Working together, individual citizens from different countries can impact others all over the world. Even if you are far away, you can fight hunger, poverty, and disease in other parts of the globe. You can help others recover from war and natural disasters. You can work to make our planet a cleaner, greener, and safer place for all its citizens.
Provide access to middle/high school social studies books in English —at two different reading levels. High-interest content is written at on-grade and below-grade levels, offering matching content and appealing visuals, along with embedded support and motivational features. Standards-based, accessible topics develop content-area literacy skills and connect with diverse students. Robust instructional support includes a Teacher’s Guide for each title and comprehension cards that help students develop evidence-based answers.
The idea that people had rights and responsibilities to themselves and their society developed in ancient Greece and Rome. Today we call this understanding between the individual and her or his community citizenship. Read this book to learn about the origins of this idea and how it forever changed the human experience.
Whether you were a knight of Europe, sworn to protect the weak and defenseless; a Chinese student working away trying to ace your civil servant exam and bring your family out of poverty; or a hardworking merchant in medieval Japan, the middle ages had a lot of midlevel responsibilities. Read this book to find out why you really have it made in the modern era.
In the United States, citizens have the right to say what they want to say, write what they want to write, and worship as they choose. What other rights come with American citizenship? Read this book to find out.
When the Constitution was drafted, only a few people—men age twenty-one and over—had the right to vote in the United States. Over the next two centuries, people fought to have their voices heard. Read this exciting book to find out how citizens expanded the right to vote and helped make America a truer democracy.
The idea that people had rights and responsibilities to themselves and their society developed in ancient Greece and Rome. Today we call this understanding between the individual and her or his community citizenship. Read this book to learn about the origins of this idea and how it forever changed the human experience.
Whether you were a knight of Europe, sworn to protect the weak and defenseless; a Chinese student working away trying to ace your civil servant exam and bring your family out of poverty; or a hardworking merchant in medieval Japan, the middle ages had a lot of midlevel responsibilities. Read this book to find out why you really have it made in the modern era.
Working together, individual citizens from different countries can impact others all over the world. Even if you are far away, you can fight hunger, poverty, and disease in other parts of the globe. You can help others recover from war and natural disasters. You can work to make our planet a cleaner, greener, and safer place for all its citizens.
When the Constitution was drafted, only a few people—men age twenty-one and over—had the right to vote in the United States. Over the next two centuries, people fought to have their voices heard. Read this exciting book to find out how citizens expanded the right to vote and helped make America a truer democracy.