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Studying United States history is important for students for several compelling reasons. Understanding National Identity: Learning about the history of the United States helps students understand the nation's unique identity, values, and culture.
- Early America
Early America Outlines and PowerPoints Early America...
- United States History Workbook Series
Our "United States History Workbook Series" is divided into...
- Great Depression
The period of United States history that included World War...
- Bridge to The Twenty-first Century
Historic Election: Barack Obama made history as the first...
- Colonial Period
The colonial period in U.S. history laid the foundation for...
- Lower Elementary Workbooks
These workbooks, designed for students in grades one through...
- Growth and Transformation
Grade 2: Grade 3: Grade 4: Grade 5: Grade 6: Grade 7: Grade...
- New Conservatism
The new political conservatism movement in the United States...
- Early America
The U.S. History Collection covers the full U.S. History curriculum for middle and high school students. Find video and interactive resources covering the curriculum of a United States History course and is organized by era and by historical thinking skill.
Our worksheets are perfect for helping students with reading comprehension, preparing for the Regents review or state assessment, pairing with a video like the Crash Course US History series, or with your lesson plans throughout the school year.
United States History - Free printable readings with questions for high school American History students (grades 9-12). Over 150 worksheets to supplement lessons or replace the textbook.
The outlines can serve as a scope and sequence for various topics and the charts consolidate a substantial amount of historical information that can either be projected or printed as a PDF document. The available outlines and charts cover a wide-range of time, from pre-Columbian Americans to recent American history.
Explore important topics and moments in U.S. history through historical primary sources from the Library of Congress. Colonial Settlement, 1600s - 1763; The American Revolution, 1763 - 1783; The New Nation, 1783 - 1815; National Expansion and Reform, 1815 - 1880; Civil War and Reconstruction, 1861-1877; Rise of Industrial America, 1876-1900
I teach ALL of American History, from the Colonies through to Modern America and include printable timeline worksheets in the packets I give students for each unit we cover. When you do cover so much content in a year, timelines become essential.