menu   home About Me My Products  
Showing posts with label Women in History. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Women in History. Show all posts

Incorporating Women's History Month Into Your Classroom




Incorporating Women’s History Month into our classrooms is a great way to recognize the accomplishments and dignity of great women in history! Celebrating these women along with women in our own families and communities leads to higher self-esteem in girls and greater respect among boys. The following is a list of notable women in history to encourage classroom discussion and further research.

Women born before 1800


  • ·       Joan of Arc – Peasant girl who led the French army. She was later burned at the stake for her crimes against the English.

  • ·       Pocahontas – She helped establish peace between the Natives and the English colonists.

  • ·       Catherine the Great – She was the empress of Russia and helped to establish Russia as a great European super power.

  • ·       Sacagawea – She traveled along with Lewis and Clark as a guide and interpreter.


Women born in the first half of the 1800s


  • ·       Harriet Beecher Stowe – She played an important role in the movement to end slavery.

  • ·       Susan B. Anthony – She was a leader in the women’s suffrage movement to get women the right to vote.

  • ·       Florence Nightingale – She was a pioneer in modern nursing.

  • ·       Harriet Tubman – She was a former slave who helped others escape to freedom from slavery.

  • ·       Clara Barton – She founded the American Red Cross and served as a nurse during the Civil War.

  • ·       Emily Dickinson – Famous poet who wrote over 2,000 poems.


Women born in the later 1800s


  • ·       Annie Oakley – Famous sharpshooter who traveled with Buffalo Bill’s Wild West Show

  • ·       Marie Curie – Chemist and physicist who worked with radioactivity and became the first woman to win a Nobel Prize.

  • ·       Heler Keller – She was blind and deaf and fought for the rights of people with handicaps.

  • ·       Eleanor Roosevelt – Wife of Franklin Roosevelt who fought for civil rights and women’s rights

  • ·       Amelia Earhart – Famous aviator who was the first woman to fly solo across the Atlantic Ocean. She mysteriously disappeared while trying to fly around the world.

 Women born in the 1900s 


  •  Mother Teresa – Roman Catholic nun known around the world for her charitable acts.
  • Rosa Parks – Civil rights leader whose arrest led to the Montgomery Bus Boycott.
  • Anne Frank – Jewish girl who wrote about her experiences during the Nazi invasion.

  •  Sandra Day O’ Connor – She was the first woman appointed to the Supreme Court.
  • Jane Goodall – She is famous for her studies with chimpanzees.


How to study these famous women in history?


  • ·       The education site Ducksters.com is a great resource that allows students to research.

  • ·       You may want to do this as a class by hooking up your laptop to a projector.

  • ·       I strongly suggest allowing students to choose who they would like to research. They will be much more engaged if they’re allowed to choose who they’ve selected.

  • ·       Research can be done individually or in groups.

  • ·       Looking of a FREE reading passage? Women's History Month FREEBIE 
  • Don't overlook women in your community. Students can brainstorm women they know in their families and community and conduct interviews.

Women'sHistory Month


March is Women’s History Month. This is a great time to teach about the accomplishments of women in our classrooms. Celebrating Women’s History Month not only teaches about the contributions of women, it also serves to inspire a new generation of young girls. Some inspiring women to include in your classroom studies are:

-        Joan of Arc
-        Pocahontas
-        Catherine the Great
-        Sacagawea
-        Harriet Beecher Stowe
-        Susan B. Anthony
-        Florence Nightingale
-        Harriet Tubman
-        Clara Barton
-        Emily Dickinson
-        Annie Oakley
-        Marie Curie
-        Helen Keller
-        Eleanor Roosevelt
-        Amelia Earhart
-        Mother Teresa
-        Rosa Parks
-        Anne Frank
-        Sandra Day O’ Connor
-        Jane Goodall

…and the list continues to grow! Check out different ways to incorporate Women's History Month into your classroom.



Looking for informational texts? Check out the FREEBIE for Rosa Parks!




Need a complete unit that can be used in your Social Studies and Reading/LA block? Check out the best-selling complete no-prep Women’s History Unit.