A high school lesson where students collaborate to design a tabletop card game centered on real-world ethical choices, applying game theory, logical reasoning, and creative writing to balance competing moral priorities.
An introductory lesson on the Trait Approach to personality, guiding students through key definitions, major theorists (Allport, Cattell, Eysenck), the Big Five model, and the real-world applications and limitations of trait theory.
A comprehensive lesson exploring the transition from the roaring optimism of the 1920s to the structural causes of the Great Depression, including the agricultural crisis, income inequality, global trade collapse, and the 1929 stock market crash.
An empathy-driven, systemic lesson for young teens (grades 7-9) exploring the realities of homelessness. Students dismantle stereotypes, examine structural causes of housing insecurity, learn to support peers discretely, and identify concrete avenues for local service and advocacy.
An exploration of the core differences and connections between Ancient Greece and Ancient Rome. This lesson focuses on comparative analysis across political, economic, geographic, and cultural structures, helping students understand how these two titans shaped Western Civilization.
A comprehensive AP US History research and presentation project exploring the Civil War. Students engage in deep historical inquiry using AP-aligned skills including contextualization, comparative analysis, and continuity and change over time.
An introductory US History lesson bridging the World History Age of Enlightenment with the founding of the United States. Students explore how radical European ideas crossed the Atlantic to spark a constitutional republic through a historical narrative, text-based writing, matching, short-answer questions, and a thematic word hunt.
An AP U.S. History unit investigating the critical events of the 1850s that tore the Union apart. Students examine causation, sectionalism, and the inevitability of the Civil War through primary source analysis and presentation of historic clues.
A 10th-grade social studies stations activity investigating the Constitutions of 1791, 1793, and 1795. Students analyze how France repeatedly drafted and revised its foundational laws in a turbulent quest for a more democratic society.
Session 7 du passeport PFMP. Les élèves découvrent comment l'agriculture calédonienne s'adapte aux préoccupations environnementales océaniennes (sol, eau, biodiversité, déchets).
Session 6 du passeport PFMP. Les élèves réfléchissent aux compétences qu'ils aimeraient développer ou améliorer et découvrent les perspectives de formation et d'évolution de carrière.
Session 5 du passeport PFMP. Les élèves découvrent et identifient les compétences requises (savoirs, savoir-faire techniques, savoir-être) pour exercer l'emploi observé.
Session 4 du passeport PFMP. Les élèves découvrent les droits, les devoirs du salarié et du stagiaire, ainsi que les règles du Code du travail de Nouvelle-Calédonie et la sécurité.
Session 3 du passeport PFMP. Les élèves apprennent à identifier les conditions réelles de travail, à analyser les contraintes d'un poste agricole et à apprécier ses atouts.
Session 2 du passeport PFMP. Les élèves apprennent à identifier l'organigramme de l'entreprise, à repérer leur maître de stage et à comprendre les fonctions et attributions de chaque salarié.
Session 1 du passeport PFMP. Les élèves apprennent à identifier et à décrire le contexte géographique, sectoriel et juridique de leur entreprise d'accueil en Nouvelle-Calédonie.
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.