Celebrating Read Across America with Studies Weekly
Celebrating Read Across AmericaFeb. 25, 2020 • Studies Weekly At Studies Weekly, we build Social Studies and Science curriculum, but literacy skills are an essential backbone to our work. If…
Celebrating Read Across AmericaFeb. 25, 2020 • Studies Weekly At Studies Weekly, we build Social Studies and Science curriculum, but literacy skills are an essential backbone to our work. If…
Women’s History Month: Women of Color, Women of ChangeFeb. 20, 2020 • Studies Weekly Every year, Women’s History Month is a great opportunity to delve even deeper into history and…
The Secret Lives of Objects: Susan B. Anthony’s Purse of Her OwnFeb. 11, 2020 • Studies Weekly Until the mid-1800s, when women married, they could not open a bank account,…
The Secret Lives of Objects: George Washington’s War TentFeb. 6, 2020 • Studies Weekly The walls of this tent witnessed many of the highs and lows of the Revolutionary War.…
Studies Weekly’s Secret Lives of Objects: Abraham Lincoln’s Stovepipe HatFeb. 4, 2020 • Studies Weekly SI Neg. 95-5528. Date: 1995.The Top Hat, worn by President Abraham Lincoln the night he…
Well-Being Lesson Plan Resources for Teaching with Rosa ParksJan. 23, 2020 • Studies Weekly Rosa Parks stood up for her belief that all humans have equal rights, and her experience…
Guidelines for Teaching the Holocaust Studies WeeklyJan. 16, 2020 • Studies Weekly Holocaust education is the story of people. Each number, statistic, chart, or list depicts an individual — someone’s…
Helping the Next Generation Remember the HolocaustJan. 14, 2020 • Studies Weekly The systemic murder of an ethnic group or people does not begin overnight. It is a long process…
The Secret Lives of Objects: Letter From a Birmingham JailJan. 9, 2020 • Studies Weekly Birmingham, Alabama in 1963 was one of the key turning points for the Civil Rights…
Using Interactive Notebooks with Studies WeeklyNov. 5, 2019 • Studies Weekly Do you use interactive notebooks in your classroom? Interactive notebooks are not new in education circles, but they are…