Tuesday, September 22, 2020

Good Sets of Primary Source Documents About the American Revolution and More

The Massachusetts Historical Society has a great website that hosts collections of primary sources related to the American Revolution, founding families of the United States, abolition, and the Civil War. Additionally, on the MHS site you'll find recordings of webinars about many of the topics related to the collections of primary sources. Music of the Plimoth Colony Settlers is an interesting webinar that was published last week. 

Some of the highlights of the collections of primary sources found on the Massachusetts Historical Society's website include:
In addition to the collections listed above, the Massachusetts Historical Society offers four collections of lesson plans that incorporate primary source documents. Those collections are Founding Fathers & Their Families, Era of the American Revolution, Slavery and Antislavery, and Civil War. The most lesson plans are in the first two collections. The vast majority of the lesson plans are for high school students, but there are a few for elementary and middle school use. 

More than a decade ago I started using Google Documents to help students analyze primary source documents. I outlined that process in this blog post in 2015

How to Recover an Archived Google Classroom

 

Last week I published an overview of how to add co-teachers to your Google Classroom classes. That post prompted a bunch of follow-up questions from readers and viewers. The most common follow-up question was "what happens if a class is accidentally archived?" The answer is that it goes into the "archived" section of your Google Classroom account. While it's archived you and your students can't do anything in it. However, all is not lost because you can recover archived classrooms. It's a simple thing to do and I've outlined the process in this one minute video

Popular Posts