Ancient World History BUNDLE: 75 Writing Prompts & Discussion Questions
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What educators are saying
Products in this Bundle (6)
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Bonus
Description
This money-saving bundle of all six sets of World History “Brain-Stretchers” covers prehistory to the Renaissance. There are 75 prompts in this set (including 3 bonus Renaissance prompts only found in this package). Use them to spark a discussion, to promote literacy, to start class in an engaging way. I used them as a written bell-ringer activity followed by a class discussion to accomplish all three of these goals! They are sure to get students thinking about topics that they will be exploring in class, finding relevance in the past, and reflecting on what they have learned!
Each individual Brain-Stretcher is neatly spaced onto its own PDF page (that displays nicely in full screen mode) and is between two and five sentences long. To help students focus on the main idea of each prompt, the key question is in bold font. The questions in each prompt are purely opinion based (no right or wrong answers) so they are accessible to all students. Each prompt can be used independently and in whatever order you prefer. This makes it easy to “skip” a Brain-Stretcher on a day when your time is cut short.
The 75 Brain-Stretchers in this set are divided as follows:
- Prehistory: 4 prompts
- Early Civilizations (Mesopotamia and Egypt): 5 prompts
- Ancient India: 3 prompts
- Ancient and Imperial China: 12 prompts
- Ancient Greece: 12 prompts
- Ancient Rome: 8 prompts
- Byzantine Empire: 4 prompts
- Islamic Civilization: 6 prompts
- Africa: 3 prompts
- Americas: 3 prompts
- Middle Ages: 12 prompts
- Renaissance: 3 prompts
I have also included a guide explaining how each question relates to the specific World History topics being covered so you can easily incorporate everything into your lessons. If you’re interested in delving deeper, you'll also find four pages of tips and suggestions detailing how Brain-Stretchers can be used to establish an effective routine that will prove invaluable in enhancing your lessons and managing your classroom.
For those of you that would like to utilize them as a written assignment, this set also comes with a rubric to make grading simple. Even better, it is a fully editable Word document that you can easily adjust to suit your grading style and preferences. The rubric is arranged to grade ten prompts at a time.
What Students Said About Brain-Stretchers (in an anonymous year-end survey):
- “It was a good way to start off the class and get us going. It helped start discussions and get our brains going.”
- “I think the journals were good because they made us apply our lives into the lesson we were going to learn that specific day.”
- “The questions made me think and opened my brain in the morning. They gave me a better perspective when learning about certain topics.”
- “I liked hearing about what other people had to say and how their opinion differed from mine.”
- “They were a good way to get the class to start thinking about the topic we would learn in class.”
- “I like that we get to have a class discussion about a topic that relates to the unit we are studying. I think it is a great way to start class.”
- “It was a good way to voice your opinion if you were passionate about a particular brain-stretcher. Also, it was a fun open-ended thing to do in the beginning of class.”
These Brain-Stretchers are truly versatile and I found them to be an absolute lifesaver in the classroom!
Only need a few of the topics found in this bundle? They are also available in these individual sets:
⭐Prehistory, Early Civilizations, and Ancient India
⭐Ancient Rome and the Byzantine Empire
⭐Islamic Civilization, Africa, and the Americas
Still curious about why I call them “Brain-Stretchers”? I like the idea of having students warm up their minds before we fully embark on our journey through the past in much the same way that athletes would stretch their muscles before more vigorous exercise. As you can see from the positive student feedback, they are an effective way to spark interest and get students thinking!
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PS: The brain icon that I used was designed with resources from Freepik.com.