Library of Congress
The Library of Congress offers a large selection of detailed lesson plans and other classroom materials for teachers to easily take advantage of. Simply browse or search by keyword!
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Password Reset If you are unable to login, and password reset did not help, please create a helpdesk ticket via email or phone (330.926.3900).
The Library of Congress offers a large selection of detailed lesson plans and other classroom materials for teachers to easily take advantage of. Simply browse or search by keyword!
EDSITEment offers free resources for teachers, students, and parents searching for high-quality K-12 humanities education materials. All websites linked to EDSITEment have been reviewed for content, design, and educational impact in the classroom. They cover a wide range of humanities subjects, from American history to literature, world history and culture, civics, language, art, architecture, and archaeology, and have been judged by humanities specialists to be of high intellectual quality.
Primary-source based, ready to use lesson plans for history, government, and civics classrooms.
World History Encyclopedia’s Teaching Materials page is a collection of educational resources designed to support the teaching of world history. It provides a wealth of materials, including articles, worksheets, images, maps, and large teaching bundles that cover various historical periods and topics.
iCivics is a resource website that houses hundreds of lessons, activities, games, and more for Social Studies Classrooms. Many of the resources come with complete teacher guides, printable activities/worksheets, and activities in Kami and Nearpod. Visiting the resource library will allow you to search by topic, content type, length of time, and more.
Race to Ratify is a game created by iCivics, it puts students into the year 1787 and has them explore core concepts and meet important people that surrounded the Constitutional Ratification debate. It is playable in the web browser or Apple and Android devices. The game is also offered with optional activities and detailed lesson plans.
The Federal Reserve is the Central Bank of the United States. Did you know they have a huge library of learning resources? From their website, you can search by grade level, topic, standards, and more to find meticulously detailed lesson plans, videos, activities, and more! It’s not all Financial Literacy either, they also have resources for History, Government, Economics, and Career Exploration.
The OER Project is a free resource website for History teachers. It includes complete History courses that feature a Teacher Guide for getting started, detailed lessons, activities, videos, and practice questions. Teachers can use any individual resources they want, they do not have to use the entire course
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