American Revolution | Elementary Curriculum

Elementary Curriculum: American Revolution

Find lesson plans, student activity sheets, interactive resources, classroom videos, and free professional development resources to expand your knowledge of the American Revolution.

 

Image Source: A detail from A View of Part of the Town of Boston in New-England and Brittish Ships of War Landing Their Troops, 1768, a broadside by Paul Revere and Christian Remick, printed in Boston, 1770. (The Gilder Lehrman Institute, GLC02873)
 

Paul Revere's hand colored engraving of Boston with British warships landing troops

Featured Lesson Plan

The American Revolution: The Boston Massacre, “Yankee Doodle,” and the Declaration of Independence, 1770–1776

Grade Level: 3–5
Recommended Time for Completion: Four 45-minute class periods

Over the course of three lessons, students will explore the Revolutionary era through three primary
sources: an image of the Boston Massacre, the song “Yankee Doodle,” and the preamble to the
Declaration of Independence. These primary sources provide three ways to understand the ideals of
the founders. Students will closely analyze these sources and use visual and textual evidence to draw conclusions. They will demonstrate their knowledge by answering critical thinking questions, restating ideas in their own words, and participating in class discussions. 

Lesson Plan  Student Activities 

Additional Lesson Plans

  • Grades 3-5

America in Song

Students will understand the history and significance of several of America’s most iconic songs: “The Star-Spangled Banner,” “Yankee Doodle Dandy,” and “America the Beautiful.”

  • Grades 4-5

The Boston Massacre

Students will be asked to learn about the Boston Massacre and to analyze Paul Revere’s depiction of the event in the engraving The Bloody Massacre Perpetrated in King-Street.

Interactive Map: The American Revolution

Classroom Videos

The Hamilton Cast Read Along videos feature cast members of the musical Hamilton reading award-winning children’s books that explore complex topics in American history. These videos can be integrated into your classroom to initiate student conversation.

Becoming the United States: Colonial America to Reconstruction (based on a traveling exhibition of the same name) is a collection of short narrated videos that will give your students an overview of key events and figures to American history.

Ona Judge Outwits the Washingtons

by Gwendolyn Hooks and Simone Agoussoye

Read along with Tiffany Mellard as she tells the story of Ona Judge, an enslaved woman who was the focus of a years-long manhunt after her escape from George and Martha Washington.

  • Hamilton Cast Read Along

Mumbet’s Declaration of Independence

by Gretchen Woelfle and Alix Delinois

Read along with Meecah as she tells the story of Mumbet, an enslaved woman from Massachusetts who successfully sued for her freedom.

  • Hamilton Cast Read Along

The American Revolution

Video 02 will provide your students with a general introduction to the American Revolution.

  • Becoming the United States

Free Professional Development Course

History Essentials: The American Revolution

Course Features:

  • 12 lectures
  • 12 quizzes
  • Suggested readings
  • Certificate for 15 PD credits

Led by Carol Berkin, Professor Emerita, Baruch College and CUNY Graduate Center

This course focuses on the story of the birth and initial growth of the United States of America and explores many different perspectives on the Revolution, including women, the common soldier, and loyalists.

Register for Free Course

NEH Summer Institute Lectures

The Making of America: Colonial Era to Reconstruction led by Denver Brunsman

In these lectures, geared toward elementary and middle school teachers, scholars focus on the people, ideas, and events that made America into a cultural, social, and political reality.