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primarry document activities
Teaching with primary sources, the real stuff of history, can make the past come alive for students. Examining documents, artworks, drawings, photographs and other primary sources puts young learners on the path that professional historians tread. For those who teach AP History courses, these lessons are also fine practice for the Document Based Question. While directed at middle and high school students, some lessons may be adaptable to upper elementary classrooms. You will also find a number of primary document activities in our:

Learning Center Lessons for Grades 9-12



interpreting buildings - 1792
the white house as home and symbol to john and abigail adams - 1800
the revolution of 1800 - 1801
saving history - 1812
the rise of jacksonian democracy - 1828
the bank war - 1832
a literary viewpoint - cahrles dickens visits the white house - 1842
using art to study the past - 1863
the president and the power to conserve the american frontier - 1906
lou hoover invites controversy - the depriest incident: 1929
the president the press - fdr's first press conference: march, 1933
provoked by pearl harbor - 1941
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