The curated resources linked below are an initial sample of the resources coming from a collaborative and rigorous review process with the EAD Content Curation Task Force.
In this interactive episode, KidCitizen uses a historic panoramic map as an object for active inquiry to engage children in wondering about this representation of a place where people live. Students closely observe the geographic features, like rivers, shorelines, and farmland along with its plant life, animal life, and man-made structures. Students collect clues in the researcher journal and use them throughout the adventure. There are a number of pathways for inquiry. Students may apply their geographic and historical thinking strategies to wonder about movement of people or reflect on the unique qualities of the area that define it as a place.
The Roadmap
KidCitizen
A Visual History, 1940–1963: Political Cartoons by Clifford Berryman and Jim Berryman presents 70 political cartoons that invite students to explore American history from the early years of World War II to the civil rights movement. These images, by father-and-son cartoonists Clifford Berryman and Jim Berryman, highlight many significant topics, including WWII and its impact, the Cold War, the space race, the nuclear arms race, and the struggle for school desegregation.
The Roadmap
National Archives Center for Legislative Archives
This video playlist is part of the New-York Historical Society's Academy for American Democracy, a new educational initiative focusing on history and civics education for the sixth grade students.
The Roadmap
New-York Historical Society
This unit invites students to consider the student activism of the Civil Rights Movement and how its lessons apply today.
The Roadmap
The Rhode Island Historical Society
In this lesson, students explore the motives, pressures, and fears that shaped Americans’ responses to Nazism and the humanitarian refugee crisis it provoked during the 1930s and 1940s.
The Roadmap
Facing History and Ourselves
This unit plan deeply explores the motives, pressures, and fears that shaped Americans’ responses to Nazism and the humanitarian refugee crisis it provoked during the 1930s and 1940s. Students will examine why widespread American sympathy for the plight of Jewish refugees never translated into widespread support for prioritizing their rescue.
The Roadmap
Facing History and Ourselves
Learn how the American idea of government evolved from a revolutionary response to monarchy to that of a unified nation. Students will dig into the preambles and introductory text of the Declaration of Independence, Articles of Confederation, and the United States Constitution.
The Roadmap
iCivics, Inc.
Students learn about the duties and powers of the three branches of government, the amendment process, and the role of the Constitution as the supreme law of the land.
The Roadmap
iCivics, Inc.
Go on a virtual field trip to the Museum of the American Revolution with Lauren Tarshis, author of the I Survived... books! You'll go behind the scenes to meet a museum curator and a museum educator, to examine real and replica artifacts, and to learn stories of real people - including kids and teens - who lived during this dynamic time. This program is presented in partnership with Scholastic, Inc.
The Roadmap
Museum of the American Revolution
Beyond the Bubble history assessments gauge students' historical thinking using one or two historical documents.
Stanford History Education Group
Although different in many ways, antisemitism in Nazi Germany during the 1930s and anti-Black racism in Jim Crow-era America deeply affected communities in these countries. While individual experiences and context are unique and it is important to avoid comparisons of suffering, looking at these two places in the same historical period raises critical questions about the impact of antisemitism and racism in the past and present.
The Roadmap
United States Holocaust Memorial Museum
Do you like running things? Branches of Power lets you do something that no one else can: control all three branches of the U.S. government.