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.
This lesson introduces children to different ways young people have used the internet to work toward positive social change.
The Roadmap
Learning for Justice
Students will answer the question "How can you make change in your community?" during this activity.
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Autry Museum of the American West
The Share My Lesson team has selected a variety of free lesson plans, educational resources and classroom materials to support educators and parents while celebrating Constitution Day with students.
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AFT Share My Lesson
Comic books are visual literature. This simple cooperative group activity allows students to identify confrontational issues within their own school and then imagine solutions.
The Roadmap
Learning for Justice
Students explore the experiences of Mexican-American farmworkers in the United States and learn about how they – especially through the leadership of Dolores Huerta and the United Farm Workers – worked with others for improvements in pay and working conditions, as well as respect for their civil rights. Students analyze primary sources and then complete a writing assignment to reflect on working with others to help solve a problem.
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Citizen U
Have you ever heard of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.'s "I Have a Dream" speech at the March on Washington? What was his dream for America, who was the man behind those famous words, and why do we celebrate his story every January? Martin's Big Words is an illustrated biography that traces Dr. King's life from his childhood and includes quotes from his writings and speeches. Explore Dr. King's story by reading together and then try some of these fun activities to learn more about him and other brave Americans who worked on the civil rights movement.
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Smithsonian National Museum of American History
In this four-mystery/lesson unit, students will explore the trade of Africans by Europeans by following the narrative of Kossula Cudjo Lewis and exploring primary sources from the Library of Congress and other sources. Mr. Lewis was an African who was taken prisoner when he was 19 years old and traded by the Dahomey to Americans and enslaved in Alabama. He would gain his freedom at the end of the Civil War and help to found Africatown in Alabama. His narrative is central to all four mysteries/lessons in this unit.
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History's Mysteries Historical Inquiry for Elementary Classrooms
Sending a letter to elected officials can be a powerful and personal way to ensure the public's voice is represented in politics, but just how do you get in contact with your representatives? Using primary and secondary sources, this collection explores the power of letters, highlights social justice letters throughout history, and examines activist covers--envelopes--and postage stamps for a cause from the National Postal Museum's collection. Using all of these objects as inspiration, users are encouraged to select a cause of personal concern to them, and send their own letters to elected officials.
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Smithsonian National Postal Museum
Help students understand the historical context and significance of Lincoln's inaugural address through archival documents such as campaign posters, sheet music, vintage photographs and documents. Other resources in EDSITEment-reviewed sites are included to create the same lessons for any President.
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National Endowment for the Humanities
This lesson is an excerpt from the teacher’s guide of One Survivor Remembers, a teaching kit built around the incredible life story of Holocaust survivor Gerda Weissmann Klein.
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Learning for Justice
Students will place a primary source within its historical context to examine how Cold War tensions between the United States and the Soviet Union turned early space exploration into the “Space Race.”
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John F. Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum
The Speak Up Speak Out facilitation guide is a project-based learning curriculum. It enables students to work together as teams to identify community problems, conduct research about the problem and its root causes, and craft innovative solutions that allow students to take tangible action.