A 5-lesson unit for 9th-grade Civics exploring the structural organization of global governments, ranging from full democracies to authoritarian regimes, and the impact of these structures on individual rights.
A deep dive into the history and contemporary reality of child labor, comparing the Industrial Revolution to modern global supply chains. Students analyze primary-source-inspired fiction and modern reporting to understand systemic drivers and ethical implications.
A unit exploring the foundations of humanistic psychology, focusing on person-centered approaches, therapeutic relationships, and the drive toward self-actualization.
A comprehensive study of leadership, civil rights, and social ethics through the lens of the film Remember the Titans.
A comprehensive two-week unit covering the social, economic, and political transformations of the 1980s and 1990s, from the Reagan Revolution to the dawn of the Digital Age and the roots of 21st-century security challenges.
A sequence for high school students (B1+ level) exploring the social and cultural impacts of gentrification in London, focusing on the tension between urban development and local community identity.
A two-part sequence that takes students from a deep-dive analysis of George Washington's Farewell Address to a modern-day evaluation of his warnings regarding political parties, media bias, and national unity.
A geography unit designed for 5th-grade students on an IEP with limited literacy, focusing on visual learning, simple hierarchy, and hands-on activities to master map skills and world features.
A comprehensive overview of four major turning points in United States history: the American Revolution, Westward Expansion, the Civil War, and World War II. This sequence explores how each era redefined the American identity and shifted the nation's trajectory.
A comprehensive unit covering United States history from 1960 to 1980, focusing on the Cold War, domestic policy, and political scandals.
A comprehensive 5-day unit covering the United States from 1960 to 1980, focusing on the Vietnam War's impact on foreign policy, domestic programs, and constitutional crises. Students analyze the tension between the Great Society and war spending, the role of technology in warfare, and the legacy of the Watergate scandal.
A comprehensive assessment sequence covering mid-century American history, focusing on the Cold War and the Civil Rights Movement. It includes a unit test, answer key, source registry, and study guide.
A comprehensive 10-lesson unit exploring the political, economic, religious, and technological landscape of the Middle Ages across Western Europe, Japan, and the Islamic Empire. Students will analyze feudal systems, cultural achievements, and global connections through slides, guided activities, and comparative studies.
A comprehensive 10-day unit exploring the causes, courses, and consequences of four major world-altering revolutions: American, French, Industrial, and China's Communist Revolution. Students will analyze political and economic drivers, human costs, and lasting global impacts through comparative study.
A comprehensive two-lesson sequence covering the American Civil Rights Movement from 1954 to 1968, focused on key advocates, opponents, and pivotal events in the struggle for equality.
A comprehensive two-lesson sequence covering the American Civil Rights Movement from 1954 to 1968, with a specific focus on Tennessee-based events and the comparison of different activist philosophies. Students explore key figures, legislative battles, and the impact of grassroots organizing.