Instructional slides for a TELPAS lesson on Latin American Revolutions. Features key vocabulary, geographical context, the SWBST summarizing strategy, and structured speaking prompts for EL students.
A teacher guide for the "Iron Grip" lesson, featuring a 25-minute pacing guide, primary source answer key, and instructional tips for high school history teachers.
A primary source document set featuring excerpts from Mussolini, Stalin, Hitler, and Tojo, with analysis questions for high school students. Every source includes author names and publication years. Includes lined student work areas for better handwriting support.
A 10-slide presentation covering the rise and methods of control of Hitler, Mussolini, Stalin, and Tojo, emphasizing the context of the 1920s-30s and the characteristics of totalitarianism.
A detailed reference list for all primary sources used in the Depression and New Deal Mastery Assessment, including names, dates, historical context, and links to official archives. Now with improved page-break handling.
A comprehensive teacher answer key for the Depression and New Deal Mastery Test, aligning each question with specific Tennessee State Standards (US.29-39) and lesson themes. Now includes the Primary Source Index as requested. Corrected contrast and pagination.
An updated multiple-choice mastery test for the Great Depression and New Deal, featuring 100% primary source analysis. Now includes an Answer Key with standards and a full Source Index on separate pages at the end of the document. Fixed numbering and visual descriptions.
A curated guide for teachers providing links, titles, and descriptions for iconic historical visuals including FSA photography, WPA posters, and anti-New Deal propaganda to enrich the lesson. Condensed to fit a single page.
A comprehensive teacher answer key for the Cartoon Combat Worksheet, providing historical interpretations, symbolic meanings, and grading criteria for student responses. Revised for better page breaks.
A concise directory for teachers and students listing all primary sources used in the lesson, including names, specific dates, and links to archives like the Library of Congress and National Archives.