SS.7.C.2.11 Propaganda DBQ & Freebies- History Guru
By History Guru
DBQ Activity: Image Analysis
Propaganda Poster from 1917.
Students will walk through a one page guided Document Based Questioning activity over the use of propaganda using a primary source.
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.
Check out samples on my Instagram: @HistoryGuruTeachShare
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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.
By History Guru
Resource for SS.7.C.1.3 Describe how English policies and responses to colonial concerns led to the writing of the Declaration of Independence. This close read model on an Excerpt from Benjamin Franklin’s Testimony Against the Stamp Act (1766). 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.