Students examine the conquest of the Inca Empire, focusing on the capture of Atahualpa and comparing Pizarro's strategies with those of Cortés.
An introductory lesson exploring the immigrant experience and systemic barriers through Suli Breaks' spoken word poem 'Fences'. Students engage in a structured movement and discourse activity to analyze literal and metaphorical barriers, connecting themes to their own lived experiences.
A middle school history lesson introducing the Protestant Reformation, focusing on Martin Luther's protest, the fundamental theological clashes, and the visual spread of Protestantism across Europe.
An immersive, print-ready educational board game teaching the major events, key figures, and critical concepts leading up to the American Revolutionary War from 1754 to 1775.
A foundational civics lesson on incumbency, electoral advantages, and media literacy. Students explore why current politicians usually win reelection and learn to distinguish between objective news reports and opinion articles.
Students examine yellow journalism through the lens of the historical DeLome Letter leak of 1898. They analyze sensationalized media, understand the historical context of the Spanish-American War, and draw parallels to modern media.
A deep dive into the French Revolution's bloodiest phase, analyzing how revolutionary ideals twisted into state-sponsored terror under Robespierre.
A highly accessible watch guide lesson linking The Wizard of Oz (1939) to Gilded Age politics (Populism, the Gold Standard, and industrial workers), designed specifically for middle school students reading at a 1st-grade level using visual matching, word banks, and literal multiple-choice questions.
A middle school history lesson exploring Martin Luther's role in the Protestant Reformation, focusing on key biographical events, critical vocabulary, and cause-and-effect historical analysis.
An interactive, historically grounded lesson exploring the significance of Treaty Day, focusing on central ideas, summarizing, and historical vocabulary. Students analyze the nature of treaties as sacred, ongoing agreements and practice identifying key themes and context clues.
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.
Students investigate the physical backbone of classical empires, comparing Greek structural harmony with Roman concrete engineering and infrastructural feats like aqueducts and roadways.
Students trace the economic veins of the Mediterranean, mapping how Greek ceramic trade and Roman maritime highways linked continents, exchanged technologies, and forged a globalized ancient marketplace.
Students explore classical philosophical inquiries through Socrates, Plato, Aristotle, and Roman legal codes, examining how these intellectual frameworks defined ethics, civic duty, and the pursuit of truth.