Dana teaches social sciences at the college level and English and psychology at the high school level. She has master's degrees in applied, clinical and community psychology. Who was Ronald Reagan and what did he have to do with the Cold War? This lesson plan uses a text lesson to outline...
Why Cold War Projects? Register to view this lesson Are you a student or a teacher? I am a student I am a teacher Start today. Try it now World History Since 1900: Lesson Plans & Resources 10 chapters | 260 lessons Ch 1. World War I Lesson Plans Ch 2. Russian Revolution & ...
Resource type: Lesson (complete) File previews png, 195.44 KBpng, 189.75 KBpdf, 3.46 MB Step into the tense and captivating era of the Cold War with this comprehensive digital lesson plan, designed to engage and educate middle and high school students ...
widely used Polish textbooks and also observes a ‘typical’ secondary school lesson in order to understand how much scope there is within both mediums for opening up space for alternative interpretations of the Cold War and for the deliberate...
Lesson 38 section 1 A wartime alliance begins to erode. Reunification of Germany Warm Up # 1 Does the US have an obligation to get involved with foreign affairs, why or why not? Warm Up # 1 (Day 1) What events and conditions led to the beginnings of the Cold War?
Utilizing some of the greatest directors like Byron Haskins (Arsenic and Old Lace 1944, War of the Worlds 1953, Robinson Crusoe on Mars 1964) John Brahm (The Lodger 1944, The Twilight Zone, Boris Karloff’s Thriller) Laslo Benedek (The Wild One 1953), Leslie Stevens, Gerd Oswald, Paul St...
‘We were able to identify one reported UAP with high confidence. In that case, we identified the object as a large, deflating balloon.’ An LDB, to coin a bit of jargon. Will we be seeing a multi-decade multi-billion dollar War on Balloons (and airborne clutter)?
World War I, with cryogenic isolation, became the great leap forward for helium and led eventually to the liquefaction of methane. During the war, airships — dirigibles, zeppelins and the like — became an novel innovation of combat [9]. Germans dropped bombs from them. The British hunted...
One lesson of the war on my father’s generation was that dramatic action was always preferable to incrementalism, even if that meant that the postwar “best and brightest” would sometimes plunge into unwise policies at home or misadventures abroad. Another lesson the World War II generation lea...
We find ourselves trying to fight a war with people who do not seem to understand the battle, how to fight and certainly not how to win. Here’s a hint: it will not be in the streets with AR-15’s, it will be in the minds of the ensuing generations if we are able to fight at...