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Clara Barton | Her Life and the Founding of the American Red Cross
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This cross-curricular unit provides students with the opportunity to work with informational text and primary sources as they learn about the life of Clara Barton and the founding of the American Red Cross.
Includes:
- Reading Comprehension w/ answer key
- Poetry Response
- Poetry writing – Writing a ‘found’ poem
- Research assignment
- Expository writing
- …and a creative poster assignment!
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Sale!
$12.00Original price was: $12.00.$9.99Current price is: $9.99.BUNDLE and SAVE! This download contains 4 (four) PPT presentations on Christmas.
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This 257 page book holds an 1893 copyright and was written to give information about historical figures living just before and during the beginning of United States history. It is not meant to be used as a textbook but rather a supplement to add stories and facts about the people written about within the pages. It is recommended for 5th-12th grades.
Suggested uses: Use with your regular curriculum to add another layer of information or give to students to use as a source information when doing research and/or projects.
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Anne Bradstreet was the most prominent of early English poets of North America and first writer in England’s North American colonies to be published. She is the first Puritan figure in American Literature.
If you are looking for a student centered resource to help students learn and practice research skills, report writing skills, project skills, presentation skills and more this is it!
This unit is a notebooking project. It 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!
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This is a downloadable copy of the book. (128 pages)
About the book: This is a 1921 work for young adults (14+) Steven is a young man who when subject to peer pressure takes his friends to the next town in his families touring car. He does not have a license but has driven a bit with is dad at his side. Things don’t work out as planned and there are some difficulties. He manages to get the car home without being discovered, but somehow the “right” time to confess is lost repeatedly. This moral challenge is the back drop to a series of discussions by by his father on the history of steam engines and trains, followed by discussions by a family friend on steam boating.
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