Below you will find all of the digital creations I have made for my students this year. I will update this blog as I make more, but you can also access other US History Resources here and US/Civics/Economics Hyperdocs here. Additionally, you can access my Digital Leadership Resources here. Here are my updated Economics slide decks for this year.
Before you use them, you will want to
1. Go to File and Make a Copy of each file you are going to use. This will enable you to edit them.2. Check all links to make sure they are still active and are accessible in your domain.
3. Decide how you want to push these out to your kids.
4. Edit what you need. There are some slide decks that have been compressed so they are more accessible to students at home. This means you can't edit the slides, but you can always insert one of your own slides and delete the one of mine you don't want.
I cannot emphasize how important it is that you check every single link INSIDE your domain to make sure that your students will be able to access the resources.
All of the files are public on the web, if you click on a file and it asks to request permission, it is because your school domain does not allow you to access files created outside your domain. If that is the case, you will need to open it with your personal Gmail account and then share it with your school account, and then open your school Drive and go to Shared With Me.
All of the files are public on the web, if you click on a file and it asks to request permission, it is because your school domain does not allow you to access files created outside your domain. If that is the case, you will need to open it with your personal Gmail account and then share it with your school account, and then open your school Drive and go to Shared With Me.
The remote only versions have gold boxes. The gold boxes are the cue to the students they have to put an answer in there based on what the slide is asking them. If they can't type on the slide, they simply need to insert a text box over the gold box.
I've included the tutorials that go with the slides for the ones I thought needed one.
I started putting boxes in the margins of the slides so that kids can add information as we discuss it in class. I let them choose where and give them a goal. For example, if there are 5 places for class notes, they have to put information in 3.
You have my permission to share these with your students and colleagues as long as you give me credit on them. You do NOT have permission to sell these on any site.
You have my permission to share these with your students and colleagues as long as you give me credit on them. You do NOT have permission to sell these on any site.
If you feel so inclined, my Venmo for coffee is @Rachel-Murat. If it asks, the last four of my phone number are 9476.
Geography Practice Skills
13 Colonies
Declaration of Independence
Articles of Confederation
Constitutional Influences
Government and Me
Constitutional Concepts
Constitutional Concepts Drag and Drop
Electoral College
Plans, Compromises and Elastic Clause
Bill of Rights
Other 17ish Amendments
Washington's Warning
Erie Canal
Louisiana Territory
Mexican American War/Manifest Destiny
Impact of Westward Expansion Part I
Impact of Westward Expansion Part II
North vs South: Civil War Snapshot
Imperialism Time Capsule
Imperialism CFU
Inauguration
Progressive Era
Semester in Review
Progressive Era Inquiry Written Response
Progressive Era Reforms
Lewis Hine and Child Labor
Inauguration
WWI: MAIN Causes
WWI: Major Events Leading up to the US Involvement
WWI: The Great Migration and African American War Experience
1920's Part I: Harlem Renaissance
1920s Part II: Tulsa
1920s Part III: Society
1920s Part IV: The Economy
1920s Part V: What Lesson Did the 1920s Teach Us?
1930s Part I: Politics and the Economy
1930s Part II: New Deal Legislation
WWII: Part I: Leaders, Countries and Alliances
WWII: Part II: The US Goes to War
WWII: Part III: The Holocaust
Civil Rights Movement Part I: 1954-1958
Civil Rights Movement Part II: 1960-1964
Civil Rights Movement Part III: 1965
1950's Part I:
1950's Part II:
1960's Part I:
1960's Part II: Rights of the Accused Cases
1960's Part III: The Vietnam War
1960's and 1970's Era of Protest
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