Students map the metaethical landscape, distinguishing between cognitivism and non-cognitivism while analyzing G.E. Moore's Open Question Argument and J.L. Mackie's Argument from Queerness.
An application-based assessment focusing on Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs, featuring a labeling section, scenario analysis, and character evaluation from literature.
A collection of resources for an educational information booth about Peru at a cultural fair, including a fact sheet and interactive trivia cards.
A structured research phase where students choose a focus area—either an ethical teaching or a significant practice—and map its connection to core Jewish tenets and contemporary life.
A comprehensive guide to structuring an informative essay on the social, economic, and religious consequences of the Black Death in medieval Europe.
Una lección que explora la inmigración moderna en los EE. UU. a través de la lente histórica de la Ley de Exclusión China, diseñada con lenguaje simplificado y organizadores gráficos para estudiantes de educación especial.
A deep-dive investigation into the Cuban Missile Crisis where students analyze declassified intelligence, private correspondence, and meeting transcripts to determine the causes and culpability of the nuclear standoff. Students act as intelligence analysts to produce a formal policy recommendation.
A comprehensive assessment covering developmental domains, brain growth, major ECE theorists, and strategies for supporting young children's self-concept and identity.
A comprehensive look at the rise and fall of Maximilian I of Mexico, exploring the French intervention and the clash between imperial dreams and republican reality.
This lesson explores the devastating social and economic impacts of the Great Depression, focusing on unemployment, migration, and Hoovervilles, while challenging students to compare the contrasting philosophies of Presidents Hoover and FDR.
A summative assessment for the first third of the novel. Evaluates student mastery of vocabulary from Lessons 1-11, character motivation, and the central theme of corporate alienation through a mix of multiple choice, short answer, and a rigorous RACE response.
The family's recovery and the transition to a new source of productivity (Grete). Synthesis of the unit's themes.
Gregor's death and self-sacrifice. Analysis of the relief of the family and the 'cleansing' of the home.
Grete's formal rejection of Gregor's identity. Analysis of the shift from sibling love to the necessity of his removal.
Gregor's reaction to Grete's violin performance. Themes of art, human connection, and the final reach for his human spirit.
Gregor's room becomes a storage area for trash. Analysis of the complete erasure of his human space and history.
The introduction of the three lodgers. Analysis of the home as a commodified space and Gregor's further displacement.
Analysis of the family taking on menial labor. Themes of exhaustion, loss of dignity, and the shared alienation of the working class.
Gregor as a permanent invalid. Analysis of the family's growing resentment and the physical reminder of his non-productive status.