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Students will understand the following:
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For this lesson, you will need:
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After you have administered the true-false quiz but before younger students write their editorials, have them participate with you in a whole-class discussion of Washington's accomplishments and failures in the early years. |
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You can evaluate your students' editorials using the following three-point rubric: Three points: clearly states an opinion based on accurate facts; acknowledges and answers opposing opinions; contains unified and coherent paragraphs; contains no errors in grammar, usage, and mechanics Two points: states an opinion based on accurate facts; acknowledges and answers opposing opinions; contains paragraphs that are mostly unified and coherent; contains some errors in grammar, usage, and mechanics One point: states an opinion but does not support it with accurate facts; does not acknowledge and answer opposing opinions; contains paragraphs that are not sufficiently unified and coherent; contains many errors in grammar, usage, and mechanics You can ask your students to contribute to the assessment rubric by having them determine how many facts should be included in the editorial. |
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The French and Indian War: A Battle Map Give students a blank map of North America. Ask them to identify the location of the major military campaigns and battles at the beginning of the French and Indian War. Have them color-code the locations as French or British campaigns or victories. Ask students to include Native American tribes that participated in battles between the French and British. The Brave, the Bold, the Daring: A Speech Ask students to imagine what life was like for the colonial citizens who lived outside established communities such as Williamsburg, Virginia, in the 1750s. Encourage students to take the part of a guest speaker from the past, pretending to be someone who was not afraid to seek new adventures, to take risks, to explore the unknown, or to fight for a cause. |
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"A Man on Horseback" Richard Brookhiser, Atlantic Monthly, January. 1996 "The Radicalism of the American Revolution" Gordon S. Wood, Alfred A Knopf, 1992 |
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Offers a history of presidents, the presidency, politics and related subjects. It features a tutorial, plus information for children and adults. There is also an exhibit hall, a quiz, and a collection of additional presidential links. The Papers of George Washington Want to see what George Washington had to say for himself, both in his youth and later as the first president of the United States? Visit this site at the University of Virginia to read the original documents and learn more about the early years of this founding father. |
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Click on any of the vocabulary words below to hear them pronounced and used in a sentence.
Context: The monarch responds with an edict that cracks like thunder across the wilderness.
Context: It couldn't be called a battle; it was more of a skirmish.
Context: In December, 1774, Colonel Washington becomes Squire Washington of Mount Vernon.
Context: He knew the area; he knew the enemy; he knew the terrain.
Context: Governor Dinwiddie sets about to recruit a volunteer to carry an ultimatum to the French. |
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This lesson plan may be used to address the academic standards listed below. These standards are drawn from Content Knowledge: A Compendium of Standards and Benchmarks for K-12 Education: 2nd Edition and have been provided courtesy of theMid-continent Research for Education and Learningin Aurora, Colorado. Grade level: 9-12 Subject area: world history Standard: Understands the economic, political, and cultural interrelations among peoples of Africa, Europe, and the Americas between 1500 and 1750. Benchmarks: Understands events in the development of various European colonies between the 16th and 18th centuries (e.g. the conflicts between British and French colonists in North America; their relationships with Native Americans; the causes and results of the French and Indian War). Grade level: 9-12 Subject area: U.S. history Standard: Understands how the early Europeans and Africans interacted with Native Americans in the Americas. Benchmarks: Understands social and economic characteristics of European colonization in the 17th and 18th centuries (e.g. the differences between the French and British colonies in North America and the conflicts which developed from them). Grade level: 9-12 Subject area: geography Standard: Understands the forces of conflict and cooperation that shape the divisions of Earth's surface. Benchmarks: Knows the causes of boundary conflicts and internal disputes between culture groups (e.g. the British and French governments fighting for world dominance, with North America as one of the pawns in the struggle; the conflicts between British and French settlers in North America which helped motivate this larger conflict). Grade level: 9-12 Subject area: geography Standard: Understands the changes that occur in the meaning, use, distribution, and importance of resources. Benchmarks: Understands the relationship between resources and exploration, colonization, and settlement of different regions of the world (e.g. the importance of land and resources in the British/French struggle for New World supremacy). Grade level: 9-12 Subject area: civics Standard: Understands the importance of political leadership, public service, and a knowledgeable citizenry in American constitutional democracy. Benchmarks: Knows personal qualities necessary for political leadership (e.g. the leadership characteristics displayed by George Washington during the French and Indian War, and the role that they played in his future development as Revolutionary War Commander-in-Chief and President of the United States). |
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