Ten lessons have students read and analyze literary texts by Paul Laurence Dunbar and Henry David Thoreau.
Providing complete lesson plans about relevant, high-interest social topics, these convenient curriculum units encourage students to develop critical thinking, reading, speaking, research, and writing skills.
This volume stresses content-based study of important issues through readings and written responses, role plays, and debates.
Topics include removal of Japanese Americans to internment camps, rationing, the writing of Ernie Pyle, women in the workforce, the election of 1944, homefront letters written by women, political cartoons at the war’s end, and the religious leadership of Norman Vincent Peale.
Topics include the Panama Canal, anti-imperialism, Mark Twain and American life, Japanese immigration, world diplomacy, President Roosevelt, minority (anti-lynching) issues, causes of the Spanish-American war, and religion.
This volume develops the skills needed for successful completion of the of the Advanced Placement examination in United States Government and Politics.
Topics include the Arab oil embargo and the energy crisis, Roots, busing in Boston, Vietnamese immigration, detente and SALT, Lieutenant Calley and My Lai, Arthur Ashe, Watergate, the Jonestown massacre, and the Equal Rights Amendment.
Topics include Fulton’s steamboat, Webster’s dictionary, frontier life, French immigration, the Barbary Wars, the Alien and Sedition Acts, the Treaty of Greenville, the Louisiana Purchase, abolitionism and organized religion, and missionary Betsey Stockton in Hawaii.
How can we help you?