Only logged in customers who have purchased this product may leave a review.
Products
- Home
- /
- Shop
- /
- By Subject
- /
- Social Studies
- /
- By Grade
- /
- 6th-8th
- /
- Research Skills
- /
- Written Document Analysis Worksheet
Written Document Analysis Worksheet
$1.50
When doing research, students will find many written documents that could be appropriate to draw from. However, it is important to analyze each. Why? Analyzing historical documents requires students to identify the purpose, message, and audience of a text. This worksheets is a graphic organizer that will guide students through the analysis of these documents.
Related products
-
$1.75Buy Now
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. -
$9.99Buy Now
This unit is perfect for any study of the American Revolution!
Designed for 4th-6th Grades.
-
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.
-
$1.00Buy Now
This John Cabot resource is perfect for a quick World History lesson or a Language Arts lesson! Cabot’s was an Italian navigator and explorer. His 1497 discovery of the coast of North America under the commission of Henry VII of England is the earliest known European exploration of coastal North America since the Norse visits to Vinland in the eleventh century. Students will enjoy learning more about this explorer and how he too (like Columbus) thought he had sailed to the Far East!
Reviews
There are no reviews yet.