Franklin D. Roosevelt
The New Deal
- FDR's Fireside Chats: The Power of Words
In this lesson, which focuses on two of FDR's Fireside Chats, students gain a sense of the dramatic effect of FDR's voice on his audience, see the scope of what he was proposing in these initial speeches, and make an overall analysis of why the Fireside Chats were so successful.
Related Video Clip: "Fear Itself" - The Social Security Act
This lesson engages students in the debate over the Social Security Act, which engrossed the nation during the 1930s.
Related Video Clip: "Depression Relief" - African Americans and the New Deal's Civilian Conservation Corps
The Civilian Conservation Corps, a New Deal recovery and relief program, provided more than a quarter of a million young black men with jobs during the Depression. By examining primary source documents, students analyze the impact of this program on race relations in America and assess the role played by the New Deal in changing them.
Related Video Clip: "Depression Relief" - Eleanor Roosevelt and the Rise of Social Reform in the 1930s
This lesson asks students to explore the various roles that Eleanor Roosevelt, a key figure in several of the most important social reform movements of the twentieth century, took on, among them: First Lady, political activist for civil rights, newspaper columnist and author, and representative to the United Nations.
Related Video Clip: "Eleanor Roosevelt"
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World War II
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Harry Truman
- The Origins of the Cold War, 1945–1949
Curriculum unit overview. Since the Bolshevik Revolution of 1917, Soviet leaders had been claiming that communism and capitalism could never peacefully coexist. Agreements regarding the postwar world were reached at Yalta and Potsdam, but the Soviets wasted no time in violating them. Harry Truman believed that the proper means of responding to an international bully was a credible threat of force.
Related Video Clip: Communism
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John F. Kennedy
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Lyndon B. Johnson
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Richard M. Nixon
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Jimmy Carter
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Ronald Reagan
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George H.W. Bush
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William Jefferson Clinton
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George Washington and Abraham Lincoln
EDSITEment has added this section as a handy reference to the two most notable of America's earlier Presidents
George Washington
Websites
Abraham Lincoln
Websites
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Selected EDSITEment Websites
Each of our presidents has taken America on a different voyage—voyages shaped by how each sitting president has defined the institution of the presidency
This resource has consolidated, coded, and organized into a single searchable database the following: The Messages and Papers of the Presidents: Washington—Taft (1789–1913); The Public Papers of the Presidents:Hoover to Bush (1929–1993); The Weekly Compilation of Presidential Documents:Clinton—G.W. Bush (1993-2008)
In-depth essays written and reviewed by distinguished scholars on each president and administration. Audio recording of White House tapes and images included.
Profiles of each president written for elementary and middle school students. Images from the Smithsonian collections included.
Overview of facts about each president and administration.
Annual Messages to Congress and the State of the Union Addresses for each president
A joint effort of twelve Presidential libraries. Case studies, documents, photographs, audio recordings, and video relating to the events of these presidents' lives
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ABOUT THE IMAGE
Clockwise from upper left: Presidents Franklin D. Roosevelt, Ronald W. Reagan, Harry S. Truman, John F. Kennedy.