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Elementary teachers can maximize instructional time by interweaving social studies disciplines while fostering inquiry and promoting literacy development.
Type: Journal article
Students will have a greater understanding of distant historical events when they connect them to current issues.
Type: Journal article
In this unit, students examine the reasons various groups traveled westward during the second half of the nineteenth century.
Type: Journal article
Drawing students' attention to the goods they use that come from other countries can be the starting point for authentic geographic inquiries into global trade patterns.
Type: Journal article
The right combination of primary and secondary sources will create an inquiry bridge between disciplinary reading and analytical writing
Type: Journal article
By implementing a few key strategies for incorporating informational texts in the classroom, teachers can make content, texts, and inquiry visually and cognitively accessible to all students.
Type: Journal article
The author describes the contribution of the C3 Literacy Collaborative (C3LC) to the strengthening of social studies teaching and learning.
Type: Journal article
Students can learn a lot about specific U.S. presidents and their presidencies by researching presidential proclamations, such as the one that created Thanksgiving Day or the pardoning of Nixon.
Type: Journal article
Studying the Supreme Court decision that established the right of minors to have attorneys in juvenile court is an excellent way to engage students in the study of the Sixth Amendment.
Type: Journal article
Playwright Lillian Hellman's featured letter to the House Un-American Activities Committee as it investigated Hollywood during the Cold War can launch an interesting lesson on the protections of the Fifth Amendment.
Type: Journal article