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US Constitution C3 Inquiry: Legislative Branch Inquiry

December 5, 2023 by

Inquiry-based Resource

US Constitution C3 Inquiry: Legislative Branch Inquiry

Horydczak, Theodor, Approximately, photographer. U.S. Capitol exteriors. East front of U.S. Capitol, whole building from side. United States Washington D.C. District of Columbia Washington D.C, None. ca. 1920-ca. 1950. Photograph. https://www.loc.gov/item/2019681940/.
Horydczak, Theodor, Approximately, photographer. U.S. Capitol exteriors. East front of U.S. Capitol, whole building from side. United States Washington D.C. District of Columbia Washington D.C, None. ca. 1920-ca. 1950. Photograph. https://www.loc.gov/item/2019681940/.

Was the Great Compromise of 1787 fair?

The Compromise of 1787, otherwise known as the Great Compromise, gave the United States the bicameral legislature it has today. This inquiry focuses on how the Constitutional Convention decided to create legislature bodies and the details of how those bodies are constructed. The inquiry features the compelling questionWas the Great Compromise of 1787 fair? and highlights the involvement of Georgia’s Convention delegate, Abraham Baldwin.

Legislative Branch Inquiry

US Constitution C3 Inquiry: Balancing Liberty with Security

December 5, 2023 by

Inquiry-based Resource

US Constitution C3 Inquiry: Balancing Liberty with Security

Currier & Ives. The great Bartholdi statue, Liberty Enlightening the World--The gift of France to the American people. , ca. 1883. New York: Published by Currier & Ives. Photograph. https://www.loc.gov/item/97502725/.
Currier & Ives. The great Bartholdi statue, Liberty Enlightening the World--The gift of France to the American people. , ca. 1883. New York: Published by Currier & Ives. Photograph. https://www.loc.gov/item/97502725/.

What is the right balance between security and personal freedom?

This 8th grade annotated inquiry asks students to consider what factors affect both liberty and security. Students consider the Social Contract Theory and how the Founding Fathers as well as everyday citizens attempt to find the balance between liberty and security. Students will assess founding documents such as the Declaration of Independence, the U.S. Constitution, and the Bill of Rights to discover how these documents address these topics, and assess major events within American history that have forced Americans to reconsider the balance liberty and security.

Balancing Liberty with Security Inquiry

Focused Inquiry: Atlanta Student Movement Georgia Historical Marker (Fulton County)

November 27, 2023 by

Inquiry-based Resource

Focused Inquiry: Atlanta Student Movement Georgia Historical Marker (Fulton County)

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Throughout the Teaching the Civil Rights Movement with the Georgia Historical Marker Program teacher training course, participants constructed Focused Inquiries based on the Inquiry Design Model. Each inquiry is a standards-based (GSE) investigation of the struggle for civil and human rights in Georgia. Featuring historical markers from the Georgia Historical Marker Program’s Georgia Civil Rights Trail and primary sources from GHS and the Library of Congress, these inquiries enhance student understanding of an era in which religion, education, politics, and free enterprise intersected to end Jim Crow and secure civil rights for African Americans. Use these classroom-ready investigations to explore local, state, and national stories from Reconstruction through the late twentieth century in elementary and middle school classrooms.

A Focused Inquiry is an adaptation of the Inquiry Design Model from C3 Teachers. The Inquiry Design Model (IDM) is a distinctive approach to creating curriculum and instructional materials that honors teachers’ knowledge and expertise, avoids overprescription, and focuses on the main elements of the instructional design process as envisioned in the Inquiry Arc of the College, Career, and Civic Life (C3) Framework for Social Studies State Standards (2013). (C3teachers.org).

Atlanta Student Movement Georgia Historical Marker (Fulton County) focused inquiry

By Paul DeBacher, The Children’s School

Teaching the Civil Rights Movement

The Georgia Historical Society's Teaching the Civil Rights Movement with the Georgia Historical Marker Program teacher training course was held January through March of 2022. Open to educators across Georgia, this training opportunity was made possible by the Library of Congress Teaching with Primary Sources (TPS) Eastern Region Program coordinated by Waynesburg University.

Focused Inquiry: Albany Movement Georgia Historical Marker (Dougherty County)

November 27, 2023 by

Inquiry-based Resource

Focused Inquiry: Albany Movement Georgia Historical Marker (Dougherty County)

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Throughout the Teaching the Civil Rights Movement with the Georgia Historical Marker Program teacher training course, participants constructed Focused Inquiries based on the Inquiry Design Model. Each inquiry is a standards-based (GSE) investigation of the struggle for civil and human rights in Georgia. Featuring historical markers from the Georgia Historical Marker Program’s Georgia Civil Rights Trail and primary sources from GHS and the Library of Congress, these inquiries enhance student understanding of an era in which religion, education, politics, and free enterprise intersected to end Jim Crow and secure civil rights for African Americans. Use these classroom-ready investigations to explore local, state, and national stories from Reconstruction through the late twentieth century in elementary and middle school classrooms.

A Focused Inquiry is an adaptation of the Inquiry Design Model from C3 Teachers. The Inquiry Design Model (IDM) is a distinctive approach to creating curriculum and instructional materials that honors teachers’ knowledge and expertise, avoids overprescription, and focuses on the main elements of the instructional design process as envisioned in the Inquiry Arc of the College, Career, and Civic Life (C3) Framework for Social Studies State Standards (2013). (C3teachers.org).

Albany Movement Georgia Historical Marker (Dougherty County) focused inquiry

By Jennifer Egas, Georgia Virtual Academy

Teaching the Civil Rights Movement

The Georgia Historical Society's Teaching the Civil Rights Movement with the Georgia Historical Marker Program teacher training course was held January through March of 2022. Open to educators across Georgia, this training opportunity was made possible by the Library of Congress Teaching with Primary Sources (TPS) Eastern Region Program coordinated by Waynesburg University.

Georgia’s Westward Expansion Inquiry Kit

October 12, 2023 by

Inquiry-based Resource

Georgia’s Westward Expansion Inquiry Kit

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cover image for Georgia’s Westward Expansion Inquiry Kit

The Georgia's Westward Expansion Inquiry Kit poses the question “How did Georgia change during its period of westward expansion?” Utilizing the Inquiry Design Model from C3 Teachers and Teaching with Primary Sources, students utilize historical markers and primary sources to identify factors that affected Georgia’s economic and political growth and westward expansion between 1789-1840.

View/download the Inquiry Kit pieces here:

Georgia’s Westward Expansion Inquiry Kit Teacher Guide

Staging the Question: Understanding Historical Markers

Supporting Question 1: The Yazoo Land Fraud and Its Impact on Georgia

Supporting Question 2: Georgia’s Five Capitals

Supporting Question 3: Georgia Moves West: Push and Pull Factors

Supporting Question 4: The Experiences of the Creek and Cherokee

Taking Informed Action: Create Your Own Historical Marker

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Contact us
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Newsletter

Want to keep up with the latest news from The Georgia Historical Society? Sign up to receive our newsletter!

Jepson House Education Center*

104 W. Gaston Street
Savannah, GA 31401
912-651-2125

Open: Monday–Friday
9:00 a.m. - 5:30 p.m.
*BY APPOINTMENT ONLY

Research Center

501 Whitaker Street
Savannah, GA 31401
912-651-2128

Open: Wednesday–Friday
12:00 p.m. - 5:00 p.m.
First and third Saturdays
10:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.

Atlanta office*

One Baltimore Place NW, Suite G300
Atlanta, GA 30308
404-382-5410

Open: Monday–Friday
9:00 a.m. - 5:30 p.m.
*BY APPOINTMENT ONLY

Charity Navigator

The Georgia Historical Society has been awarded its eleventh consecutive 4-Star Rating from Charity Navigator, the largest charity evaluator in America, for sound fiscal management and commitment to accountability and transparency, a distinction that places The Society among an elite 1% of non-profit organizations in America.

Privacy Policy
Financial Statements

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    • Resources for Teachers
      • Search All Education Resources
      • Teaching with Primary Resources
      • Biographical Resources
      • Economic History Resources
      • Eighth-Grade WebQuest
      • Women’s History Resources
      • Online Exhibits
      • Field Trips and In-School Programs
      • Professional Development
      • Back
    • Resources for Students
    • Today in Georgia History
    • Off the Deaton Path
    • Georgia Historical Society Education Newsletter
    • Back
  • Learn + Explore
    • Programs and Initiatives
    • Community Archives Initiative
    • Georgia Commemorates America at 250
    • Historical Markers
      • Explore Georgia Historical Markers
      • Applying for a New Historical Marker
      • Maintaining Historical Markers
      • FAQs
      • Report a Missing or Damaged Marker
      • Civil War Historical Marker Initiative
      • Georgia Civil Rights Trail
      • Back
    • Georgia History Festival
    • Georgia Trustees
    • Trustees Gala
    • Vincent J. Dooley Distinguished Fellows Program
      • Distinguished Teaching Fellows
      • Distinguished Research Fellows
      • Back
    • History and Race Initiative
    • Georgia’s Business History
    • Affiliate Chapter Program
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