TPT
Total:
$0.00

Percent Increase and Decrease Quiz

4+ results
Filters
Audience
Preview of Women’s History Quiz & Disenfranchisement Lesson

Women’s History Quiz & Disenfranchisement Lesson

Created by
Katrina Daigle
Women’s History Quiz & Lesson Plan – Systemic Disenfranchisement of Women (Paper + Digital)Description:Make women’s history real, relevant, and reflective with this ready-to-teach quiz and mini-lesson that exposes the shocking and often-overlooked legal barriers women have faced in modern U.S. history. More than just a quiz—this is a complete lesson with a warm-up, historical context, and meaningful student reflection built-in. Students will learn about systemic disenfranchisement—like how wom
Preview of AP Gov't Unit 2 (2.4–2.7) Bundle Executive Roles, Powers, Oversight, & Com.

AP Gov't Unit 2 (2.4–2.7) Bundle Executive Roles, Powers, Oversight, & Com.

Created by
Katrina Daigle
Help your students master the Executive Branch with this AP U.S. Government and Politics Unit 2.4–2.7 Bundle. Aligned to College Board standards, this resource covers the president’s roles and powers, checks on the executive, communication with the public, and policy implementation.Designed for busy AP teachers, this bundle provides ready-to-use lessons, engaging activities, and AP-style assessments that build both content knowledge and exam skills.Use it for direct instruction, guided pra
Preview of Nixon & Watergate: Power, Corruption & Accountability | DBQ Primary Sources

Nixon & Watergate: Power, Corruption & Accountability | DBQ Primary Sources

What happens when the president breaks the law — and who stops him? This three-day primary source mini-unit examines the Watergate scandal through the lens of journalism and democratic accountability, tracing the story from the 1972 break-in through Nixon's resignation and asking the question that still matters today: what does it take for a democracy to hold its most powerful leader accountable? Built for mixed classrooms with AP/Advanced extension questions throughout. Designed as Part 3 of t
Preview of The Evolution of the Electoral College

The Evolution of the Electoral College

Help students move beyond memorization and into historical thinking and civic analysis with this engaging, inquiry-based lesson on the Electoral College. In this activity, students analyze how the Electoral College was originally designed, how it changed with the 12th Amendment, and how it functions in modern U.S. elections. Designed for grades 7–12, this resource is flexible, accessible, and perfect for introducing constitutional structures while building critical thinking skills. Students work
Showing 1-4 of 4+ results