

DBQ Online Support Series
Online Support Series - February 2024

Welcome, February!
This edition of DBQ Online Support Series includes:
- Video: Top 10 Ways to Use the Teacher Markup Tool
- Spotlight Video: What Are Teachers Saying About DBQ Online?
- February Unit Spotlights: Celebrating Black History Month -- share with your teachers!
Top 10 Ways to Use the Teacher Markup Tool Video
Take 7 minutes and discover the power of the Teacher Markup tool!
Your students will thank you!
DBQ Spotlight: What Teachers Are Saying About DBQ Online
February Unit Spotlights: Celebrating Black History Month
How Did Abolitionists Make the Case Against Slavery?
Binders: Mini-Qs in Literature - Volume 2 & Mini-Qs in Literature - Volume 3
Martin Luther King and Malcolm X: Which Strategies Made the Most Sense for America in the 1960s?
Binders: Mini-Qs in Georgia History & Document Based Questions in American History
Harlem Renaissance Poetry: Does High Art or Folk Art Best Express Racial Pride?
Binder: Mini-Qs in Literature - Volume 1
Class, Gender, and Race in To Kill a Mockingbird: Is Mayella Powerful?
Harper Lee’s classic novel, To Kill a Mockingbird, is both a heartwarming and heartbreaking story. Included in this story is the tale of Mayella Ewell, a poor, white woman living in a racist Southern community in the 1930s. Your task is to read through the documents in this Mini-Q and assess Mayella’s power.
Binder: Mini-Qs in Literature - Volume 1
What Was Harriet Tubman’s Greatest Achievement?
Harriet Tubman is a true American hero. In this Mini-Q, you will learn about three of her achievements: helping enslaved people escape to the North, leading a Civil War river raid, and caring for those in need. Then you will decide which of these achievements was the greatest.
Binders: Elementary Mini-Qs - Volume 2 & Original US Volume 1 Mini-Qs: Units 1-12
What Were the Underlying Causes of the Tulsa Race Massacre?
On June 1, 1921, a mob of white Tulsans looted and burned the Greenwood District of Tulsa, Oklahoma. Many people died, but the majority—more than 300—were African American. At the time and for decades afterward, the events of that terrible night were referred to as the Tulsa Race Riot. In fact, what happened was not a riot but an organized attack on an established African American community.
This Mini-Q explores the underlying causes of the massacre.
Binder: New US Volume 2 Mini-Qs: Units 13-27
DBQ Project Workshops & Events
Upcoming Workshops:
February 2nd: DBQ Invitational - Pueblo, Colorado
March 7th: NCHE Pre-Conference in Cleveland, Ohio
March 7th: CCSS Pre-Conference in Garden Grove, CA
March 8th: CCSS Session: Engaging Students with Inquiry AND Technology: Everyday DBQ Strategies!
June 24th-27th: DBQ U Virtual Workshops (DBQ U 1.0, DBQ U 2.0, and DBQ Lead Boot Camp)
July 11th-12th: DBQ Project National Summit -- Registration deadline is March 31st. Limited space available. Register today!!!
The DBQ Project
Email: info@dbqproject.com
Website: www.dbqproject.com
Location: 1234 Sherman Avenue, Evanston, IL, USA
Phone: 847-475-4007
Facebook: facebook.com/dbqproject
X (Twitter): @dbqproject