Students explore the difference between cultural stereotypes and reality through a 'drawing challenge' and the 'Identity Iceberg' model, using the video 'Belonging in America' as a primary source.
A lesson exploring the intersection of Europe's unique physical geography and its dramatic history, focusing on how barriers and natural highways shaped civilizations.
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.
An intermediate lesson examining how early humans migrated out of Africa, adapted to different global climates, and used cultural and technological innovations to improve their lives.
An introductory lesson exploring how archaeologists, paleontologists, and scientists reconstruct prehistoric human society using fossils, scientific testing, and geographical migration tracks.
An exploration of early human migration, the transition from hunter-gatherers to agrarian societies, and the rise of the first river valley civilizations in Mesopotamia and ancient Egypt.
A project-based lesson where students explore the dramatic transition from hunter-gatherer societies to early agricultural communities. Students analyze historical evidence to create a comic, short story, or poster detailing daily life in their assigned era.
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 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 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 6th-grade social studies lesson investigating early human evolution, tool adaptations, cultural practices, and migration patterns, integrated with CCSS ELA-Literacy RI.6.1.
An intensive, document-based 8th-grade civics lesson exploring the Separation of Powers and Checks and Balances. Students analyze primary sources and architectural-style diagrams to understand how the Constitution structures government to prevent tyranny, direct from standard 8.C1.1.
A highly scaffolded middle school lesson on Harlem Renaissance poet Claude McKay, adapted for a first-grade reading level. Includes a text analysis, footnote glossary, comprehension questions, a group timeline poster project, and support tools for co-teachers.
An 8th-grade civics lesson detailing the long fight for voting rights from the Seneca Falls Convention to the Civil Rights Movement and the 26th Amendment. Students participate in a hands-on Cut-and-Paste Sorting Activity analyzing constitutional amendments and protest strategies.
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 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.
A comprehensive lesson exploring the geography, culture, and integration of Europe, utilizing a reading passage, extensive comprehension activities, and an analytical exit ticket.
A lesson exploring Europe's geography, rich history, and modern institutions through a detailed reading passage and comprehension packet.
A 7th-grade history investigation into how Baghdad became the center of global learning during the Islamic Golden Age through translation, trade, and cultural preservation.