“Everything is so linear, but this makes me think diagonally!” ~ a student describing Byrdseed.TV

Notice, Wonder: A Long Line

This is one of 750+ ready-to-use lessons on Byrdseed.TV. Videos, worksheets, and teacher guides. Your teachers press play, students work independently. This is one of 750+ ready-to-use lessons on Byrdseed.TV. Videos, worksheets, and teacher guides. Your teachers press play, students work independently. This is one of 750+ ready-to-use lessons on Byrdseed.TV. Videos, worksheets, and teacher guides. Your teachers press play, students work independently. This is one of 750+ ready-to-use lessons on Byrdseed.TV. Videos, worksheets, and teacher guides. Your teachers press play, students work independently. This is one of 750+ ready-to-use lessons on Byrdseed.TV. Videos, worksheets, and teacher guides. Your students watch, think, and work independently. This is one of 750+ ready-to-use lessons on Byrdseed.TV. Videos, worksheets, and teacher guides. Your students watch, think, and work independently. This is one of 750+ ready-to-use lessons on Byrdseed.TV. Videos, worksheets, and teacher guides. Your students watch, think, and work independently. Set up a free trial →
Notice, Wonder: A Long Line (members only)

Focus on moving slowly and allowing students to notice details and ask questions about the images. It's not about guessing or jumping to hypotheses! It's about wondering. (I recommend setting the Google Slides to *fullscreen* first!)


⚠️ Spoilers! Click for the explanation.

This is a 1932 photo of a breadline in New York City during the Great Depression. This photo comes from the US National Archives