Graham Bell, Albert Einstein, John Roebling, and Alexandre Eiffel, examining how their diverse backgrounds fueled American innovation.
An introductory early-literacy vocabulary lesson about Ancient Egypt. Students learn key terms through tactile hands-on tracing worksheets, vocabulary matching games, and printable trace-and-cut flashcards.