This is a 60 word vocabulary about human rights with some activities to develop as an individual task in class. I hope you like it! - ESL worksheets
This is a five task activity about the human rights. Your students can dramatize about human rights. - ESL worksheets
Thanks to our rich connection with Zimbabwean poet in exile, Mbizo Chirasha, I have the pleasure and privilege of expanding The Poet by Day to include African artists, to feature their efforts in s…
This Reading Comprehension worksheet is suitable for higher elementary to proficient ESL learners or native English speakers. The text explores the harsh reality of children refugees and exposes the shortfalls in funding, aid and support for war-stricken children. After carefully reading the text, ...
This 2-page nonfiction article tells about Ruby Bridges and her role in the desegregation of American schools in the early 1960���s. After reading, students show what they���ve learned by completing a biographical graphic organizer. Lexile Level 790
MARY Wollstonecraft was the original feminist. For the last 150 years she’s been at rest in Bournemouth’s St Peter’s churchyard but she’s…
Children learn about the life and legacy of civil rights activist Rosa Parks in this history worksheet.
Learn more about some of the most popular songs of the day and explore what made them anthems of the Civil Rights movement.
Learn about Martin Luther King, Jr. with these free printouts and get ideas for activities to celebrate the holiday with your kids or students.
This is a worksheet based on the painting by Norman Rockwell. Desegregation. The students must describe the picture at first, then after reading the background must ananylse and interpret certain aspects of the renowned painting. Can be used in conjuction with segregation or education rights. Hope it's useful. - ESL worksheets
In honor of Martin Luther King, Jr.'s birthday, I'm sharing a few free printables, including this "I Have a Dream!" coloring page.
This Reading Comprehension worksheet is suitable for upper intermediate to proficient ESL learners. The text explains how the Universal Declaration Of Human Rights was voted after the end of WWII. After carefully reading the text, students are required to complete some comprehension exercises including: questions, True or False and a word search exercise. The vocabulary used in the text is rather advanced and can also be used for IGSCE, TOEFL or IELTS vocabulary building purposes. The handout can be completed in class or assigned for homework.