Students will analyze multiple sources to determine which of the causes of …
Students will analyze multiple sources to determine which of the causes of the Civil War each source best supports. Students will support their choices with evidence from the source and their own understanding of the causes of the Civil War.
Students will use their knowledge and understanding of the lives and contributions …
Students will use their knowledge and understanding of the lives and contributions of Harriet Tubman, Frederick Douglass, and Abraham Lincoln with focus on the Civil War era by reconstructing key aspects of their lives that connect them to the Civil War.
Students are asked to use the provided source material to answer the …
Students are asked to use the provided source material to answer the central historical question: Why did African Americans join the Union Army during the Civil War?
Students will select a person, persons, or event from the Pre-war to …
Students will select a person, persons, or event from the Pre-war to Civil War era that had a significant impact on African American and United States history. They will design a monument or a memorial and create a proposal for it.
This teaching guide and activity seeks to introduce primary sources to students …
This teaching guide and activity seeks to introduce primary sources to students so that theyT can understand how to analyze and interpret them to make conclusions about the past. The primary sources the students will analyze are from the John Marshall House’s collection. All of the sources presented, both objects and written, focus on the theme of clothing during the Early Republic (1780-1820), the period in which John Marshall lived. This teaching guide and activity follow the Virginia Standards of Learning from 4th-6th grade, but may be applicable for other grades/ages.
In this activity students will analyze various forms of primary sources, images …
In this activity students will analyze various forms of primary sources, images and text, based on differing accounts of the Boston Massacre. Students will use this information to construct a historically accurate timeline (story) using the website twinery.org.
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