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Preview of Federal Bureaucracy DBQ | Primary Sources & Anchor Charts for U.S. Government

Federal Bureaucracy DBQ | Primary Sources & Anchor Charts for U.S. Government

This DBQ pushes students beyond memorizing agency types and into understanding why bureaucracy is controversial. By analyzing Hamilton, Weber, Jefferson, Reagan, FDR, and LBJ, students see that debates about government size and efficiency aren't new—they're fundamental questions about whether bureaucracy enables government function or threatens liberty and wastes resources. This works especially well when students think bureaucracy debates are modern partisan politics or can't explain why people
Preview of Elections, Parties & Voting | U.S. Government DBQ Nomination Systems

Elections, Parties & Voting | U.S. Government DBQ Nomination Systems

Help students understand how candidates are nominated, how elections function, and why the Electoral College shapes campaign strategy with this Primary Source DBQ. Students analyze six rich excerpts—from Jackson-era caucus critiques to modern swing-state research—supported by guided questions, Anchor Charts, and a clear final writing prompt. What’s Included: Primary Source DBQ – Six excerpts with guided questions and a final synthesis prompt Teacher Key – Complete answers for all document questi
Preview of Fall Equinox Math | Measuring Daylight Hours & Seasonal Patterns | K–12, TEKS

Fall Equinox Math | Measuring Daylight Hours & Seasonal Patterns | K–12, TEKS

Description: Use the Fall Equinox (around September 22) to explore math through daylight patterns, graphs, and functions. Students compare data from different regions and discover how math explains natural cycles. Elementary: Graph daylight hours from 3 cities using pictographs or bar graphs.Middle School: Calculate averages and create double bar graphs comparing hemispheres.High School: Model daylight hours over months with sinusoidal functions, analyzing amplitude, p
Preview of The Matrix Film Scene Analysis | AP Lang Rhetorical Analysis Lesson

The Matrix Film Scene Analysis | AP Lang Rhetorical Analysis Lesson

Created by
LITFlicks
🎬 Teach Rhetorical Analysis Through Film — No Prep Required Engage your students with this high-interest AP Lang lesson using the iconic red pill scene from The Matrix. This resource helps students analyze how cinematic techniques function as rhetoric, making abstract skills more concrete and memorable. Perfect for: AP Lang rhetorical analysis practice Introducing visual rhetoric End-of-year engagement (when students need something fresh!) Bridging film and literary analysis ✨ What’s
Preview of Patriot Day Math | Data Analysis of 9/11 Statistics | K–12, TEKS-Aligned

Patriot Day Math | Data Analysis of 9/11 Statistics | K–12, TEKS-Aligned

Description: This lesson uses Patriot Day (September 11) as a context for practicing data analysis, graphing, and problem solving in a respectful, age-appropriate way. Elementary: Graph small data sets of helpers (firefighters, police, medics) with pictographs or bar graphs.Middle School: Analyze timelines and casualty numbers, calculate percents, and create bar graphs.High School: Work with complex datasets such as rebuilding costs or memorial attendance, modelin
Preview of Constitution Day Math | Numbers in the U.S. Constitution | K–12, TEKS

Constitution Day Math | Numbers in the U.S. Constitution | K–12, TEKS

Description: Celebrate Constitution Day (September 17) by showing students how numbers reveal history! In this activity, learners explore articles, amendments, years, and voting ages through math skills appropriate to their grade level. Elementary: Count branches of government, add articles and amendments, and draw number representations.Middle School: Calculate years between the Constitution and the Bill of Rights, find what fraction of states must ratify amendments, and s
Preview of Fall Equinox Science | Earth’s Tilt & Day/Night Balance | K–12, TEKS-Aligned

Fall Equinox Science | Earth’s Tilt & Day/Night Balance | K–12, TEKS-Aligned

Description: Bring the Fall Equinox to life with this hands-on science lesson where students investigate why day and night are equal and how Earth’s tilt and orbit create seasonal changes. Elementary: Use a globe and flashlight to model sunlight, draw Earth during equinox, and record equal day/night hours.Middle School: Graph daylight hours across seasons and compare equinox vs. solstice.High School: Analyze latitude-based daylight data, calculate Earth’s tilt (23
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