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Understanding Uncertainty Interactive: Survival in England and Wales
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This tool allows the user to view the rates of survival by year and gender, hazards, behavior and can be sorted on these factors. 

Subject:
History/Social Sciences
Social Sciences
Material Type:
Lesson
Provider:
TeachingWithData.org
Provider Set:
TeachingWithData.org
Author:
Understanding Uncertainty
Date Added:
07/07/2022
The Value of College
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These interactive charts explore the attitudes of the public and of college presidents about the value, cost, quality, mission and payoff of higher education.

Subject:
History/Social Sciences
Social Sciences
Material Type:
Lesson
Provider:
TeachingWithData.org
Provider Set:
TeachingWithData.org
Author:
Pew Research Center
Date Added:
07/07/2022
Voter Turnout in the United States: A Data-Driven Learning Guide
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This is a learning module that uses data to investigate the relationships between voter turnout and demographic characteristics such as race, age, income and education.

Subject:
History/Social Sciences
Social Sciences
Material Type:
Activity/Lab
Provider:
TeachingWithData.org
Provider Set:
TeachingWithData.org
Author:
ICPSR
Date Added:
07/07/2022
WPSA Annual Meeting, 2013
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The WPSA Annual Meeting will be hed on March 28 - 30, 2013, at the Loew's Hotel, Hollywood, CA. The theme for the event is: "The Empire Strkes Back!." Democratic governance, and its triumph over fascism and state-socialism, have long been facilitated by the ability of capitalism to “reform itself” or, more precisely, to reconcile itself to the modest regulation imposed by popular rule. Regulations and reforms established more than a century ago in the Teddy Roosevelt administration, and expanded from time to time in the 40 years that followed, constrained the exploitation of workers, prevented banks from gambling with the economic system, broke up monopolies, restricted unfair labor practices, and established a social safety net, and in so doing provided fertile ground for an unprecedented rate of economic growth, improvement in human conditions, and the establishment of a large and productive middle class. The stability that followed—and the spread or co-occurrence of this approach (with variation and modifications) in the other industrialized democracies of the world—forestalled the emergence of fascism in the U.S. and simultaneously pushed back against the spread of state-socialism in Europe and beyond.Since the passage of the Taft Hartley Act in 1947, the US has seen steady erosion in those protections. Workers in the US and Europe bear a greater and greater burden for the social goods provided by their society and receive fewer and fewer benefits while those who have benefitted most from the triumph of capitalism have begun to knock down the reforms achieved in the 20th Century. Hopes of spreading the improved human condition to the global south have foundered on a reconstructed mercantilist and neo-colonial international trade regime that has resulted in exploitation of workers in lesser-developed nations and vast environmental degradation.Is democracy up to this challenge? Can the free-market global economy again be brought into line with the goals of improving the conditions of humanity? Are our institutions, nation-states, international compacts, and ways of thinking up to this challenge, or will the latter part of the 21st Century more closely resemble the late 19th than the late 20th? While the WPSA welcomes proposals on all political and governmental questions of interest to the discipline, in 2013, we would like to pay particular attention to domestic and international inequality, its causes and its consequences, and whether democratic institutions are up to the task of addressing either.

Subject:
History/Social Sciences
Social Sciences
Material Type:
Lesson
Provider:
TeachingWithData.org
Provider Set:
TeachingWithData.org
Author:
WPSA
Date Added:
07/07/2022
The War on Terror: A Data-Driven Learning Guide
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The goal of this exercise is to consider the impact of the War on Terror in the global arena. We will also learn more about terrorism, generally. Crosstabulations and frequency tables will be used.

Subject:
History/Social Sciences
Social Sciences
Material Type:
Lesson
Provider:
TeachingWithData.org
Provider Set:
TeachingWithData.org
Author:
ICPSR
Date Added:
07/07/2022
We Can Uncover!
Conditional Remix & Share Permitted
CC BY-NC
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Students will explore the enduring legacy of the cultures of enslaved people in Virginia by examining primary sources, engaging the research of Black historians, and connecting to their own experiences, interests, and cultures. Students document their thinking in a graphic organizer for formative assessment.

Subject:
American History
History/Social Sciences
Social Sciences
Virginia History
Material Type:
Lesson
Author:
Woodson Collaborative
Date Added:
04/13/2021
What is an HBCU?
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CC BY-NC
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Students will explore primary and secondary sources to investigate the origin, purposes, and vitality of Historically Black Colleges and Universities.

Subject:
American History
Economics
History/Social Sciences
Social Sciences
Virginia History
Material Type:
Lesson
Author:
Woodson Collaborative
Taylor M. Snow
Date Added:
04/23/2021
What makes up our identities?
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CC BY-NC-SA
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This is a Google Slide presentation designed to be easily adapted by instructors.  Learning Target: I can reflect on the elements of my internal and external world that influence my “identity.”Identity Influence DiscussionSocial Identity ActivityPersonal Identity ActivityTeacher notes throughout are in red! This is a brief slides lesson to introduce the concepts of personal/social identity. This lesson can be a hook into a writing assignment, an independent reading character analysis, or a debate/discussion.

Subject:
English
Social Sciences
Material Type:
Activity/Lab
Author:
Bridget Mariano
Macy Pniewski
Date Added:
12/14/2020
World History I - Compare & Contrast (5 Venn Diagrams)
Unrestricted Use
Public Domain
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Interactive Google Slides - Drag and drop venn diagram activities that can also print off as worksheets. Includes Answer Keys!Venn Diagrams Included:Paleolithic v. Neolithic ErasEgypt v. MesopotamiaHinduism v. BuddhismAthens v. SpartaMayans, Incas, & Aztecs matching 

Subject:
History/Social Sciences
Humanities
Social Sciences
World History
Material Type:
Activity/Lab
Homework/Assignment
Interactive
Author:
Haley Taylor
Date Added:
07/27/2022