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Smithsonian Institution, Washington, DC. – 2003
The monetary system in the U.S. colonies was notable because it was based on thin air. The earliest forms of U.S. money were commodities, items that were not just tokens of wealth but had some intrinsic value. In addition to adopting the Indians' use of wampum and furs, the colonists used crops and European-made items such as nails. In 1775, the…
Descriptors: Heritage Education, Intermediate Grades, Middle Schools, Monetary Systems
Weidman, Lisa K. Menendez – 2002
This teaching guide consists of a biography of Jacqueline Bouvier Kennedy (Onassis), the wife of President John F. Kennedy, the 35th President of the United States and questions for students to answer after reading the biography. The guide contains activities, such as playing the role of an inquiring camera girl (Mrs. Kennedy's first job in…
Descriptors: Biographies, Curriculum Enrichment, Intermediate Grades, Presidents of the United States
National Archives and Records Administration, Washington, DC. – 2002
The United States subscribes to the original premise of the framers of the Constitution that the way to safeguard against tyranny is to separate the powers of government among three branches so that each branch checks the other two. At no time in the 20th century was the devotion to that principle more vigorously evoked than in 1937, when…
Descriptors: Academic Standards, Constitutional Law, Federal Government, National Standards
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Singer, Alan, Ed. – Social Science Docket, 2002
This publication opens with a statement by the 2001-2002 National Council for the Social Studies (NCSS) President Adrian Davis on the horrific events of September 11, 2001. Davis said that social studies educators need to reinforce the ideals of tolerance, equity, and social justice against a backlash of antidemocratic sentiments and hostile…
Descriptors: Black History, Elementary Secondary Education, Foreign Countries, Geography
Lamberson, Wesley; Lange, L. S.; Sutter, Jason; Sutter, Gail – 2001
This curriculum/activity guide is designed for use by teachers and other educators who live within trip distance of Homestead National Monument of America in Nebraska. However, some activities in the guide are designed for the classroom, and some are more effective if they are conducted outdoors; but many can be completed at school. The activity…
Descriptors: Curriculum Enrichment, Heritage Education, Intermediate Grades, Middle Schools
Nostbakken, Faith – 2002
Although "Othello" has been one of William Shakespeare's most popular plays, its performance history has been marked with risk and tension because of the play's focus on racial prejudice, gender conflict, and sexuality. The controversies surrounding conflicting attitudes toward race and religion, love and marriage, and war and the…
Descriptors: Class Activities, Classics (Literature), Drama, English Literature
Wyoming Univ., Laramie. American Heritage Center. – 1999
This lesson, for grades 7-12, correlates with Era 8, Standard 3c of the National History Standards for United States History: "evaluate the internment of Japanese Americans during World War II and assess the implication for civil liberties." The lesson provides background on the internment of Japanese Americans during the war and…
Descriptors: Civil Liberties, Japanese Americans, Primary Sources, Relocation
Blackburn, Marc K. – 1999
This lesson is based on the National Register of Historic Places registration file, "Pioneer Square Historic District," and other sources about Seattle (Washington) and the Klondike Gold Rush. The lesson helps students understand how Seattle exemplified the prosperity of the Klondike Gold Rush after 1897 when news of a gold strike in…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Historic Sites, Local History, Primary Sources
Smardz, Karolyn, Ed.; Smith, Shelley J., Ed. – 2000
This guidebook outlines the culture and structure of schools and shows how archaeologists can work with teachers, curriculum developers, museum professionals, and park rangers to develop useful programs in archaeological education both in the classroom and in informal settings. The essays strive to provide multiple examples of exemplary…
Descriptors: Ancient History, Anthropology, Archaeology, Cross Cultural Studies
Percoco, James A. – 2000
Augustus Saint-Gaudens (1848-1907) was a renowned 19th-century U.S. sculptor whose artistic training and talent ensured his place in Gilded Age society. In 1885, he was drawn to Cornish, New Hampshire, to find a place where he could model his latest commission, a statue of Abraham Lincoln. He and his wife established a summer home and studio in an…
Descriptors: Artists, Elementary Secondary Education, Heritage Education, Historic Sites
Eckard, Chris – 2000
The original Little Kinnakeet Lifesaving Station (North Carolina) is a reminder of the stations constructed by the U.S. Lifesaving Service during its 44-year existence (1871-1915). The original station building was among the first seven constructed on North Carolina's treacherous Outer Banks in 1874. A larger building was added in 1904, and the…
Descriptors: Built Environment, Geography, Heritage Education, Historic Sites
Singleton, Laurel R., Ed. – Source: A Newsletter of Practical Teaching Ideas for American Memory Users, 2002
This publication contains teaching ideas generated by classroom teachers. For grades K-5, newsletter editor Laurel R. Singleton explains how students can explore the quilt as a metaphor used in literature to represent American values and ideals (the lesson is adaptable for all age groups). For grades 5-8, social studies teacher Claire McCaffery…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Metaphors, Photographs, Popular Culture
Massachusetts Univ., Lowell. Tsongas Industrial History Center. – 1998
This lesson, which is based on a field trip to Lowell, Massachusetts, focuses on Lowell's preeminence as a textile weaving center beginning late in the 18th century. The lesson offers advice for managing the tour group, provides historical background on Lowell, the textile industry, and the United States and the world in general at the time, and…
Descriptors: Capitalism, Field Trips, Heritage Education, Historic Sites
Massachusetts Univ., Lowell. Tsongas Industrial History Center. – 1999
This field trip program, three 45-minute hands-on workshops and a 30-45-minute interpretive tour, provides students with the opportunity to explore the many ways that the Industrial Revolution significantly changed modes of U.S. work, lifestyle, and land use. The workshops complement one another by exploring different aspects of these changes.…
Descriptors: Cultural Context, Field Trips, Heritage Education, Historic Sites
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Mings, Robert C. – Journal of Geography, 1982
Using the U.S. Bureau of the Census's National Travel Survey as the primary data source, the exercises described will help high school or college level students develop basic geographic skills, including data interpretation, map construction, and spatial analysis. They will also familiarize students with broad patterns of recreation travel. (RM)
Descriptors: Cartography, Census Figures, Data Analysis, Geography Instruction
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