American Revolution Battles Activity Gallery Walk
Skip the lecture and engage students in this inquiry-based gallery walk for the battles of the American Revolution. Students get up and moving on a gallery walk of the images of the Revolutionary War plus the part of the Treaty of Paris, a primary source. The groups collaborate to draw conclusions about the role different battles played in the overall war results.
This resource contains:
- Teacher's guide
- 6 Gallery displays (all primary sources)*
- Analysis activity
- Student graphic organizer for gallery walk
- DIGITAL version of all of the above for 1:1 classrooms or distance learning.
Never done a gallery walk? FREE: 5 tips for successful gallery walks.
Related bundles include:
∆ American Revolution Teacher Resource Bundle
∆ Early America Gallery Walk Bundle
∆ US History from the Colonies through Civil War Mega Teacher Resource Bundle
More not to be missed gallery walks:
☆ Bill of Rights Student Created Gallery Walk
☆ US Civil War Reconstruction Gallery Walk
☆ Westward Expansion Gallery Walk
☆ The Civil Rights Movement Gallery Walk
Must have American Revolution resources:
★ American Revolution Causes Activities
★ American Revolution Unit Bundle
★ Road to Revolution Group Project
★ What's the Question Bell Ringers for the American Revolution
★ Bill of Rights Student Created Gallery Walk
★ American Revolution Comparative Timeline Activity
* NOTE: This product is an inquiry lesson. There is not detailed information on each battle. It contains photos related to the battles for students to discuss and analyze.
This purchase is for one teacher only. This resource is not to be shared with colleagues or used by an entire grade level, school, or district without purchasing the proper number of licenses. If you are interested in a site license, please contact me for a quote. This resource may not be uploaded to the internet in any form, including classroom/personal websites or network drives. Sharing this document with others in person or via the internet is a direct violation of copyright law and may be prosecuted.
Skip the lecture and engage students in this inquiry-based gallery walk for the battles of the American Revolution. Students get up and moving on a gallery walk of the images of the Revolutionary War plus the part of the Treaty of Paris, a primary source. The groups collaborate to draw conclusions about the role different battles played in the overall war results.
This resource contains:
- Teacher's guide
- 6 Gallery displays (all primary sources)*
- Analysis activity
- Student graphic organizer for gallery walk
- DIGITAL version of all of the above for 1:1 classrooms or distance learning.
Never done a gallery walk? FREE: 5 tips for successful gallery walks.
Related bundles include:
∆ American Revolution Teacher Resource Bundle
∆ Early America Gallery Walk Bundle
∆ US History from the Colonies through Civil War Mega Teacher Resource Bundle
More not to be missed gallery walks:
☆ Bill of Rights Student Created Gallery Walk
☆ US Civil War Reconstruction Gallery Walk
☆ Westward Expansion Gallery Walk
☆ The Civil Rights Movement Gallery Walk
Must have American Revolution resources:
★ American Revolution Causes Activities
★ American Revolution Unit Bundle
★ Road to Revolution Group Project
★ What's the Question Bell Ringers for the American Revolution
★ Bill of Rights Student Created Gallery Walk
★ American Revolution Comparative Timeline Activity
* NOTE: This product is an inquiry lesson. There is not detailed information on each battle. It contains photos related to the battles for students to discuss and analyze.
This purchase is for one teacher only. This resource is not to be shared with colleagues or used by an entire grade level, school, or district without purchasing the proper number of licenses. If you are interested in a site license, please contact me for a quote. This resource may not be uploaded to the internet in any form, including classroom/personal websites or network drives. Sharing this document with others in person or via the internet is a direct violation of copyright law and may be prosecuted.
Skip the lecture and engage students in this inquiry-based gallery walk for the battles of the American Revolution. Students get up and moving on a gallery walk of the images of the Revolutionary War plus the part of the Treaty of Paris, a primary source. The groups collaborate to draw conclusions about the role different battles played in the overall war results.
This resource contains:
- Teacher's guide
- 6 Gallery displays (all primary sources)*
- Analysis activity
- Student graphic organizer for gallery walk
- DIGITAL version of all of the above for 1:1 classrooms or distance learning.
Never done a gallery walk? FREE: 5 tips for successful gallery walks.
Related bundles include:
∆ American Revolution Teacher Resource Bundle
∆ Early America Gallery Walk Bundle
∆ US History from the Colonies through Civil War Mega Teacher Resource Bundle
More not to be missed gallery walks:
☆ Bill of Rights Student Created Gallery Walk
☆ US Civil War Reconstruction Gallery Walk
☆ Westward Expansion Gallery Walk
☆ The Civil Rights Movement Gallery Walk
Must have American Revolution resources:
★ American Revolution Causes Activities
★ American Revolution Unit Bundle
★ Road to Revolution Group Project
★ What's the Question Bell Ringers for the American Revolution
★ Bill of Rights Student Created Gallery Walk
★ American Revolution Comparative Timeline Activity
* NOTE: This product is an inquiry lesson. There is not detailed information on each battle. It contains photos related to the battles for students to discuss and analyze.
This purchase is for one teacher only. This resource is not to be shared with colleagues or used by an entire grade level, school, or district without purchasing the proper number of licenses. If you are interested in a site license, please contact me for a quote. This resource may not be uploaded to the internet in any form, including classroom/personal websites or network drives. Sharing this document with others in person or via the internet is a direct violation of copyright law and may be prosecuted.