ENGAGING HISTORY POWER POINTS
Mr. Harms has designed a number of PowerPoint and Keynote presentations with key Social Studies Concepts and Critical Thinking Questions to help students understand history. Designed by a teacher for teachers, this PowerPoint focuses on The Beginning of the French Revolution.
Overview
These history presentations are designed to give students an overview of how the French Revolution began. Students will be shown maps, animations and descriptions detailing these events.
Customizable
The presentation is totally customizable, allowing you to add your own pictures, graphics and animations to take what we’ve done even farther.
Benefit
What is your time worth? Our basic pricing system for History Presentations is 10 cents per slide. Some title slides may only take 30 seconds to create, but complex slides with animations and coordinated builds for complicated topics may take 30 minutes or more. It’s not unusual for a presentation to take between 3 and 7 hours of work. What could you do with 6 or 7 free hours?
Topics Include
The Topics include: French Revolution, The Old Order, Estates General, Bourgeoisie, First Estate, Second Estate, Third Estate, Peasants, Enlightenment, American Revolution, National Debt, Louis XVI, Marie Antoinette, Social Systems, National Assembly, Emmanuel Sieyes, Tennis Court Oath, Bastille, Great Fear.
Included in The Presentation Package:
- Keynote Presentation
- Power Point Presentation
- Text edit file of the outline of the presentation and presenter’s notes.
The package is a digital download (Zip File) of these three items.
Modern World History Presentations
We have a number of Power Points related to Modern World History. These units are proven to engage students in a way that text books and documentaries can’t. Hundreds of teachers are using these lesson plans to bring history to life for students. It’s a unit you’ll use year after year.
Source:
MCDOUGAL LITTEL’S WORLD HISTORY: PATTERNS OF INTERACTION
Unit 5 Absolutism To Revolution
Module 19 The French Revolution and Napoleon
Lesson 1 “The French Revolution Begins”
These materials were prepared by Harms LLC and have neither been developed, reviewed, nor endorsed by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company, publisher of the original WORLD HISTORY: Patterns of Interaction work on which this material is based.
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