Ergebnis der Suche (4)
Ergebnis der Suche nach: ( ( ( ( (Freitext: E-LEARNING) und (Lernressourcentyp: UNTERRICHTSPLANUNG) ) und (Systematikpfad: POLITIK) ) und (Bildungsebene: "SEKUNDARSTUFE II") ) und (Systematikpfad: ENGLISCH) ) und (Schlagwörter: WITH)
Es wurden 48 Einträge gefunden
- Treffer:
- 31 bis 40
-
A TALE OF TWO ECONOMIES: Comparing the 1929 Stock Market Crash to Today’s Wall Street Crisis
In this NYT lesson, students use resources from The New York Times to compare the circumstances under which the Great Depression came about to the circumstances of the economic crisis in 2008.
Details { "HE": "DE:HE:267070" }
-
BUBBLE TROUBLE: Analyzing Causes of the Economic Crisis.
In this NY Times lesson, students use several different resources from The New York Times to discuss, analyze, and present on the causes and effects of the 2008 economic crisis.
Details { "HE": "DE:HE:140214" }
-
Legislative Process: Charting the Ideal and Real
New York Times Lesson Plan comparing the basic legislative process with the real process, complete with the political machinations at work when a bill works its way through Congress (2010)
Details { "HE": "DE:HE:869057" }
-
Charting the Ideal and Real Legislative Process
This New York Times Lesson Plan compares the basic legislative process with the real process, complete with the political machinations at work when a bill works its way through Congress (2010-20).
Details { "HE": [] }
-
Equality Under the Law?
This New York Times lesson asks students to study the 14th Amendment to discern what it means and how it has been interpreted. Then some articles are suggested that examine how the criminal justice system treats black people in comparison to white people (2016).
Details { "HE": "DE:HE:3052390" }
-
A New Child Labor Crisis in America
In this lesson, students will learn about how migrant children work brutal jobs across the United States. Then they consider what they would do if they were president (USA: NYT 2023).
Details { "HE": [] }
-
Freedom of Speech?
This lesson plan encourages students to examine their own assumptions about what freedom of speech really means, as well as to deepen their understanding of the current accepted interpretation of speech rights under the First Amendment (New York Times 2019).
Details { "HE": [] }
-
Should Schools Be Able to Discipline Students for What They Say on Social Media?
The case of a high school cheerleader who was suspended from her team for comments she made on social media may be heading to the Supreme Court. Do schools have the right to censor or punish students for speech outside of their grounds? (New York Times 2021)
Details { "HE": [] }
-
‘When the Monkey Chants Are for You: A Soccer Star’s View of Racist Abuse’
In this lesson, students will look at racism in European soccer and explore ways to address and remedy the problem (New York Times 2020).
Details { "HE": [] }
-
Comparing Jewish Refugees of the 1930s With Syrian Refugees Today
This New York Times Lesson pairs a Times article about the historical resonance of Europe’s refugee crisis with an excerpt from “Defying the Nazis” that chronicles the Sharps’s relief and rescue mission in 1939 (2017).
Details { "HE": [] }