Due Dates for upcoming assignments
US History
Upcoming Assessments
WORLD HISTORY
Upcoming Assessments
Classroom Management PowerPoint:
Digital Instructional Resources
Stanford Education Group: https://sheg.stanford.edu
The Stanford History Education Group is an award-winning research and development group that comprises Stanford faculty, staff, graduate students, post-docs, and visiting scholars. SHEG seeks to improve education by conducting research, working with school districts, and reaching directly into classrooms with free materials for teachers and students.
PBS Learning Media: https://scetv.pbslearningmedia.org
PBS LearningMedia™ provides educators with strategies, tools, and professional development resources needed to fully utilize digital learning. It offers schools, districts, and states a cost-effective solution for seamless media integration and customization, including:
State standards alignment, Student access and class accounts, Robust user management, Comprehensive analytics, and Content management system.
Crash Course: https://thecrashcourse.com
Crash Course, a video course website, has a worldwide audience in and out of classrooms. While the show is an immensely helpful tool for students and teachers, it also has a large viewership of casual learners who seek out online educational content independently. It has changed attitudes towards education by creating a community of learners who are looking for more than just help passing a test.
Tom Richey: https://www.tomrichey.net
A website, constructed by US and World History teacher Tim Richey, committed to delivering learning to students and teachers by providing online videos, PowerPoints, tutoring services, writing courses, and other instructional materials.
World History for us all: https://whfua.history.ucla.edu
World History for Us All is a national collaboration of K-12 teachers, collegiate instructors, and educational technology specialists. It offers a treasury of teaching units, lesson plans, and resources, presents the human past as a single story rather than unconnected stories of many civilizations, helps students understand the past by connecting specific subject matter to larger historical patterns and draws on up-to-date historical research.
National Archives: https://www.archives.gov
The National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) is the nation's record keeper. This online resource allows students to access records and documents published for public use. It seeks to drive openness, cultivate public participation, and strengthen our nation’s democracy through public access to high-value government records.
Digital Public Library of America: https://dp.la
The DPLA is a US project aimed at providing public access to digital holdings in order to create a large-scale public digital library. The DPLA is a discovery tool, or union catalog, for public domain and openly licensed content held by the United States' archives, libraries, museums, and other cultural heritage institutions.
Docs Teach: https://www.docsteach.org
Docs Teach is a primary source website in conjunction with the National Archive. Students can Access thousands of primary sources — letters, photographs, speeches, posters, maps, videos, and other document types — spanning the course of American history.