Skip to main content
SHEG

User account menu

  • Register
  • Log in

Main navigation

  • Home
  • Reading Like a Historian History Lessons
  • Beyond the Bubble History Assessments
  • Civic Online Reasoning Curriculum

Secondary navigation

  • About
    • History of SHEG
    • People
    • Updates
    • In the News
    • Professional Development
    • Testimonials
    • Links
  • Events
  • Projects
  • Publications

Register today!

Our lessons and assessments are available for free download once you've created an account.
Create an Account

Filter Your Results

  • Assessment
  • Lesson Plan

Topic

  • U.S. History
  • World History
Sort
  • Relevance
  • A - Z
  • Z - A
Your search produced (15) results
Image: Political cartoon satirizing American and European imperialism made by J.S. Pughe in 1899. From the Library of Congress.

Philippine-American War Political Cartoons

View lesson
Image: Photo of Filipino prisoners of war taken in 1899. From the Library of Congress.

Soldiers in the Philippines

View lesson
Image: 1898 Illustration of the explosion of the Maine. From the Library of Congress.

Maine Explosion

View Lesson
Image: Print of Galileo by Samuel Sartain from painting by Wyatt, date unknown. From the Library of Congress. In 1633, scientist Galileo Galilei was convicted of heresy by the Inquisition. He was forced to recant his beliefs and spent the rest of his life under house arrest. Students may be surprised to learn Galileo's crime: teaching the sun, rather than the earth, is at the center of the solar system. In this lesson, students explore three primary sources and one New York Times article to answer the quest

Galileo

View lesson

American Imperialism

View assessment

Plague Doctor

View assessment

Connections to the Philippine-American War

View assessment

Opposition to the Philippine-American War

View assessment
USS Maine

Explosion of the USS Maine

View assessment

Pagination

  • Page 1 of 2
  • Next page ›
Home

Support us

We’re committed to providing educators accessible, high-quality teaching tools. That’s why all our lessons and assessments are free. Please consider donating to SHEG to support our creation of new materials. All gifts are made through Stanford University and are tax-deductible.

Contact usSupport us

© Stanford University     |     485 Lasuen Mall, Stanford, CA 94305     |    Privacy Policy

facebooktwitteryoutube