A visual presentation to launch the Global Explorer project, defining culture, setting expectations, and inspiring curiosity about world travel.
An inquiry-driven social studies sequence investigating Ancient Greece and Rome across four core pillars: government, philosophy, trade, and engineering. Students engage with primary sources, architectural achievements, and ethical dilemmas to construct arguments about classical legacies.
A vibrant 40-minute lesson for second graders focusing on the meaningful symbols and celebrations of Juneteenth. Through interactive slides, a visual worksheet, and structured teaching prompts, students learn about the Juneteenth flag, red food traditions, uplift music, and festive community parades.
A beautiful two-page student activity worksheet featuring a Juneteenth matching activity, a custom flag-design drawing space, and guided primary-ruled writing lines for reflecting on community joy.
An 8-day interdisciplinary project where 3rd-grade students design a sustainable historical Massachusetts settlement. Integrating math, ELA, science, and social studies, students apply area, perimeter, fractions, weather science, Wampanoag adaptations, and persuasive writing.
A historical investigation lesson exploring the experiences of immigrants in America. Students research an individual immigrant, complete a detailed profile organizer, and demonstrate their understanding of core concepts like push and pull factors.
An interactive and colorful slide deck featuring a welcome slide, the story of Juneteenth, detailed guides on the flag, food, music, parades, and discussion prompts.
A comparative and deep-dive review sequence exploring foundational teachings, sacred texts, and cultural practices of major world religions.
A lesson exploring the calling of the first disciples, focusing on Jesus' invitation to become fishers of men and share God's love with others through creative, hands-on activities.
A comprehensive, highly detailed two-page teacher guide outlining the 40-minute lesson flow, classroom discussion prompts, slide scripts, and worksheet guidance.
A middle-school history unit exploring the emergence of early humans, their prehistoric migrations, the radical transition of the agricultural revolution, and the foundations of early civilizations.
A creative civics and art lesson where fourth-grade students brainstorm personal actions for four key areas of citizenship (leadership, planet care, rules, and helping), then design personal, colorable quilt squares that combine into a collaborative classroom display.
A standalone, double-sided printable reading worksheet designed for English Language Learners (ELL) focusing on Loving Day (June 12, 1967). Includes an accessible, scaffolded reading passage, a visual vocabulary spotlight, text-dependent comprehension questions with writing frames, and a creative reflection activity.