Category: Social Studies
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Showing 81–100 of 123 resultsSorted by latest
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$3.00Add to Cart
✏️A student-centered resource to help students learn and practice research skills, report writing, project and presentation skills.
Students will use this project-based unit to learn about and report on Molly Pitcher. Molly Pitcher is a nickname given to a woman said to have fought in the American Battle of Monmouth, generally believed to have been Mary Ludwig Hays McCauley. However, various Molly Pitcher tales grew in the telling, and many historians regard Molly Pitcher as folklore rather than history or suggest that Molly Pitcher may be a composite image inspired by the actions of a number of real women. The name itself may have originated as a nickname given to women who carried water to men on the battlefield during War.
✏️This notebooking project unit can be assigned individually or within cooperative groups. Use it within a Language Arts classroom or a Social Studies / U.S. History classroom. Very flexible and cross-curricular! After completing the written portion of this resource, you can grade it (or) assign students to do an oral and/or audio-visual presentation based on their findings/work.
✏️What is in this resource?
- Student instructions for using biographical notebooking, project pages
- Suggested research questions
- Student notebooking, project pages (includes covers, KWL, reference recording, report writing, and more)
- Teacher pages (instructions, assignment, evaluation)
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$3.00Add to Cart
✏️A student-centered resource to help students learn and practice research skills, report writing, project and presentation skills.
Students will use this project-based unit to learn about and report on Lady Deborah Moody. Lady Deborah Moody is notable as the founder of Gravesend, Brooklyn, and is the only woman known to have started a village in colonial America. She was the first known female landowner in the New World.
✏️This notebooking project unit can be assigned individually or within cooperative groups. Use it within a Language Arts classroom or a Social Studies / U.S. History classroom. Very flexible and cross-curricular! After completing the written portion of this resource, you can grade it (or) assign students to do an oral and/or audio-visual presentation based on their findings/work.
✏️What is in this resource?
- Student instructions for using biographical notebooking, project pages
- Suggested research questions
- Student notebooking, project pages (includes covers, KWL, reference recording, report writing, and more)
- Teacher pages (instructions, assignment, evaluation)
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$7.00Add to Cart
A fun & engaging Paul Revere study designed to give students a good working knowledge of Paul Revere and information surrounding the American Revolution.
Students will learn about…
- – Paul Revere’s life and accomplishments
- – Revere in relation to the beginning of the American Revolution
- – Revere’s famous midnight ride
Students will be asked to research and learn about…
- – Boston Tea Party
- – Sons of Liberty
Students will also learn and study…
- – related vocabulary
- – Poem: Paul Revere’s Ride
Includes:
- – Worksheets
- – Puzzles
- – Notebooking pages and templates for interactive notebooks
- – Other fun activities
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$2.50Add to Cart
Susan B Anthony was a great influential woman in American History who was a major women’s rights activist and played a pivotal role in the women’s suffrage movement. She was also an abolitionist and worked in the Temperance movement as well.
This resource, Susan B Anthony – Biographical Research & Notebooking, has been designed to provide your students with the materials they need to complete a research / report project about her!
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$2.50Add to Cart
A detailed biography on Abraham Lincoln written shortly after his death.
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This is a downloadable copy of the book. (63 pages)
About the book: In January 1776, Thomas Paine published a document that sparked the American fight for independence from England. His political pamphlet, called Common Sense, showed the colonists that they could be free from the tyranny of a king by creating an independent nation where they could justly and fairly govern themselves. -
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This is a downloadable copy of the book.
About the Author: Sarah Morgan Dawson was born in New Orleans, Louisiana on February 28, 1842 to Judge Thomas Gibbes Morgan and his second wife, Sarah Hunt Fowler Morgan. She spent her early childhood in New Orleans until Judge Morgan relocated the family to Baton Rouge in 1850. Although Sarah received less than a full year of formal schooling, she followed a serious course of study on her own. In addition to learning French, she read widely in English literature. References to her reading habits as well as allusions to various literary works appear in her diary, which she began during the Civil War.
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This is a downloadable copy of the book. (643 pages – Christian World-View)
About the book: Lord begins the book (Chapter 1 – Antediluvian World) with the Creation and the Garden of Eden. The book continues up to and through the Fall of the Roman Empire. A great deal can be learned about a variety of states and empires and more specifically the Greek and Roman empires. Published in 1869. -
$15.00Add to Cart
High School American History 2 – Teacher’s Guide with Keys
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✏️A student-centered resource to help students learn and practice research skills, report writing, project and presentation skills.
Students will use this project-based unit to learn about and report on Deborah Sampson. Deborah Sampson became a hero of the American Revolution when she disguised herself as a man and joined the Patriot forces. She was the only woman to earn a full military pension for participation in the Revolutionary army.
✏️This notebooking project unit can be assigned individually or within cooperative groups. Use it within a Language Arts classroom or a Social Studies / U.S. History classroom. Very flexible and cross-curricular! After completing the written portion of this resource, you can grade it (or) assign students to do an oral and/or audio-visual presentation based on their findings/work.
✏️What is in this resource?
- Student instructions for using biographical notebooking, project pages
- Suggested research questions
- Student notebooking, project pages (includes covers, KWL, reference recording, report writing, and more)
- Teacher pages (instructions, assignment, evaluation)
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$4.00Add to Cart
This resource, The Intolerable Acts – U.S. History Notebooking Project, has been designed to aid students in creating a thorough and organized History project. If you want students to do a deeper dive into the ‘Coercive Acts’ passed by the British Parliament in response to the Boston Tea Party, this is the resource.
See description below for more details!
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$6.50Add to Cart
This resource will take students through a journey of learning...a journey learning about the Wright Brothers and the beginning of aviation while weaving lessons throughout various subjects: Art, Science, Math, Language Arts, Geography, Economics and even Health.
This 83-page resource provides detailed lesson plans, student information, student worksheets and many hands-on, engaging student activities!
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$9.99Add to Cart
This is the Teacher’s Guide to World History 2. It is a 208 page resource and includes the following for each unit:
- Unit Focus
- Suggestions for Enrichment
- Unit Assessment
- Keys
See description below for unit titles.
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$1.50Add to Cart
This resource, The Intolerable Acts – US History Informational Text, will inform students of the British Parliament’s reaction to the Boston Tea Party…”5 laws” passed referred to by colonist as the Intolerable Acts:
- The Boston Port Act
- Massachusetts Government Act
- Administration of Justice Act
- The Quartering Act
- The Quebec Act
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$15.00Add to Cart
This student textbook covers World History 1 and is a large download (617 pages). It includes 21 units from Ancient Egypt to the rise of nationalism in the 1800’s. (see description below for details).
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$1.75Add to Cart
This informational article will help students understand one of ‘taxes’ imposed upon the colonies by King George prior to the American Revolution. After reading, students will be questions to assess their comprehension of the material (1 multiple-choice question, 7 short answer questions and 2 short essay questions).
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$2.00Add to Cart
This is a downloadable copy of the book. (400 pages)
About the book: An English railroad expert surveys the history and practice of railroading in America – published in 1910, two years after sales of the Model T begin. The book sketches the history and goes into considerable detail about operations at the turn of the twentieth century. (Reading Level: High School)
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$15.00Add to Cart
Units:
- America from Exploration through Colonization
- Road to Revolution
- The Constitution and Early National Period
- The Civil War and the Reconstruction Era
- Westward Expansion (1840-1890)
- Industrial America (1865-1925)
- Problems in Industrial America
- Becoming a World Power
- U.S. Foreign Policy (1898-1933)
- The Progressive Era (1890-1917)
- World War 1 in Europe
- The U.S. enters WW1
- Peace after WW1
- Prosperity after WW1
- The Great Depression (1929-1932)
- The New Deal (1933-1940)
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$15.00Add to Cart
This is the Teacher’s Guide to World History 1. It is a 242 page resource and includes the following for each unit:
- Unit Focus
- Suggestions for Enrichment
- Unit Assessment
- Keys
See description below for unit titles.
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$2.50Add to Cart
This is a downloadable copy of the book.
About the book: The St. Nicholas referred to in the title is not Santa Claus but a magazine founded in 1873 Many sources refer to St. Nicholas as a children’s magazine but the articles and stories in this collection are not childish by modern American standards. The magazine published some of the country’s best writers including Louisa May Alcott, Laura Richards, Mark Twain, Joel Chandler Harris and Frances Hodgson Burnett. Among the noted authors who first published in the magazine were F. Scott Fitzgerald and E.B. White.This collection contains many articles and a few stories. Among the articles are one about alligators and one about catching terrapins. There are also articles about New Orleans, St Augustine, an earthquake at Charleston, S.C. and American rivers. The St. Augustine article reads as though it was placed by the chamber of commerce or a tourist bureau. One of the better stories is The Watermelon Stockings by Alice Caldwell Hegan about a disobedient but brave little girl. Another is The Creature With No Claws by Joel Chandler Harris.





















