Send your student into a real conversation with history. This 10-page printable guide teaches students to ask specific questions, listen for the story beneath the story, and treat a family member’s memory as the primary source it actually is. Grab the free companion lesson plan for full differentiated assignments in grades K–12.
A 26-page primary source analysis unit exploring how the 1935 Matanuska Colony reflects the shifting role of American government, from Homestead-era individualism to New Deal federal intervention. Includes real, composite, and illustrative sources, each clearly labeled with full transparency notes and verified archive links. Built for grades 6–12.
A 12-page companion tool for the Tuning Fork Thesis Method. Includes seven thesis testing questions with revision direction for each, the “Although A and B, nevertheless C” formula broken down with cross-subject examples, an announcement language guide, a step-by-step revision workflow, a quick diagnostic table, and three level-specific graphic organizers for Levels 1, 2, and 3. Works as a planning tool before drafting, a revision diagnostic, or a conferencing reference.
A 183-page, three-level essay writing curriculum built around one central idea: a strong thesis doesn’t just state a position, it creates tension, holds two competing ideas in balance, and resolves them with a clear argument within a 5 paragraph essay (and any academic paper). Students at every level learn to write with precision, authority, and purpose.
Charlotte didn’t just love Wilbur. She ran a strategic persuasion campaign to save him and now your students will too. A comprehensive 56 page K-5 project-based novel study covering spider science, rhetoric, E.B. White’s craft, and the real cost of friendship. Includes a county fair showcase finale.
A hands-on, differentiated novel study for Louis Sachar’s Holes that connects the story to real desert science, American history, and literary craft. Built for grades 3 through 9, with separate question sets and activities for every grade band. Works in a single afternoon or across a full week.
Teach sophisticated historical thinking through food historiography! This 106-page toolkit shows students grades K-12 how to analyze historical recipes as primary sources revealing economic pressure, daily realities, and the context behind historical decisions.
Includes complete theoretical framework, two ready-to-teach lesson plans (Colonial & Great Depression), grade-level adaptations K-12, student worksheets, assessment rubrics, and flexible implementation for classrooms, homeschools, and co-ops. Uses the Four Lenses framework (Economic, Technological, Social/Cultural, Policy) to develop critical thinking, primary source analysis, and evidence-based argumentation.
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