Gorillas
(View Complete Item Description)Learn about the lives of gorillas born in captivity in this video segment from Nature.
Material Type: Lecture
Learn about the lives of gorillas born in captivity in this video segment from Nature.
Material Type: Lecture
A photographer trails elephants in Kenya in this video segment from Africa.
Material Type: Lecture
In this video segment from Nature, animal lovers talk about their experiences having pigs as pets.
Material Type: Lecture
Write about something that you used to enjoy doing but that you no longer find interesting. What has changed and what have you learned? ***Access to Teacher's Domain content now requires free login to PBS Learning Media.
Material Type: Lecture
A team of middle school students in Baton Rouge research global warming and produce their take on the subject in this witty 30-second animated short
Material Type: Lecture
A family of elephants rescues a baby elephant kidnapped by a rival elephant family in this video segment from Nature.
Material Type: Lecture
Students form literature circles, read "Esperanza Rising" or "Becoming Naomi Leon" by Pam MuĐoz Ryan, use a Critical Thinking Map to discuss social issues, and use a class wiki.
Material Type: Activity/Lab, Lesson Plan, Unit of Study
A small, bust-length caricature of Washington "Globe" editor and Van Buren adviser Francis Preston Blair. The print was probably issued in the spring of 1838. In May of that year the Specie Circular, an extremely unpopular order issued by the Jackson administration in December 1836, directing collectors of public revenues to accept only gold or silver ("specie") in payment for public lands, was repealed. The print's title may refer to Daniel Webster's lengthy March 12 speech condemning the Independent Treasury Bill and other aspects of President Van Buren's fiscal program. The print may to be a companion piece to "The Globe-Man After hearing of the Vote on the Sub-Treasury Bill" (no. 1838-4). Both are probably attributable to Napoleon Sarony on the strength of their marked resemblance to Sarony's characterization of Blair in "A Globe to Live On!" (no. 1840-42).|Entd . . . 1838 by H.R. Robinson . . . Southern District of N. York|Printed & pubd. by H.R. Robinson, 52 Cortlandt St. N.Y.|Probably drawn by Napoleon Sarony.|Title appears as it is written on the item.|Weitenkampf, p. 54.|Forms part of: American cartoon print filing series (Library of Congress)|Published in: American political prints, 1766-1876 / Bernard F. Reilly. Boston : G.K. Hall, 1991, entry 1838-3.
Material Type: Diagram/Illustration, Primary Source
An illustrated anti-Whig broadside, designed to combat the "Log Cabin campaign" tactics of presidential candidate William Henry Harrison. The text warns the people of New Orleans of Whig election propaganda: "People of Louisiana, above you have an accurate representation of the federal "Log-Cabin" Trap, invented by the "bank-parlor, Ruffle-shirt, silk-stocking" Gentry, for catching the "votes" of the industrious and laboring classes, of our citizens, of both town and country. . . . The "log cabin" is raised to blind you with the belief, that they are your friends . . ." The author then goes on to describe Whig campaign techniques as relying on deception, alcohol, and visual enticements, and as an "appeal to [the people's] passions, with mockeries, humbugs, shows, and parades. . . ." In the illustration a man sucks at a barrel of "Hard Cider" linked by a trip-rod to a precariously tilted log cabin. Above is the "Federal Bank Whig Motto. We Stoop to Conquer."|Title appears as it is written on the item.|Published in: American political prints, 1766-1876 / Bernard F. Reilly. Boston : G.K. Hall, 1991, entry 1840-24.
Material Type: Diagram/Illustration, Primary Source