We have 30 free history lessons and assessments to teach the African American Freedom Movement during Black History Month and year-round. From Thomas Jennings and Emancipation to the Montgomery Bus Boycott and Greensboro Sit-Ins, check out our materials:
www.inquirygroup.org/about/update...
Posts by Digital Inquiry Group
Congratulations to @inquirygroup.org Co-Founder Sam Wineburg — named the third most influential education scholar in curriculum and instruction!
Join us this week at the National Council for the Social Studies Conference! We'll be at Booth 328 to share resources, professional development opportunities, and swag. Learn more: www.inquirygroup.org/about/updates/2025/natio...
November is National Native American Heritage Month. We have free lessons and assessments to support teaching the histories of Indigenous peoples of the United States and the Americas this month and year-round. Explore our materials: https://inquirygroup.org/native-american-heritage-month
In school, students read carefully selected materials. Outside, they scroll through a flood of unfiltered information. How do we bridge this divide? By bringing the digital world into the classroom, not to replace the curriculum, but to make it better. #MediaLiteracyWeek
Skilled users of the internet don't begin with critical thinking. They begin with critical ignoring. They ask, “Do I really know what I’m looking at?” Then, they use the internet to check the internet. #MediaLiteracyWeek
AI chatbots cite articles that don’t exist and draw on studies that say the opposite from what they claim. The most important thing for students to learn about AI? Information is always wedded to a particular source. #MediaLiteracyWeek
We’ve asked thousands of students to evaluate online sources. Here are the five most common mistakes they make: #MediaLiteracyWeek
Young people are online almost constantly — yet struggle to make sense of the content that streams across their screens. Our Civic Online Reasoning curriculum offers evidence-based resources teachers can use to help students make better decisions online. #MediaLiteracyWeek
Integrating digital literacy into existing coursework boosts students’ online reasoning. Learn more about our work in Illinois weaving Civic Online Reasoning into biology and geography classes in this National Association of State Boards of Education article: https://loom.ly/1LtxxHU
September 15 to October 15 is National Hispanic Heritage Month. We have free lessons and assessments to teach Hispanic, U.S. Latino, and Latin American history this month and year-round. Browse our curriculum: www.inquirygroup.org/about/updates/2023/hispa...
You can still sign up for today’s Beyond the Bubble History Assessments webinar at 4 pm PT/7 pm ET! Join us to explore 150+ free, document-based history assessments that reveal student thinking and can be scored in minutes.
Register for today’s webinar: https://loom.ly/9gb-MB8
Does a TikTok video really show Newark, New Jersey, in the 1940s? Our new task gauges student thinking about videos on social media. inquirygroup.org/history-assessments/hist...
You can still sign up for today’s Reading Like a Historian Lessons webinar at 4 pm PT/7 pm ET! Join us to explore 200+ document-based lessons that engage students in historical inquiry.
Register for today’s webinar: https://loom.ly/mxEyVlU
We’re honored to be recognized by @librarycongress.bsky.social as part of its 2025 Literacy Awards, particularly for our work integrating digital literacy into history instruction.
What caused the 1974 Puerto Rican Riots? In our new lesson, students analyze historical documents to investigate both immediate and systemic causes. inquirygroup.org/history-lessons/1974-pue...
You can still register for today's webinar at 4pm PT/7 pm ET on sorting fact from fiction online! We’ll cover the research behind the Civic Online Reasoning curriculum, review materials, and discuss how these resources can be integrated into classrooms. Sign up now: https://loom.ly/zryviKY
You can still sign up for today’s Beyond the Bubble History Assessments webinar at 4 pm PT/ 7 pm ET! Join us to explore 150+ free, document-based history assessments that reveal student thinking and can be scored in minutes.
Register for today’s webinar: https://loom.ly/WBXUT1o
Can students evaluate the credibility of a social media video about a Supreme Court decision? Our new assessment gauges students’ ability to read laterally and assess whether the organization behind the video is trustworthy. inquirygroup.org/history-assessments/denn...
You can still sign up for today’s webinar at 4 pm PT/7 pm ET! Join us to learn tips for integrating digital literacy in your classroom using free Civic Online Reasoning lessons designed for use in different subjects.
Register now: https://loom.ly/XRuAYEM
During the Second Red Scare, the Supreme Court ruled that membership in the Communist Party amounted to advocating the violent overthrow of the government. Just six years later, the Court changed its mind. Our new lessons asks students to investigate why. https://loom.ly/49K2pVQ
AI images are everywhere — and are increasingly indistinguishable from genuine photos. Our new assessment gauges students’ abilities to reason critically about a social media post that uses an AI-generated image to support a dubious historical claim. https://loom.ly/cSsmswM
Between 1896 and 1906, Arnold Genthe took hundreds of photographs in San Francisco’s Chinatown. Our new lesson asks students to evaluate the strengths and limitations of these photographs as evidence of the past. inquirygroup.org/history-lessons/historic...
There’s still time to register for today’s webinar at 4 pm PT/7 pm ET! Participants will experience a model lesson, receive access to curricular resources, and identify strategies for integrating digital literacy into history instruction. Sign up now: https://loom.ly/_hX5m5E
Did the term “grandfather clause” originate from a voter suppression scheme in Southern states during the Jim Crow era? Our new assessment asks students to verify a TikTok claim using credible sources. inquirygroup.org/history-assessments/gran...
How can students learn what to trust if schools never show them the kinds of information they see on their phones? DIG Co-Founder Sam Wineburg joined The Squiz to talk about the shift from an analog to a digital age, and how schools need to respond.
Full episode: pod.link/1477008816/e...
You can still register for tomorrow's webinar at 4pm PT/7 pm ET on sorting fact from fiction online! We’ll cover the research behind the Civic Online Reasoning curriculum, review materials, and discuss how these resources can be integrated into classrooms. Sign up now: https://loom.ly/zPikcPk
🎙️ In this episode of School’s In, GSE Professor Emeritus Sam Wineburg discusses digital literacy and how to help students navigate the internet in the era of AI and fake news.
🎧 Listen to the full episode: lnk.to/SchoolsInSM
#EduSky #AcademicSky
Why might history textbooks have changed how they present the Jim Crow era? In our new lesson, students contextualize contrasting textbook passages from 1942 and 1974 to investigate how historical accounts evolve. inquirygroup.org/history-lessons/jim-crow...
In Igarassu, Brazil, Ezequiel David do Amaral Canario used our Battle of the Somme lesson to explore World War I with his students. We’re thrilled to see educators around the world adapt and incorporate our free, evidence-based materials!