Paid-members only Grade 5 Social Studies Units Unit Plan 18 (Grade 5 Social Studies): Midyear Inquiry Project — “Why Revolution?” Students investigate multiple causes of the American Revolution and craft a clear, evidence-based claim—using sources, perspectives, and reasoning—to explain what most drove colonists toward independence.
Paid-members only Grade 5 Social Studies Units Unit Plan 17 (Grade 5 Social Studies): International Allies and Global Impact Students explore how France, Spain, and other international allies transformed the Revolution into a global conflict, using maps and sources to see how worldwide support helped secure American independence.
Paid-members only Grade 5 Social Studies Units Unit Plan 16 (Grade 5 Social Studies): Major Battles and Turning Points Students map major Revolutionary War battles and explain why Saratoga, Valley Forge, and Yorktown became key turning points that shaped the path to American independence.
Paid-members only Grade 5 Social Studies Units Unit Plan 15 (Grade 5 Social Studies): Patriots, Loyalists, and Perspectives A 5th-grade unit where students compare Patriot, Loyalist, and marginalized perspectives to see how background and experience shaped views of the American Revolution.
Paid-members only Grade 5 Social Studies Units Unit Plan 14 (Grade 5 Social Studies): The Declaration of Independence The unit teaches students to decode key excerpts from the Declaration of Independence, uncover Enlightenment ideals like natural rights and consent of the governed, and explain why the document marked a major turning point in American history.
Paid-members only Grade 5 Social Studies Units Unit Plan 13 (Grade 5 Social Studies): The Road to Revolution Colonial events from the French & Indian War to the Declaration of Independence are sequenced to reveal how conflicts, taxes, protests, and shifting ideas gradually pushed colonists toward revolution.
Paid-members only Grade 5 Social Studies Units Unit Plan 12 (Grade 5 Social Studies): Protests and Boycotts Colonial protests and boycotts—shaped by taxes, trade laws, and competing perspectives—show how everyday choices and persuasive arguments helped colonists challenge British policies and push tensions toward revolution.
Paid-members only Grade 5 Social Studies Units Unit Plan 11 (Grade 5 Social Studies): Trade, Taxes, and Tensions British trade laws and new taxes—like the Sugar, Stamp, and Townshend Acts—disrupted colonial trade, raised everyday costs, and sparked boycotts and protests, creating rising tensions that pushed the colonies and Britain toward open conflict.
Paid-members only Grade 5 Social Studies Units Unit Plan 10 (Grade 5 Social Studies): Colonial Governments and Self-Rule Early colonial assemblies and town meetings introduced self-government, representation, and citizen participation, forming key foundations of American democracy despite limits under royal rule.
Paid-members only Grade 5 Social Studies Units Unit Plan 9 (Grade 5 Social Studies): Midyear Project — “Our Colonial World” Atlas Create a collaborative class atlas that uses maps, charts, and evidence-based explanations to highlight regional differences, Indigenous homelands, and Atlantic trade routes, showing how geography, environment, and movement shaped colonial America.
Paid-members only Grade 5 Social Studies Units Unit Plan 8 (Grade 5 Social Studies): Life in the Colonies Explore daily life in colonial America by comparing work, religion, economy, and community roles across diverse groups, showing how families earned, traded, and made decisions in a changing society.
Paid-members only Grade 5 Social Studies Units Unit Plan 7 (Grade 5 Social Studies): Colonial Regions—New England, Middle, Southern Compare New England, Middle, and Southern colonial regions by examining how geography and climate shaped crops, jobs, resources, and regional specializations, revealing how land and labor built distinct colonial economies.
Paid-members only Grade 5 Social Studies Units Unit Plan 6 (Grade 5 Social Studies): Early Colonies and Settlements Explore early English colonies by locating settlements like Roanoke, Jamestown, and Plymouth while uncovering why people colonized North America and how geography, climate, and scarce resources shaped their earliest challenges.
Paid-members only Grade 5 Social Studies Units Unit Plan 5 (Grade 5 Social Studies): The Atlantic World Explore how goods, people, and ideas moved among Europe, Africa, and the Americas, highlighting interdependence, trade, taxation, and boycotts that shaped economic choices across the Atlantic world.
Paid-members only Grade 5 Social Studies Units Unit Plan 4 (Grade 5 Social Studies): Exploration and Exchange European exploration was driven by wealth, trade, religion, and competition, shaping ocean routes and encounters that connected Europe, Africa, and the Americas while bringing both exchange and profound impacts on Indigenous peoples.
Paid-members only Grade 5 Social Studies Units Unit Plan 3 (Grade 5 Social Studies): Peoples and Environments Indigenous nations adapted to and shaped their environments through practices like controlled burns, irrigation, and sustainable harvesting, showing deep interdependence between people, place, movement, and trade.
Paid-members only Grade 5 Social Studies Units Unit Plan 2 (Grade 5 Social Studies): Indigenous Homelands and Nations Explore the rich diversity of Indigenous nations across North America in this 5th-grade unit, as students map homelands, examine how land and environment shaped daily life, compare cultures respectfully, and recognize Indigenous peoples’ enduring presence and traditions.
Grade 5 Social Studies Units Unit Plan 1 (Grade 5 Social Studies): Geography of the Americas Explore how landforms, waterways, and climate shape life across North America in this 5th-grade geography unit, as students map major regions, examine Indigenous homelands and colonial regions, and explain how environment influences settlement, culture, and economies.
The Admin Angle The Admin Angle: Use Independent Lunch—A Smart, Humane Consequence That Protects Learning Independent lunch is a structured, dignified reset during a student’s normal lunch period that protects instructional time, reduces cafeteria disruptions, and teaches replacement behaviors through brief reflection, reteaching, and a clear plan for re-entry.
Blog Bridging the Gap: Strategies That Close the Vocabulary Divide in Math Instruction Students thrive when math vocabulary becomes clear and accessible. This post unpacks how academic language barriers affect learning and offers strategies to build precise math talk, stronger comprehension, and confident problem-solving.
Grade 6 Social Studies Units Unit Plan 36 (Grade 6 Social Studies): Cumulative Synthesis & Exhibition Show how geography, resources, trade, and civic decision-making connect across global networks as students create maps, models, and inquiry exhibits that synthesize history, economics, civics, and spatial thinking.
Paid-members only Grade 6 Social Studies Units Unit Plan 35 (Grade 6 Social Studies): Preserving Our Shared Past Examine how archaeology, museums, and digital archives protect cultural heritage through context, provenance, conservation, and repatriation, highlighting why preserving artifacts and their stories matters for communities today.
Paid-members only Grade 6 Social Studies Units Unit Plan 34 (Grade 6 Social Studies): Economics of Empire and Trade Explore how ancient regions produced, traded, and exchanged goods by examining scarcity, opportunity cost, specialization, supply and demand, and interdependence, showing how geography shaped markets and economic decision-making.
Paid-members only Grade 6 Social Studies Units Unit Plan 33 (Grade 6 Social Studies): Belief Systems and Global Values Belief systems like Hinduism, Confucianism, Judaism, Buddhism, and polytheistic traditions shaped moral codes, laws, and social order, revealing how values such as justice, duty, and compassion guided early civilizations.
Paid-members only Grade 6 Social Studies Units Unit Plan 32 (Grade 6 Social Studies): Law, Justice, and Civic Ideals Across Cultures Compare how ancient civilizations defined justice by examining their law codes, governing structures, and concepts of rights and responsibilities, revealing diverse approaches to fairness across Mesopotamia, Greece/Rome, Persia, South Asia, and East Asia.