Close Read Analyzing Uncle Tom’s Cabin
By History Guru
Let’s face it, close reading isn’t often a skill that comes naturally. When our students get a new reading assignment, their first instinct is often to race to the finish line rather than engage deeply with a text. Getting students to slow down, engage with the text in different ways, and reflect as they read are challenges for every teacher, and are the goals of close reading. They’re also at the heart of the Common Core English Language Arts standards. There’s no magic way to turn your class into top-notch readers overnight, but there are specific close reading skills you can teach that will help your students now and down the line. This Close Reading includes a Primary Resource excerpt from "Uncle Toms Cabin" by Harriet Beecher Stowe. It breaks down the vocab used and gives teacher lead questions, student creation of questions, as well as a summary. We all know that it’s not enough to just understand what a text says. Close readers not only grasp an author’s message, but they also take a look under the hood, so to speak.
The Temperance Movement Close Reading {History Guru}
By History Guru
Determining the feelings and emotions of moments in history through comics and propaganda is a great way to explain events to students. This close read is going over exactly that for the Temperance Movement. This will break down vocab, references, and context clues. This could easily be a simple DBQ or an in-depth close read opportunity for either a US History class or a Reading/ ELA course.
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MesoAmerica Bundle: Inca, Maya, & Aztec {History Guru}
By History Guru
Bundle:
ACTIVITIES, BELLWORK/ BELLRINGERS, GUIDED READINGS, LEARNING GOAL CHART, DBQ’S, READING STRATEGIES, VOCAB, & MUCH MORE
Standards:
SS.6.W.2.10 Emergence of advanced civilizations in Meso and South America;
SS.6.W.2.3 Identify the characteristics of civilization.
Civilizations:
-Inca
-Maya
-Aztecs
Readings on:
-MesoAmerica
-Human Sacrifice
-Farming
-Culture
-Pyramids
-Explorers
-Etc.
Activities on:
-Religion
-Games
-Calendars
-Explorers
-Etc.
DBQ's on:
-Farming
-Lifestyle
-Explorers
-Human Sacrifice
-Etc
Learning Goal: Students will be able to describe the emergence of advanced civilizations in Meso and South America.
Essential Question: How were the civilizations in Meso and South America similar to Mesopotamia, Egypt, India, and China?
Unit: Objectives:
A. I can define absolute monarchy. (SS.6.W.2.10)
B. I can define isthmus. (SS.6.W.2.10)
C. I can define maize. (SS.6.W.2.10)
D. I can describe how were the civilizations in Meso and South America similar to Mesopotamia, Egypt, India, and China? (SS.6.W.2.10)
E. I can describe the Emergence of advanced civilizations in Meso and South America. (SS.6.W.2.10)
F. I can connect the relationship of physical geography to ancient river valley civilizations to MesoAmerica. (SS.6.G.2.3)
G. I can Compare the Aztecs and Incan civilizations. (SS.6.W.2.10)
H. I can Analyze the impact European colonization in the Americas had on the indigenous populations in the Americas and West Africa. (SS.6.W.2.10)
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Close Readings and DBQs for US History
By History Guru
These units are focused on close reading in history/social studies, primarily in the discipline of history, and using text-dependent questions to help students gain a deeper understanding of informational texts. Unit 3 will offer suggestions for how to implement FL CCSS in the other related disciplines of civics, economics, and geography. Why Close Reading Now? I wear a variety of professional hats—Department Head, Social Studies Coach, Youth In Government Advisor, Interactive Notebook Team member for the District, Chromebook Leader, tech Leader, School Based Leadership Team, AVID Tutor, and most of all Teacher. To keep myself honest (and humble), I spend a lot of time in classrooms watching kids and teachers at work. During the past few years, I've observed a transformation in the teaching of reading from an approach that measured readers' successful understanding of text through lengthy packets of comprehension questions to one that requires students to think about their thinking, activating their "good reader" strategies. The National Assessment of Educational Progress even made one of those strategies—making reader/text connections—a thinking strand within its framework (National Assessment Governing Board, 2002). For a long while, this approach looked ideal. What could be better than creating metacognitive readers? 14 Close reading files for your entire school year! Close Reading Topics Included: English Bill of Rights Mayflower Compact Montesquieu Thomas Paine- Common Sense Join or Die Declaration of Independence- Excerpt Declaration of Independence- Natural Rights Articles of Confederation Federalists Papers #51- Need Government Federalists Papers #51- Separation of Powers Alien & Sedition Act Cane Fight- Preston Brooks and Charles Sumner Analyzing Uncle Toms Cabin Emancipation Proclamation Eli Whitney Whiskey Rebellion Temperance Movement Woodrow Wilson WWI JFK Address Judicial Branch Legislative Branch Foreign Relations Paying for Government Power of Government
SOAP 1775 Colonial Newspaper Primary Source {History Guru}
By History Guru
SS.8.A.3.2 Explain American colonial reaction to British policy from 1763 - 1775.
SS.8.A.2.4 Identify the impact of key colonial figures on the economic, political, and social development of the colonies.
This is an anonymous article that was originally published in The Providence Gazette Newspaper in 1775. This article was found in the American Archives
and edited by Peter Force, who collected records from newspapers, state papers, committee papers, and gathered them together in several volumes as
part of forming a documentary history of the American Revolution. However, it is clear that the article is not written by an objective source.
Scholars In Action presents case studies that demonstrate how scholars
interpret different kinds of historical evidence. This newspaper article was published in the Patriot press in 1775 and describes a political demonstration in Providence, Rhode Island, where protesters burned tea and loyalist newspapers. As opposition to British rule grew in the years leading up to the American Revolution, many people in the colonies were forced to take sides. Popular movements such as the "Sons of Liberty" attracted artisans and laborers who sought broad social and political change. Street actions against the British and their economic interests brought ordinary citizens, including women and youth, into the political arena and often spurred greater militancy and radicalism. By 1775, a number of major political protests and clashes with the British had occurred, including the Stamp Act riots, the Boston Massacre, and the Boston Tea Party.
Before you move to the next page, read this newspaper article. How does the article describe the event? Can you tell who participated in the protest? Are the political issues and tensions clear? What is puzzling or unclear?
SOAP (Source, Occasion, Audience, Purpose)
Who/what is the Source?
What person or group produced this document?
Whose perspective is being voiced?
What is the Occasion?
When and where was this evidence created?
What context or situation encouraged the creation of this document?
Who is the Audience?
Who would be expected to see or read this piece of evidence?
What is the Purpose?
What was this document intended to accomplish?
What was its creator’s aim?
Adapted from “Building Success Program: Participant’s Manual” New York, The College Board, 1998. Reading and Thinking in the History Classroom, April 2002. Area 3 History & Cultures Project, UC Davis http://historyproject.ucdavis.edu
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How to get TeachShare credit to use on future purchases:
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Canefight! Preston Brooks and Charles Sumner Close Reading
By History Guru
This close read model on the "Canefight! Preston Brooks and Charles Sumner" from ushistory.org. This model walks students through teacher guided questions, student created questions, vocab, a summary, and an exit question about the Stamp Act. This is great for an ELA, Reading, US History, Government, or Civics class.
Civics Bellwork for the WHOLE YEAR {History Guru}
By History Guru
Civics Bellwork for the WHOLE YEAR
The students will complete the bellwork in a 5 day model. Each day is a scaffolded release of questions targeted at 5 main language arts standards. This allows students to pick apart the important information while meeting their language arts requirements in social studies
18 topics: Including Economics, Enlightenment, Elections, Executive Branch, Legislative Branch, Citizenship, ETC!
Bellwork Procedure
Conversation: There is no talking during Bellwork time. Silently get Bellwork out from the bin & return it silently as well. Quiet/ voices off from entrance into the classroom till last Bellwork is put away.
Help: There should be no talking during this activity, so if you have a question: please raise your hand quietly, wait patiently, & once I can I will answer your question. Please think about the wording of your question before you ask, seeing as this is an assessment.
Activity: Bellwork day 1-4: One question per day.
Bellwork 5: Quiz= do all four questions.
UNREAL: EVERYDAY
Underline the title
Number the sections
Read to understand: mark the text
Eliminate wrong answers
Answer
Look back to double check answers
Movement: 1. Quietly grab your Bellwork from the bin without emptying file folder out; just grab yours.
2. Silently do your Bellwork at your seat.
3. Silently place Bellwork back into the correct file folder.
4. Sit quietly at your seat as we patiently wait for others to finish.
Participation: This is an independent activity. Please look at your paper only and give a full effort. I am checking your understanding/ skills, not someone else’s.
Success:
· UNREAL: __/12 points
· Daily Questions (front): ___/10 points each
· Quiz (back): total of ___/40 points
*Placed into Quizizz on Day 5 together __/ 80 points total
· Efficiency: Smart Goal of 80% or above
SS.7.C.1.1, SS.7.C.1.2, SS.7.C.2.1, SS.7.C.2.2, SS.7.C.3.1, SS.7.C.3.3, SS.7.C.3.12, SS.7.C.3.3 & SS.7.C.3.6 etc etc
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Check out samples on my Instagram: @HistoryGuruTeachShare
Customer Tips:
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I value your feedback greatly as it helps me determine which products are most valuable for your classroom so I can create more for you. If you have any concerns or any of my resources are not what you expected, please contact me first before leaving feedback so I can have a chance to fix it for you! You can DM or follow me at Follow me on Instagram: @HistoryGuruTeachShare
How to get TeachShare credit to use on future purchases:
• Please go to your My Purchases page (you may need to login). Beside each purchase you'll see a Provide Feedback button. Simply click it and you will be taken to a page where you can give a quick rating and leave a short comment for the product. Each time you give feedback, TeachShare gives you feedback credits that you use to lower the cost of your future purchases.
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Close Read Analyzing Woodrow Wilson's "Fourteen Points" Speech
By History Guru
Let’s face it, close reading isn’t often a skill that comes naturally. When our students get a new reading assignment, their first instinct is often to race to the finish line rather than engage deeply with a text. Getting students to slow down, engage with the text in different ways, and reflect as they read are challenges for every teacher, and are the goals of close reading. They’re also at the heart of the Common Core English Language Arts standards. There’s no magic way to turn your class into top-notch readers overnight, but there are specific close reading skills you can teach that will help your students now and down the line. This Close Reading includes a Primary Resource excerpt from Woodrow Wilson's "Fourteen Points" Speech, January 8th, 1918. It breaks down the vocab used and gives teacher lead questions, student creation of questions, as well as a summary. We all know that it’s not enough to just understand what a text says. Close readers not only grasp an author’s message, but they also take a look under the hood, so to speak.
Ancient Rome Bundle with Reading Strategies, Foldables, and more {History Guru}
By History Guru
When in Rome....
BUNDLE:
ACTIVITIES, BELLWORK/ BELLRINGERS, GUIDED READINGS, DBQ’S, READING STRATEGIES, VOCAB, & MUCH MORE
Inside this complete Ancient Rome unit bundle you will find the items below and so much more:
*Reading Bellwork on Ancient Rome's Empire and Entertainment.
*Guided Readings with Close Read Strategies.
* 10 DBQ's on Roman Law - The Twelve Tables, Comparing Governments, Art, Language, Literatures, etc.
* Close Readings on Cesar, Romulus and Remus, Roman Baths, Roman Lifestyle, Republic to Empire, Augustus (Octavian), etc.
*Worksheets and organizers on the Roman Republic, Emperors, the hierarchy system, vocab, reading comprehension, and much more.
*Foldables on Vocab and lifestyles.
*I have, Who has? to check comprehension.
Standards:
SS.6.W.3.11
Explain the transition from Roman Republic to empire and Imperial Rome, and compare Roman life and culture under each one.
SS.6.W.3.8
Determine the impact of significant figures associated with ancient Rome.
SS.6.E.3.3
Describe traditional economies (Egypt, Greece, Rome, Kush) and elements of those economies that led to the rise of a merchant class and trading partners.
SS.6.W.3.15
Explain the reasons for the gradual decline of the Western Roman Empire after the Pax Romana
Check out samples on my Instagram: @HistoryGuruTeachShare
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I value your feedback greatly as it helps me determine which products are most valuable for your classroom so I can create more for you. If you have any concerns or any of my resources are not what you expected, please contact me first before leaving feedback so I can have a chance to fix it for you! You can DM or follow me at Follow me on Instagram: @HistoryGuruTeachShare
How to get TeachShare credit to use on future purchases:
• Please go to your My Purchases page (you may need to login). Beside each purchase you'll see a Provide Feedback button. Simply click it and you will be taken to a page where you can give a quick rating and leave a short comment for the product. Each time you give feedback, TeachShare gives you feedback credits that you use to lower the cost of your future purchases.
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