Fake News Lesson Plan

One of the most important things kids need to learn now in social studies is about Fake News”. Obviously, you hear about Fake News all the time. It dominates social media and the news outlets.

Kids need to be able to recognize what is fake news, what is real news, and how can you tell the difference. This is a 21st century skill that every kid needs to learn in high school. It's so important for our society to teach these kinds of skills so that kids can graduate with the ability to be informed citizens.

I teach this lesson about fake news in both my US history and my American government classes.

I love this lesson because it connects students to fake news in history from the Yellow Journalism era of the late 1800’s early 1900s’ in American history and also the fake news of today.

The Lesson Plan

I start the lesson off with a warm-up cartoon from the yellow journalism era and ask students to interpret it. Then we look at for glaring examples of fake news from...

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Great Classroom Management Tips for High School

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Hey there! My friend Lindsay is a former high school math teacher and went through the same struggles early on in her career that I did - no textbook, terrible resources, and no little help to figure things out. 

Thankfully for the both of us, we figured things out and found success by creating our own resources and then sharing them with others. She's now got an awesome blog where she shares awesome teaching tips. Some are math focused, but many others apply to any subject and I LOVED this post on Classroom Management Tips and wanted to share it with you. 

Everything in this post resonated with me and brought me back to those early days of teaching where I'd be up late into the night trying to plan a lesson that would keep kids busy the whole period because I hadn't yet learned those important strategies to make my classroom engaging, filled with learning, and with a natural fow built on respect.

If you're just starting out or want some important ideas to review...

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Cooperative Learning Resources from Oodles of Teaching Fun

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Hey all - hope your summer is in full force and you're enjoying the sun and naps that make summer amazing! 

Over the next few weeks, I want to share some resources from friends of mine that I think might be beneficial for some of you that are not strictly social studies teachers. As the end of the summer approaches (sorry to bring that awful reminder to you), you likely will start thinking about resources and lessons for your classroom.

Meagan England is an Accountability Instructional Supervisor and previously served as an Instructional Coach,  K-8 Reading Interventionist and a 5th and 6th grade ELA teacher in Tennessee. She's got a great blog called Oodles of Teaching Fun that you might want to check out! 

She's got some great free cooperative learning activities for both reading and math here. You might also want to check out the printable activities she's got on her blog and free resources for writing, technology, and reading.

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Civil Rights Movement Timeline Activity

The Civil Rights Movement is one of my favorite eras to teach in US History. There's so many compelling stories and it's easy for students to connect with the young people advocating for change in American society.

There's also a lot of events to cover. A great way to either introduce students to the era or review the Civil Rights Movement as a whole is with a timeline. This gives students a broad perspective of what was going on and how long it took from Claudette Colvin and Rosa Parks first refusing to give up their seats in Montgomery until the Civil Rights Act finally ended segregation. 

I use this set of timeline activities in my US History classes

First, students paste into their notebooks a 2-page timeline that covers the height of the Civil Rights era. Once completed, it will look like this:

Students respond to the prompts for each event after reading short overviews that are placed at stations around the room. The 10 events we cover in this timeline are:

  • Brown...
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Back to School Night Tips From Kim at Stress-Free Teaching

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If you're a teacher, you know that one of the longest days of the year is Back to School Night. At some schools it's a once-a-year thing while at others you might have a couple of them. Either way, it means you're likely at school for 12+ hours. 

Obviously, any way you can make such a long day easier is a huge. You've just taught a full school day (which is tiring enough!) but then need to stay at school until 8 or 9 pm. 

My friend Kim has a great blog called "Stress-Free Teaching" where she shares great tips that are mostly focused on elementary. However, I wanted to share with you her blog post on Back to School Night Tips because they're super helpful no matter what grade you teach. 

My favorite of her recommendations is to create a video presentation to share with parents that couldn't make it to Back-to-School Night. Teaching high school, this is a common occurrence. I think most years I average about 5-7 parents out of a class of 25-30 kids. Most parents...

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Absolute Monarchs PowerPoint, Activity, and Lesson Plan

The Age of Absolutism is a great unit in World History. My students love learning about the rulers who held absolute power in Europe and seeing pictures of their great palaces. 

In my World History curriculum, I have a great Absolute Monarchs activity to get things started. Students receive worksheets with Europe's most well-known absolute rulers to cut out: Louis XIV, Philip II, Henry VIII, & Peter the Great. 

They also receive an interactive map of Europe that will go in their notebooks. We'll then go through a PowerPoint. As they learn about each monarch, they cut out the figures and glue them on the map so they pop-up. So it becomes a literal "Rise of Absolute Monarchs" right in their notebooks! 

Students love the hands-on nature of this activity. It keeps them engaged during the PowerPoint and helps them better connect with each leader. 

Next, students analyze a primary and secondary source on King Louis XIV's daily routine as Versailles and...

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Ancient Rome Timeline Activity

A great way to review Ancient Rome in World History is with an interactive timeline that covers early Rome through the Republic, Roman Empire, and finally the Fall of Rome. 

I use this set of timeline activities in my World History classes. The variety is great for differentiation and making the lesson engaging for all the kids in my classroom. 

First, students are provided with the reading activity on Ancient Rome. This is condensed so that it focuses on the most essential information students need to know. The download includes a 2-page PDF version for printing and a 3-page Google Doc version (this one can also be printed but it includes some more pictures). 

Students also receive a printable timeline that goes across 2 pages in their notebooks. The timeline features boxes with headings on the major events they need to know along with guiding questions. Students sometimes draw an event or analyze the text for their response.

 Students can work independently,...

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American Revolution Timeline Activity

Some of the most important concepts for students to understand about the American Revolution are the causes and events leading to the war and then the battles and key events that took place during the Revolutionary War.

Timeline activities are perfect to help students grasp the significance of each of these and are a great in-class activity. I combine activities that students complete in cooperative learning groups, digital timelines that kids work on with computers, and teacher-directed overviews of the most import events. This way, you ensure that students have a thorough understanding of each significant event of the Revolutionary War era. 

The first activity students complete is a cooperative learning activity where students read about and sort 10 events on a two-page interactive timeline. The activity includes PDF printable cards about each of the following events:

The Enlightenment, Salutary Neglect, The French & Indian War, Proclamation of...

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Fake News Lesson Plan for High School

One of the most important lessons we can teach high school students now is how to critically view media and news in order to understand what is true, what is biased, and what is outright "fake news".

My new lesson plan on Media and Fake News is a perfect one to use for this in any of your social studies classes. Included in the lesson plan download is a complete teacher instructions page for the lesson, an engaging warm up activity, presentation, group activity, videos homework, and more! 

For a warm up, students are given 4 blatant fake news articles. In groups they analyze these and look for clues as to why they might be real or fake and how they can tell. 

Following a discussion on why articles like this exist and how to recognize them, you transition to a PowerPoint on the role of the media. This visually engaging presentation covers the function of the media in society, bias, and how to recognize fake news. Both a printable guided...

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Analyzing Eisenhower's People to People Program for Peace

This great new lesson for a Cold War unit in US History covers President Eisenhower's People to People Program. I created it because I found I spent most of my unit on war, paranoia, & civil strife and wanted to a lesson on what America did to promote peace and positivity.  That lead to an Essential Question for this lesson of: “What did the US do to promote peace during the Cold War and what more can be done today?”

The download includes multiple primary source documents from different program committees on music, sports, books, business, education, and more. Students then work on a brief Project Based Learning (PBL) activity to develop their own plans to promote peace and cultural connections in the world today! 

In addition to a full lesson plan detailing how to conduct the whole lesson, you also get ALL of these great pieces as well:

Speech excerpt from President Eisenhower & analysis worksheet
Project introduction page
9 primary...

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