Skip to main content
Home
ahs logo
  • Sign In
  • or
  • Sign UP
Fourscore Primary Menu
  • About
    • About Fourscore
    • About American Heritage
    • Authors
    • Advisory Board - History and ELA Education
    • Master Teacher Review Panel
    • What Experts Are Saying
  • Collections
  • Instructional Resources
  • Sponsors and Partners
    • Helmsley Charitable Trust
    • The Diana Davis Spencer Foundation
    • Educational Testing Service (ETS)
  • Support/FAQs
    • Questions About Fourscore Content
    • Questions About Access And Use
  • Magazine
 
X

Who Was Wyatt Earp? by Allen Barra

Teacher's Guide
05008_WhoWasWyattEarp_FINAL_TG.pdf
Era(s) This Collection Covers
ERA 5: Civil War and Reconstruction (1850-1877)
ERA 6: The Development of the Industrial United States (1870-1900)

Possible Instructional Strategies With this Collection
  • TASK 1. Wrestle with the Argument
  • TASK 2. One Sentence Summaries
  • TASK 3. Unpack the Points
  • TASK 7. Close Reading - Focus Question
  • TASK 8. Analyze and Compare Author Purpose
  • TASK 10. Question the Author
  • TASK 22. Structured Academic Controversy
  • TASK 23. Identifying Claim/Evidence
  • TASK 24. QFT (Question Formulation Technique)
  • TASK 25. Document Analysis/Sourcing

More Collections

  • Lincoln, the Orator by Harold Holzer
  • America as a Gun Culture, by Richard Hofstadter
  • Slaughter on Cemetery Ridge, by Stephen Sears
  • America’s Oddest Election, by Harold Holzer
  • Why The Civil War Still Matters, by James McPherson
  • The Slaves Freed, by Stephen Oates
  • The Father of American Terrorism, by Ken Chowder
  • Susan B. Anthony Cast Her Ballot And Was Arrested, by Godfrey D. Lehman
  • Who Was Wyatt Earp? by Allen Barra
  • Hollywood History, by Mark C. Carnes
Footer
  • About
  • Collections
  • Instructional Resources
  • Sponsors and Partners
  • Support
  • Contact
ahs logo
Follow us
  • facebook
  • twitter
  • tumbler icon
  • google plus icon
  • linkedin icon
  • pintrest icon

If you don't know history, then you don't know anything. You are leaf that doesn't know it is a part of a tree. -Michael Crichton

© 2023, American Heritage Society