I'm a high school teacher in the United States with more than 20 years experience teaching history and English! I believe in making learning fun and incorporating critical thinking skills, as well as building lessons that provide teacher convenience features!
I'm a high school teacher in the United States with more than 20 years experience teaching history and English! I believe in making learning fun and incorporating critical thinking skills, as well as building lessons that provide teacher convenience features!
60 Multiple Choice Questions on Episode 12 of America: The Story of US
America: The Story of US is a History Channel series that uses engaging imagery, powerful special effects, and a lively script to convey the story of the United States in 12 concise yet comprehensive episodes. This teaching packet covers Episode 12: “Millennium," focusing on events in the United States at the end of the 20th century and the beginning of the 21st.
Using any of the series’ episodes in class opens up several useful possibilities. They are so well presented that they are easily understood by students. This in turn means that episodes can actually be used as an introduction to a topic or a unit. On the other hand, they also make excellent reinforcers, so some teachers will want to show the episodes after the end of a chapter or unit for use as a review or recap.
ABOUT THIS TEACHING PACKET
I’ve kept this episode versatility in mind when making these materials. This teaching resource contains both a worksheet and a test on the episode it covers. These two components are based on different approaches to the video:
• The student viewing worksheet has 50 multiple choice questions, all presented in video order. These questions are fairly detailed. Certainly, many students will have good enough recall to be able to complete the worksheet after the episode has been shown, but because of the detailed nature of the questions, some teachers may want to use the worksheet as a “during-viewing” activity that will help students track information and stay on task
.
• The 10-question test, on the other hand, is designed to help students synthesize the episode’s information and see larger patterns that span different sections of it. My intent when writing the test was to focus solely on the “big issues” that arise from the targeted time span of American history. Students who have paid attention to the video should definitely have mastered these basic, fundamental issues from the targeted time period. All test questions are also multiple choice.
• Two answer keys are provided for all questions. One is designed for fast grading. The other one provides the full context of question and answer to help teachers review material out loud or facilitate class discussions of the material.
DIFFERENTIATED INSTRUCTION POSSIBILITIES
Because the worksheet and test take these different approaches, teachers can also use them to differentiate instruction.
keywords: Cold War, Space Race, moon landing, Soviet Union, Vietnam War, televised war, Woodstock, feminism, Nixon, Watergate, impeachment, 1980s, 1990s, credit cards, computers, internet, World Wide Web, email, Space Shuttle, Challenger, PCs, Silicon Valley, terrorism, 9/11 attacks, immigration, American Dream
60 Multiple Choice Questions on Episode 10 of America: The Story of US
America: The Story of US is a History Channel series that uses engaging imagery, powerful special effects, and a lively script to convey the story of the United States in 12 concise yet comprehensive episodes. This teaching packet covers Episode 10: “World War II," focusing on the role the United States played in the Second World War.
Using any of the series’ episodes in class opens up several useful possibilities. They are so well presented that they are easily understood by students. This in turn means that episodes can actually be used as an introduction to a topic or a unit. On the other hand, they also make excellent reinforcers, so some teachers will want to show the episodes after the end of a chapter or unit for use as a review or recap.
ABOUT THIS TEACHING PACKET
I’ve kept this episode versatility in mind when making these materials. This teaching resource contains both a worksheet and a test on the episode it covers. These two components are based on different approaches to the video:
• The student viewing worksheet has 50 multiple choice questions, all presented in video order. These questions are fairly detailed. Certainly, many students will have good enough recall to be able to complete the worksheet after the episode has been shown, but because of the detailed nature of the questions, some teachers may want to use the worksheet as a “during-viewing” activity that will help students track information and stay on task
.
• The 10-question test, on the other hand, is designed to help students synthesize the episode’s information and see larger patterns that span different sections of it. My intent when writing the test was to focus solely on the “big issues” that arise from the targeted timespan of American history. Students who have paid attention to the video should definitely have mastered these basic, fundamental issues from the targeted time period. All test questions are also multiple choice.
• Two answer keys are provided for all questions. One is designed for fast grading. The other one provides the full context of question and answer to help teachers review material out loud or facilitate class discussions of the material.
DIFFERENTIATED INSTRUCTION POSSIBILITIES
Because the worksheet and test take these different approaches, teachers can also use them to differentiate instruction.
keywords: Pearl Harbor, radar, mass production, women working, feminism, D-Day, Normandy, segregation, B-17, Oppenheimer, Manhattan Project, Hiroshima, Nagasaki, superpower
Do you need a couple of fun ways to get students more thoroughly engaged as you take them through key information about the era of New Imperialism? Look no further than this Queen Victoria's Empire Episode 1 Worksheet set!
Designed to go along with a showing of Episode 1 of the PBS series: Queen Victoria's Empire, this teaching guide will help students make those all-important connections between the industrial revolution and the onset of imperialism. Along the way, they will also gain valuable information about the Irish Potato Famine and Benjamin Disraeli's role as Prime Minister of Great Britain.
This Queen Victoria's Empire teaching packet offers you and your students several different choices:
--Fill-in worksheet with 37 problems to help students focus in on the concepts that matter most; all problems presented in video order
--Fill-in worksheet as above, but including timestamps as well for teachers who like to offer their students this information
--Follow-up crossword puzzle with 17 clues and terms
--Answer keys for all activities
What better way to teach, review, and encourage broad learning than to use these fun interactive games in class?
About these WWII Interactive History Games
Cover the broad topic of "Global Conflict 1931-1941," the individual games address a variety of key issues of the period, including:
American isolationism
Early phase of WWII in Europe (up to 1941)
The Holocaust
American entry into World War Two
Nuremberg Laws
Battle of Britain
Pearl Harbor
Lend-Lease Act
Mussolini
Shoah
Anschulss
...and many, many more!
Activity Types included in these Early WWII Games
The games include word games, crosswords, sports-scored games, anagrams, geography games, timed puzzles, put-the-events-in-order and many, many more. All the games are interactive and almost all of them are self-checking.
Some of the games are also very appropriate as "teachable moments" -- the answer is "internationalism," so who can tell me more about that? Let's look at that in a little more detail before we continue to the next slide... you get the idea.
The preview file contains 3 games and the full download has 11. All the games are locked, but people who purchase the full 11 game version of the file can contact me to request the password that will unlock the slides and let you edit the games, customizing them further with your own content, as much as you please.
History Games created by Elise Parker
Three analysis worksheets designed to help students think critically as they carefully examine posters promoting the WPA, the CCC, and the Social Security program -- key elements of FDR's New Deal legislation intended to help the United States rise above the Great Depression!
About These New Deal Primary Analysis Worksheets
Using primary sources in class is a powerful way to illustrate history and bring it to life. When it comes to the New Deal, there's a huge wealth of primary sources in the form of propaganda posters readily available via image searches.
The trouble with just using the images in class, however, is that all too often, students will simply glance at the poster before claiming to thoroughly understand it. Even when assigned to write a paragraph about a New Deal propaganda poster, students may only explore the most obvious points instead of delving deeper.
A Focus on Analysis, not Just Observation!
These New Deal Primary Source Propaganda worksheets ask students to do more than just note what images and text exist in the New Deal posters under study. They also require students to determine WHY certain text and image elements were included, using questions that explore issues such as:
• What caused the artist to use a certain color scheme?
• What was the propaganda poster creator trying to communicate by including certain image elements?
• How does the overall look of the poster create a message of inclusion or exclusion from certain government programs and policies?
• What do various design elements imply about the program or policy in question?
Learning by Doing
Once students have some experience answering these pre-made analysis questions, they will understand a lot more about not just the New Deal itself, but also about the ways in which propaganda artists influence their audiences. With this new understanding, they'll be ready to tackle a couple of fun and interesting New Deal project follow-up suggestions included in the packet!
Teacher Convenience Features
• Three separate worksheets, each one focusing on a specific New Deal program.
• Each worksheet includes a complete rendering of the poster under study along with six multiple choice questions for students to answer.
• Two of the posters included are full-color, while one was created only in black and white.
• Full answer keys are included for each worksheet.
• Multiple choice means FAST correcting!
Teacher Convenience Features in these New Imperialism Puzzle Worksheets
This New Imperialism Puzzle includes a variety of options designed to give teachers instant options. Designed for differentiated learning, each topic includes two puzzles versions so that two difficulty levels can be provided. First you will see a standard presentation with just the crossword grid and the lists of clues. On the very next page, however, you will see a “basic” version of the same puzzle. This one includes a word bank so that students who need more guided assistance can also succeed on the puzzles, learning along the way.
The answer key is also designed for teacher convenience. First you will see the puzzle grid filled in with the answers. This page also includes the clues for teacher reference. On the next answer page, you’ll find a handy table that pairs up each answer with its corresponding clue. This page will let you review terms and names with your students without having to hunt for the answers on a puzzle grid.
Ways to Use these New Imperialism Puzzle Worksheets
The information included on these puzzles matches what is typically presented in a high school history textbook, but of course if students have internet-capable devices – even their own smart phones, if that works per your school’s policies – they can always augment the textbook with a spot of online research.
These New Imperialism Worksheet puzzles work great for:
• Reviewing key concepts after the text has been read and discussed
• Homework assignments
• Sub plans – even months after imperialism has been taught, you can use these for emergency substitute lesson plans!
• Open-book New Imperialism tests
• New Imperialism fun quizzes
• Group / Cooperative Learning Activities
• History contest activities
These New Imperialism Crossword Puzzles Also Available:
• The Scramble for Africa
• Methods of Imperialism (includes resistance efforts)
• European Imperialism in the Muslim World
• The British in India
• British Empire Dominions: Canada
• British Empire Dominions: Australia and New Zealand
• British Empire Dominions: Ireland
• United States Imperialism
• The Spanish-American War
• Imperialism in Southeast Asia and the Pacific
Teacher Convenience Features in these New Imperialism Puzzle Worksheets
This New Imperialism Puzzle includes a variety of options designed to give teachers instant options. Designed for differentiated learning, each topic includes two puzzles versions so that two difficulty levels can be provided. First you will see a standard presentation with just the crossword grid and the lists of clues. On the very next page, however, you will see a “basic” version of the same puzzle. This one includes a word bank so that students who need more guided assistance can also succeed on the puzzles, learning along the way.
The answer key is also designed for teacher convenience. First you will see the puzzle grid filled in with the answers. This page also includes the clues for teacher reference. On the next answer page, you’ll find a handy table that pairs up each answer with its corresponding clue. This page will let you review terms and names with your students without having to hunt for the answers on a puzzle grid.
Ways to Use these New Imperialism Puzzle Worksheets
The information included on these puzzles matches what is typically presented in a high school history textbook, but of course if students have internet-capable devices – even their own smart phones, if that works per your school’s policies – they can always augment the textbook with a spot of online research.
These New Imperialism Worksheet puzzles work great for:
• Reviewing key concepts after the text has been read and discussed
• Homework assignments
• Sub plans – even months after imperialism has been taught, you can use these for emergency substitute lesson plans!
• Open-book New Imperialism tests
• New Imperialism fun quizzes
• Group / Cooperative Learning Activities
• History contest activities
These New Imperialism Crossword Puzzles Also Available:
• The Scramble for Africa
• Methods of Imperialism (includes resistance efforts)
• European Imperialism in the Muslim World
• The British in India
• British Empire Dominions: Canada
• British Empire Dominions: Australia and New Zealand
• British Empire Dominions: Ireland
• United States Imperialism
• The Spanish-American War
• Imperialism in Southeast Asia and the Pacific
Teacher Convenience Features in these New Imperialism Puzzle Worksheets
This New Imperialism Puzzle includes a variety of options designed to give teachers instant options. Designed for differentiated learning, each topic includes two puzzles versions so that two difficulty levels can be provided. First you will see a standard presentation with just the crossword grid and the lists of clues. On the very next page, however, you will see a “basic” version of the same puzzle. This one includes a word bank so that students who need more guided assistance can also succeed on the puzzles, learning along the way.
The answer key is also designed for teacher convenience. First you will see the puzzle grid filled in with the answers. This page also includes the clues for teacher reference. On the next answer page, you’ll find a handy table that pairs up each answer with its corresponding clue. This page will let you review terms and names with your students without having to hunt for the answers on a puzzle grid.
Ways to Use these New Imperialism Puzzle Worksheets
The information included on these puzzles matches what is typically presented in a high school history textbook, but of course if students have internet-capable devices – even their own smart phones, if that works per your school’s policies – they can always augment the textbook with a spot of online research.
These New Imperialism Worksheet puzzles work great for:
• Reviewing key concepts after the text has been read and discussed
• Homework assignments
• Sub plans – even months after imperialism has been taught, you can use these for emergency substitute lesson plans!
• Open-book New Imperialism tests
• New Imperialism fun quizzes
• Group / Cooperative Learning Activities
• History contest activities
These New Imperialism Crossword Puzzles Also Available:
• The Scramble for Africa
• Methods of Imperialism (includes resistance efforts)
• European Imperialism in the Muslim World
• The British in India
• British Empire Dominions: Canada
• British Empire Dominions: Australia and New Zealand
• British Empire Dominions: Ireland
• United States Imperialism
• The Spanish-American War
• Imperialism in Southeast Asia and the Pacific
Teacher Convenience Features in these New Imperialism Puzzle Worksheets
This New Imperialism Puzzle includes a variety of options designed to give teachers instant options. Designed for differentiated learning, each topic includes two puzzles versions so that two difficulty levels can be provided. First you will see a standard presentation with just the crossword grid and the lists of clues. On the very next page, however, you will see a “basic” version of the same puzzle. This one includes a word bank so that students who need more guided assistance can also succeed on the puzzles, learning along the way.
The answer key is also designed for teacher convenience. First you will see the puzzle grid filled in with the answers. This page also includes the clues for teacher reference. On the next answer page, you’ll find a handy table that pairs up each answer with its corresponding clue. This page will let you review terms and names with your students without having to hunt for the answers on a puzzle grid.
Ways to Use these New Imperialism Puzzle Worksheets
The information included on these puzzles matches what is typically presented in a high school history textbook, but of course if students have internet-capable devices – even their own smart phones, if that works per your school’s policies – they can always augment the textbook with a spot of online research.
These New Imperialism Worksheet puzzles work great for:
• Reviewing key concepts after the text has been read and discussed
• Homework assignments
• Sub plans – even months after imperialism has been taught, you can use these for emergency substitute lesson plans!
• Open-book New Imperialism tests
• New Imperialism fun quizzes
• Group / Cooperative Learning Activities
• History contest activities
These New Imperialism Crossword Puzzles Also Available:
• The Scramble for Africa
• Methods of Imperialism (includes resistance efforts)
• European Imperialism in the Muslim World
• The British in India
• British Empire Dominions: Canada
• British Empire Dominions: Australia and New Zealand
• British Empire Dominions: Ireland
• United States Imperialism
• The Spanish-American War
• Imperialism in Southeast Asia and the Pacific
Teacher Convenience Features in these New Imperialism Puzzle Worksheets
This New Imperialism Puzzle includes a variety of options designed to give teachers instant options. Designed for differentiated learning, each topic includes two puzzles versions so that two difficulty levels can be provided. First you will see a standard presentation with just the crossword grid and the lists of clues. On the very next page, however, you will see a “basic” version of the same puzzle. This one includes a word bank so that students who need more guided assistance can also succeed on the puzzles, learning along the way.
The answer key is also designed for teacher convenience. First you will see the puzzle grid filled in with the answers. This page also includes the clues for teacher reference. On the next answer page, you’ll find a handy table that pairs up each answer with its corresponding clue. This page will let you review terms and names with your students without having to hunt for the answers on a puzzle grid.
Ways to Use these New Imperialism Puzzle Worksheets
The information included on these puzzles matches what is typically presented in a high school history textbook, but of course if students have internet-capable devices – even their own smart phones, if that works per your school’s policies – they can always augment the textbook with a spot of online research.
These New Imperialism Worksheet puzzles work great for:
• Reviewing key concepts after the text has been read and discussed
• Homework assignments
• Sub plans – even months after imperialism has been taught, you can use these for emergency substitute lesson plans!
• Open-book New Imperialism tests
• New Imperialism fun quizzes
• Group / Cooperative Learning Activities
• History contest activities
These New Imperialism Crossword Puzzles Also Available:
• The Scramble for Africa
• Methods of Imperialism (includes resistance efforts)
• European Imperialism in the Muslim World
• The British in India
• British Empire Dominions: Canada
• British Empire Dominions: Australia and New Zealand
• British Empire Dominions: Ireland
• United States Imperialism
• The Spanish-American War
• Imperialism in Southeast Asia and the Pacific
Teacher Convenience Features in these New Imperialism Puzzle Worksheets
This New Imperialism Puzzle includes a variety of options designed to give teachers instant options. Designed for differentiated learning, each topic includes two puzzles versions so that two difficulty levels can be provided. First you will see a standard presentation with just the crossword grid and the lists of clues. On the very next page, however, you will see a “basic” version of the same puzzle. This one includes a word bank so that students who need more guided assistance can also succeed on the puzzles, learning along the way.
The answer key is also designed for teacher convenience. First you will see the puzzle grid filled in with the answers. This page also includes the clues for teacher reference. On the next answer page, you’ll find a handy table that pairs up each answer with its corresponding clue. This page will let you review terms and names with your students without having to hunt for the answers on a puzzle grid.
Ways to Use these New Imperialism Puzzle Worksheets
The information included on these puzzles matches what is typically presented in a high school history textbook, but of course if students have internet-capable devices – even their own smart phones, if that works per your school’s policies – they can always augment the textbook with a spot of online research.
These New Imperialism Worksheet puzzles work great for:
• Reviewing key concepts after the text has been read and discussed
• Homework assignments
• Sub plans – even months after imperialism has been taught, you can use these for emergency substitute lesson plans!
• Open-book New Imperialism tests
• New Imperialism fun quizzes
• Group / Cooperative Learning Activities
• History contest activities
These New Imperialism Crossword Puzzles Also Available:
• The Scramble for Africa
• Methods of Imperialism (includes resistance efforts)
• European Imperialism in the Muslim World
• The British in India
• British Empire Dominions: Canada
• British Empire Dominions: Australia and New Zealand
• British Empire Dominions: Ireland
• United States Imperialism
• The Spanish-American War
• Imperialism in Southeast Asia and the Pacific
Teacher Convenience Features in these New Imperialism Puzzle Worksheets
This New Imperialism Puzzle includes a variety of options designed to give teachers instant options. Designed for differentiated learning, each topic includes two puzzles versions so that two difficulty levels can be provided. First you will see a standard presentation with just the crossword grid and the lists of clues. On the very next page, however, you will see a “basic” version of the same puzzle. This one includes a word bank so that students who need more guided assistance can also succeed on the puzzles, learning along the way.
The answer key is also designed for teacher convenience. First you will see the puzzle grid filled in with the answers. This page also includes the clues for teacher reference. On the next answer page, you’ll find a handy table that pairs up each answer with its corresponding clue. This page will let you review terms and names with your students without having to hunt for the answers on a puzzle grid.
Ways to Use these New Imperialism Puzzle Worksheets
The information included on these puzzles matches what is typically presented in a high school history textbook, but of course if students have internet-capable devices – even their own smart phones, if that works per your school’s policies – they can always augment the textbook with a spot of online research.
These New Imperialism Worksheet puzzles work great for:
• Reviewing key concepts after the text has been read and discussed
• Homework assignments
• Sub plans – even months after imperialism has been taught, you can use these for emergency substitute lesson plans!
• Open-book New Imperialism tests
• New Imperialism fun quizzes
• Group / Cooperative Learning Activities
• History contest activities
These New Imperialism Crossword Puzzles Also Available:
• The Scramble for Africa
• Methods of Imperialism (includes resistance efforts)
• European Imperialism in the Muslim World
• The British in India
• British Empire Dominions: Canada
• British Empire Dominions: Australia and New Zealand
• British Empire Dominions: Ireland
• United States Imperialism
• The Spanish-American War
• Imperialism in Southeast Asia and the Pacific
40-problem cloze viewing worksheet, crossword puzzle review designed for differentiated learning, and helpful teaching aids to assist you as you lead your students through a fun and engaging review of U.S. history as told through key Supreme Court cases that clearly show the various eras the nation has experienced!
This video activity packet is intended for use with the excellent PBS series The Supreme Court. The series consists of four episodes, each lasting an hour. Through watching all four episodes, students will be explore in chronological order the entire history of the Supreme Court up through the early 21st century. The program first aired on PBS in 2007 but will remain relevant for many, many years to come!
What This PBS The Supreme Court Episode 1 Worksheet Packet Includes:
• Comprehensive fill-in worksheet with 40 problems: All problems are presented in video order so that students can follow along. Doing the worksheet as they watch requires students to pay close attention to all narration so they can “catch” the next problem coming up. This leads to higher student engagement with the video and more learning!
• Student answer sheet: The student worksheet is formatted to discourage students from writing directly on their copies. This way, teachers can make one class set and use it for years, saving them both time and paper! Students can write on their own paper, of course, but using the included answer sheet will facilitate super-fast grading since it will guarantee that student answers “line up” perfectly with the answer key.
• Answer key for fast grading: This key perfectly matches the student answer sheet so that teachers can correct 3, 5, or even more papers at once should they choose – just spread them out carefully so all student pages line up with the key, and you’ll be able to correct student work in nothing flat!
• Answer key for going over answers with the class: Instead of grading the papers yourself, you can have students grade themselves or each other with this key. Instead of just reading out the right answer, you can make the “correcting phase” a learning/review experience by reading students the whole sentence they were looking at during viewing, pausing when the answer appears to let the class or selected students supply the correct answer. This lets students hear the key sentences again, helping to reinforce key concepts and information!
• Teacher reference materials: Included is a list of all the laws and court cases discussed during the episode, as well as a full transcript of the episode’s narration in case you want to quickly review what the program had to say on a particular topic.
• Crossword puzzle activity: Differentiated for basic and advanced learners; 28 words & clues!
37-problem cloze viewing worksheet, crossword puzzle review designed for differentiated learning, and helpful teaching aids to assist you as you lead your students through a fun and engaging review of U.S. history as told through key Supreme Court cases that clearly show the various eras the nation has experienced!
This video activity packet is intended for use with the excellent PBS series The Supreme Court. The series consists of four episodes, each lasting an hour. Through watching all four episodes, students will be explore in chronological order the entire history of the Supreme Court up through the early 21st century. The program first aired on PBS in 2007 but will remain relevant for many, many years to come!
What This PBS The Supreme Court Episode 2 Worksheet Packet Includes:
• Comprehensive fill-in worksheet with 37 problems: All problems are presented in video order so that students can follow along. Doing the worksheet as they watch requires students to pay close attention to all narration so they can “catch” the next problem coming up. This leads to higher student engagement with the video and more learning!
• Student answer sheet: The student worksheet is formatted to discourage students from writing directly on their copies. This way, teachers can make one class set and use it for years, saving them both time and paper! Students can write on their own paper, of course, but using the included answer sheet will facilitate super-fast grading since it will guarantee that student answers “line up” perfectly with the answer key.
• Answer key for fast grading: This key perfectly matches the student answer sheet so that teachers can correct 3, 5, or even more papers at once should they choose – just spread them out carefully so all student pages line up with the key, and you’ll be able to correct student work in nothing flat!
• Answer key for going over answers with the class: Instead of grading the papers yourself, you can have students grade themselves or each other with this key. Instead of just reading out the right answer, you can make the “correcting phase” a learning/review experience by reading students the whole sentence they were looking at during viewing, pausing when the answer appears to let the class or selected students supply the correct answer. This lets students hear the key sentences again, helping to reinforce key concepts and information!
• Teacher reference materials: Included is a list of all the laws and court cases discussed during the episode, as well as a full transcript of the episode’s narration in case you want to quickly review what the program had to say on a particular topic.
• Crossword puzzle activity: Differentiated for basic and advanced learners; 27 words & clues!
Instructions, lesson plan, and easy to use worksheet to help students track information and analyze the proceedings of the Senate during confirmation hearings for cabinet posts and Supreme Court justices. Helps teachers easily use video primary source footage in government, current events, and U.S. history classes!
The Nitty-Gritty
Here's how this Senate confirmation hearing worksheet works:
• Students are asked to fill out the nominee, the position sought, the hearing context (full Senate? Specific committee instead?) and the date of the hearing.
• Students wait for a question, then summarize it briefly.
• Students determine if the question is fair to the nominee, and also if it is a valid question -- one which is appropriate to ask. They simply check off yes or no to this issue, since minimal writing means more attention can be paid to listening to the video feed.
• Students listen to the nominee's answer and decide if they think the nominee should or should not be confirmed based on that single answer.
• Students write comments as needed to explain their perspectives about questions or answers.
That's all there is to it!
A Class Lesson Plan for Watching a Confirmation Hearing
My own usage of the worksheet looks approximately like this:
• Briefly orient students to activity. Pass out worksheets.
• Watch approx. 30 minutes of a confirmation hearing while students view with me and fill out their worksheets.
• During the 30 minutes, hit pause or mute on the hearing as needed to clarify points for the class or ask them for feedback. After an interesting Q&A (typically 8 or 10 minutes of coverage), I might debrief with the class before resuming. On the other hand, I might wait until the 30 minutes are over and then debrief the students.
• To debrief, I ask questions like this: Who thought the question wasn't fair or valid? Explain why you think that.... Who would confirm the nominee based on the last answer? Why? Who would refuse to confirm? Why?
• I've found in my years of teaching that students in government really want to discuss issues and put forth their own views. When we debrief a confirmation hearing, I usually get a lot of participation and engagement, sometimes even from students who don't usually volunteer to speak in class!
27-problem cloze viewing worksheet, crossword puzzle review designed for differentiated learning, and helpful teaching aids to assist you as you lead your students through a fun and engaging review of U.S. history as told through key Supreme Court cases that clearly show the various eras the nation has experienced!
This video activity packet is intended for use with the excellent PBS series The Supreme Court. The series consists of four episodes, each lasting an hour. Through watching all four episodes, students will be explore in chronological order the entire history of the Supreme Court up through the early 21st century. The program first aired on PBS in 2007 but will remain relevant for many, many years to come!
What This PBS The Supreme Court Episode 3 Worksheet Packet Includes:
• Comprehensive fill-in worksheet with 27 problems: All problems are presented in video order so that students can follow along. Doing the worksheet as they watch requires students to pay close attention to all narration so they can “catch” the next problem coming up. This leads to higher student engagement with the video and more learning!
• Student answer sheet: The student worksheet is formatted to discourage students from writing directly on their copies. This way, teachers can make one class set and use it for years, saving them both time and paper! Students can write on their own paper, of course, but using the included answer sheet will facilitate super-fast grading since it will guarantee that student answers “line up” perfectly with the answer key.
• Answer key for fast grading: This key perfectly matches the student answer sheet so that teachers can correct 3, 5, or even more papers at once should they choose – just spread them out carefully so all student pages line up with the key, and you’ll be able to correct student work in nothing flat!
• Answer key for going over answers with the class: Instead of grading the papers yourself, you can have students grade themselves or each other with this key. Instead of just reading out the right answer, you can make the “correcting phase” a learning/review experience by reading students the whole sentence they were looking at during viewing, pausing when the answer appears to let the class or selected students supply the correct answer. This lets students hear the key sentences again, helping to reinforce key concepts and information!
• Teacher reference materials: Included is a list of all the laws and court cases discussed during the episode, as well as a full transcript of the episode’s narration in case you want to quickly review what the program had to say on a particular topic.
• Crossword puzzle activity: Differentiated for basic and advanced learners; 25 words & clues!
TEACH WITH HUMOR USING U.S. HISTORY CRASH COURSE!
Few classroom strategies are as successful as this simple approach: make learning fun! That, or course, is easier said than done, but when it comes to teaching American history content, the YouTube series Crash Course U.S. History is a fantastic place to start.
QUESTION TYPES INCLUDED ON THESE Crash Course U.S. History Worksheets
Some worksheets are free answer.
Some are true/false -- and in the answer key, all false answers are annotated to give additional information.
Some are fill-in-the-blank or cloze format.
The worksheets cycle through these formats in order to keep student interest high, so using the worksheets is a varied experience for them.
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EPISODES INCLUDED IN THESE CRASH COURSE U.S. HISTORY WORKSHEETS
This resource includes a worksheet, a time-stamped worksheet, and a detailed answer key for each episode 1-5 of Crash Course U.S. History:
• The Black Legend, Native Americans, and Spaniards
• When is Thanksgiving?
• The Native Americans and the English
• The Quakers, the Dutch, and the Ladies
• The Seven Years War and the Great Awakening
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TEACH WITH HUMOR USING U.S. HISTORY CRASH COURSE!
Few classroom strategies are as successful as this simple approach: make learning fun! That, or course, is easier said than done, but when it comes to teaching American history content, the YouTube series Crash Course U.S. History is a fantastic place to start.
ABOUT THESE CRASH COURSE U.S. HISTORY WORKSHEETS
Time stamps are provided for each and every question to help students zero in on the answers. If you do not care to provide your students with time stamp information, however, the packet also includes a "questions only" worksheet for each episode.
Each worksheet focuses on a single episode of Crash Course U.S. History and typically contains between 10 and 20 items for students to complete. Worksheets are formatted to fit on one page for easy copying and a detailed answer key is provided for each episode!
QUESTION TYPES INCLUDED:
Some worksheets are free answer.
Some are true/false -- and in the answer key, all false answers are annotated to give additional information.
Some are fill-in-the-blank or cloze format.
The worksheets cycle through these formats in order to keep student interest high, so using the worksheets is a varied experience for them.
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EPISODES INCLUDED IN THESE CRASH COURSE U.S. HISTORY WORKSHEETS
This resource includes a worksheet, a time-stamped worksheet, and a detailed answer key for episodes 6-10 of Crash Course U.S. History:
• Taxes and Smuggling: A Prelude to Revolution
• Who Won the American Revolution
• The Constitution, the Articles of Confederation, and Federalism
• Where Did U.S. Politics Come From? -- Federalists and Democratic-Republicans
• Thomas Jefferson and His Democracy
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What better way to teach, review, and encourage broad learning than to use interactive games in your class? These games are super fun, improved based on student input, and can be played on a Smart Board using Smart Notebook software.
WHAT THESE INTERACTIVE SMART BOARD HISTORY GAMES COVER
About the games -- they all cover the topics of World War I and the Russian Revolution. These games are based on the material in Chapter 8 of Glencoe's World History: Modern Times but of course history is history. These games include the relevant vocabulary such as propaganda, armistice, militarism, etc. You can use these games to teach about Triple Alliance, Triple Entente, Lawrence of Arabia, Czar Nicolas II Lenin, Trotsky, and many other topics no matter what textbook you use! However, if you ARE using the Glencoe text, these games will perfectly coordinate with the chapter listed and really make your lesson planning a snap!
All the games are interactive and many of them are self-checking!
HOW TO USE THESE WWI AND RUSSIAN REVOLUTION HISTORY GAMES
I like to use the games on the Smart Board with a few students at the board at at time while the other watch, and then follow that with a trip to the computer lab where EVERY student can play on an individual computer at his/her own pace. The students learn and retain more via games than via other types of review activities, and they enjoy history and tell others how fun your class is -- it's a win/win teaching strategy.
Some of the games are also very appropriate as "teachable moments" -- the answer is "reparations," so who can tell me more about that? Let's look at that in a little more detail before we continue to the next slide... you get the idea.
The file contains 7 slides full of games. All the games are locked, but people who purchase the file can email me to request the password that will unlock the slides and let you edit the games, customizing them further to your own content, to your heart's content.
Have you ever looked at catalogs and wished that you could find some classroom display materials that would stimulate a lot of thought and discussion about the nature of history itself -- instead of only about a limited topic such as the French Revolution?
Have you wanted to find more mature display materials that would help your high school students feel that they are being treated as reasoning individuals nearing adulthood?
If you are like me, you have decided that a lot of classroom displays for social studies are just too "elementary"-looking for high school students to appreciate. You have probably also longed for some permanent displays that could stay up all year and still be relevant every single day.
The answer: Great Quotes about History
These 48 famous quotations will stimulate thought and discussion even as they challenge students' preconceptions about what history really is, how it gets written, and why it can be interpreted so differently! I find my students looking up at them and studying them during pauses in instruction or when they have seat work to do. They also work as fantastic sponge and transition activities -- particularly if you print them out on a variety of different colors of paper. A great class starter is to challenge students to "find the orange quotation that most closely matches your view, and be prepared to explain why you agree with it."
They can also be used as essay and debate topics, encouraging students all the while to do more than simply learn historical facts, but to reach a deeper understanding as to the role and purpose of history itself.
Apart from any other instructional use, however, they make for a beautiful, relevant, and timeless set of classroom display materials -- these quotations are "evergreen" and will work well with any historical topic.
WHAT YOU WILL GET IN THE ZIP DOWNLOAD FILE:
Since teacher convenience and accessibility is a part of my whole philosophy, the full set contains:
--a .pdf file to make sure that the pages will display as designed even if you lack the font I used
--an editable .rtf file you can customize to suit yourself. I include this since you might want to add to the quotes as you see fit, change the font to an alternate you prefer, or switch away from black text if you have a color printer.