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What is Performance Education Unlimited?

Performance Education Unlimited provides unlimited access to the complete library or section of the library that you join.

Thousands of social studies teachers and specialists have benefited from using Performance Education’s effective, student centered, and easy to use workbooks. Our library includes the revolutionary Teacher Toolbook Series, our ever popular Testbook Series, and our new Daily Warm-Up Series, called “Predicting the Past”.

Performance Education makes all these resources available to you online 24/7.

You can choose the subscription that best meets your needs from the following options: Click on the product list to see what is included with each subscription.

With annual subscriptions, teachers have unlimited access to our materials. Not only do they get materials from our current library, but all new titles and product types that are currently in the works.

Subscription type Subscription content 12-monthly payments Prepaid Annual subscription
Geography and World Regions Product List $24.95$19.96
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$299$239.20
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American History and Government Product List $39.95$31.96
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$399$319.20
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World History Product List $39.95$31.96
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$399$319.20
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Comprehensive Plan (All of the Above) Product List $54.95$43.96
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$599$479.20
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School Comprehensive Product List n/a $1995 $1596.00
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Reasons to Buy PE Unlimited

. . . You Deserve It and Your Students Deserve It

Consider these reasons:
  1. We are specialists in social studies for grades 6 through 12. This is all we do, and we continuously update our lessons to conform to changes involving current events, internet sites, state standards and state tests.

    Learn about our product line by clicking here

  2. It works. Based entirely on Blooms Taxonomy, you will produce better results not just in tests, but in the quality of your students’ critical thinking and problem solving skills.

    Learn more about our revolutionary teaching methods by clicking here.

  3. It saves you time. Each Teacher Toolbook contains everything you need to present and reinforce the subject, from facts, lectures, maps, timelines, graphic organizers, games, homework assignments, tests, and links to other useful sites. Think how much time you spend looking for just half this stuff, and it’s all here in one reproducible book.

    Check out a sample of our Toolbooks by clicking here

  4. Your students will love it. We all know that students learn best when they’re engaged, and that’s what we provide with our materials. They will love the variety, the Brain Games, the competition, and above all the knowledge that they can all be successful with your help and these materials.

  5. It’s easy to Use. Just download a lesson plan and away you go. No special training or learning curve is required by you or your students. And you’ll never be short of ideas to use.

  6. It shares the burden and reduces stress. Our program is student centered and encourages them to take responsibility for their own learning, recognizing their own strengths and weaknesses, and working together as teams in a collaborative manner.

  7. We support you. Our goal is to help you and your students be successful and we are here to provide answers to any of the questions you may have as you.

  8. We’re offer Exceptional Value. Compare our price to what we offer, and we believe you’ll quickly agree that we do indeed offer exceptional value.

  9. Our customers love us. Don’t just take our word for it. Check out comments from teachers and principals from around the country by clicking here, or call us and we’ll be glad to put you in touch with one of our customers and you can hear for yourself what they have to say.

Why Bloom’s Taxonomy?

Our materials are based on Bloom’s Taxonomy because it is the # 1 approach required for student success on any standardized test, plus a proven method in the development of critical thinking, a skill for life.

  • Bloom’s taxonomy is used to write state standards
  • Bloom’s taxonomy is used to write state tests
  • Bloom’s taxonomy is the basis for our materials
Each Toolbook is designed to provide students with practice in the 6 levels of critical thinking outlined in Bloom’s Taxonomy, and used to set questions on standardized tests:
  1. Recall Recall the facts themselves (memorization, rote learning)
  2. Interpret Translate the facts into your own words
  3. Apply Apply the facts to a new situation
  4. Analyze Break down the facts
  5. Synthesize Add up the facts
  6. Evaluate Judge whether the facts measure up to a high standard
The assumption here is simple: If you truly understand a concept you can demonstrate it in six different ways. To do well, the test requires students to manipulate the facts in order to answer questions based on all six methods. It’s that simple, yet most other materials, including text books do not prepare students for this approach to testing and learning. At Performance Education this is what we do well.
(Click to learn more about Bloom’s Taxonomy………..excerpts from “How to make your classroom Bloom” and link to purchase the book)

Teacher Toolbooks

~All Inclusive Unit Guides~
Suppose you had all year with nothing to do... ...but research every topic, define every term, find maps, write mini-lectures, invent creative lessons, dream up and assessment for each topic, plus write hundreds of social studies test questions for "The Grand Exam." Well, that's exactly what we've done! Teacher Toolbooks provide a general knowledge base, student-centered activities and assessments, plus “The Grand Exam” to assess what your students have actually learned.

Based on Bloom's Taxonomy, our Toolbooks are all you need to shape your students future and see amazing results on end of year tests.
Samples and Detailed Information | Toolbook List

Predicting the Past

~10 Minute Daily Warmups~
Imagine, opening your class with: “Once upon a time . . .”
Read about a famous person and then predict what happens to him or her. Each person’s life story is a lesson in character education! True stories about real men and women who helped shape U.S. and World History. Diversity – stories of famous people from Asia, Africa, Latin America. Fascinating – most of the stories describe the famous person’s childhood. Predicting – students predict what happens to him/her as an adult! Inspiring – how each person struggled against tremendous odds. Entertaining – human interest stories you will find nowhere else. Memorable – people who made history faced tough decisions. Tests – these are the famous people who show up on standardized tests.
Detailed description and product list.

United States History and Government

Colonial America
Everything from A to Z. Why the colonies were founded, life in colonial America, compare and contrast the three regions - New England, the Middle colonies, and the South. Why representative government arose in the Thirteen Colonies. 516 test questions.
The American Revolution
Everything you need to know about the American Revolution, from A to Z. The Causes. The Revolutionary War. The Leaders. The Results. A full analysis of the significance of the Declaration of Independence. 200 test questions.
The U.S. Constitution
You can’t touch this - no other workbook comes close. Topics: The origins, fundamental principles, Constitutional Convention, Bill of Rights, and how the Constitution works. The centerpiece: Guys and gals recreate the Constitutional Convention. (It’s easy, we provide a worksheet for each student in your class.) Action games and analysis of documents help students appreciate the principles that underlie our Constitution. 551 test questions.
The Early Republic
The Federalist era and the rise of the two-party system. Compare and contrast Alexander Hamilton and Thomas Jefferson. Thomas Jefferson and the Louisiana Purchase. The War of 1812: causes, events, people, and results. The Industrial Revolution: inventors, factories, and immigrant labor. 505 test questions.
Growth and Conflict
From 1830 onward, this explains the causes of the Civil War. Andrew Jackson and Jacksonian democracy. Westward expansion. The Mexican War. Slavery and slave resistance. The Abolitionists. The Reformers: Horace Mann and many more. 699 test questions.
The Civil War
Everything you need to know about the Civil War from A to Z: Causes, events, battles, turning points, leaders, and consequences. The concepts: states’ rights vs federalism, sectionalism, nullification and secession. Abraham Lincoln’s presidency and his speeches. 699 test questions.
The Industrial Age
The Industrial Revolution, 1870 to 1900. Railroads and high-tech farming shaped a new federal Indian policy. The Sioux Wars. The Homestead Act. Inventors and inventions: Edison, Bell, the Wright brothers. Industrialists and bankers (Carnegie, Rockefeller, Stanford, Morgan) shaped both economics and politics. Urbanization and industrialization. Child labor. Laissez-faire. The labor movement. Immigration. The Populist Party. 240 test questions.
The U.S. as a World Power
The Spanish-American War, 1898. The Open Door policy. The Panama Canal. Theodore Roosevelt’s Big Stick diplomacy. Taft’s dollar diplomacy. Woodrow Wilson’s moral diplomacy. 603 test questions.
The Progressive Era
The Muckrakers. Upton Sinclair’s The Jungle. Life in the industrial cities: sweatshops and slums, and the political machine. Corporate mergers and the Trust. Social Darwinism and the Social Gospel. The Progressive Party. Federal regulation of big business. President Theodore Roosevelt. 944 test questions.
America in World War I
Everything you need to know about World War I (at home and abroad), from A to Z. The causes, events, people, and consequences of the war. Plus: What was happening on the home front? 414 test questions.
The Roaring Twenties
Three Republican presidents: Harding, Coolidge and Hoover. The Palmer Raids. Marcus Garvey. The KKK. Immigration quotas. Groups that tried to protect individual rights: ACLU, NAACP, Anti-Defamation League. The 18th, 19th, and 21st Amendments. The new status of women. The Harlem Renaissance. Radio, movies, and popular culture. 586 test questions.
The Great Depression
The causes and consequences of the Great Depression. The Dust Bowl. FDR and the New Deal. Expansion of the federal government: WPA, Social Security, NLRB, farm programs, and the TVA. The role of organized labor. 784 test questions.
The Modern World - World War II
Everything you need to know about World War II, from A to Z. The causes, events, people, and consequences of the war. The Axis and Allies. Appeasement. Theaters of war, turning points, and war conferences. Churchill, FDR, Hirohito, Hitler, Mussolini, Stalin, MacArthur, and Eisenhower. The Holocaust. Plus: What was happening on the home front? 656 test questions.
The Modern World -The Cold War Across The Globe
Everything you need to know about the Cold War, from A to Z. The two superpowers (U.S. and U.S.S.R.) face off. The causes: Yalta, Eastern Europe, the nuclear arms race. The Marshall Plan, rebuilding Germany and Japan. The Truman Doctrine, the Korean War, Vietnam. Competition for hearts and minds in Asia, Africa, the Middle East and Latin America. China from Mao to Tiananmen Square. Eastern Europe from the Iron Curtain to the 1990s. The Middle East from the birth of israel to the 1990s. 602 test questions.
The Civil Rights Movement
How World War II changed expectations. Brown v. Board of Education. The leaders: A. Philip Randolph, Martin Luther King, Jr., Malcolm X, Thurgood Marshall, James Farmer, and Rosa Parks. Dr. King’s Letter from Birmingham Jail and his “I Have a Dream” speech. Resistance at Little Rock and Birmingham. The movement spreads to northern cities. The 1964 Civil Rights Act, the Voting Rights Act of 1965, and the 24th Amendment. The impact on American Indians, Asian Americans, Hispanic Americans, and the women’s movement of the 1960s. 625 test questions.
Origins of the U.S. Constitution
American Government Part I: The Us Constitution - The Concepts Were Revolutionary and Remain So to This Day. How did the founding fathers come up with the concepts embedded in the U.S. Constitution? The main purpose of government is to promote the public good. The Classical Age - The Greeks invented democracy. The Romans invented the republic and citizenship. Medieval England - The Magna Carta established the principle of limited government. The main purpose of government is to protect individual rights. The Judeo-Christian Ethic - the importance of the individual. The Glorious Revolution - A constitutional monarchy and the English Bill of Rights. John Locke - Natural Rights and the Social Contract. Montesquieu - Three Branches, Separation of Powers, Checks & Balances, plus Majority Rule/Minority Rights. The Mayflower Compact - Consent of the Governed. The Great Awakening - Separation of Church & State. The Declaration of Independence - Political equality ("All men are created equal.")
Principles beneath the Constitution
Students recreate the Constitutional Convention of 1787 and then examine the principles beneath the Constitution: tyranny of the majority, separation of powers, checks and balances, an independent judiciary, enumerated powers, the rule of law, federalism, and civilian control of the military.
The Three Branches
Examine all seven articles of the Constitution, then zoom in on the 3 branches of government - the President, Congress and Supreme Court. Each branch: What is its purpose? What power does it have? How is its power checked by the other branches?
Civil Liberties
The First Amendment. Landmark court cases. Freedom of speech (symbolic speech, libel, obscenity, sedition). Freedom of the press (propaganda and prior restraint). Freedom of assembly (civil disobedience). Freedom of petition (the right to lobby). Freedom of Religion (Separation of Church & State, school prayer, the Ten Commandments, and the Pledge of Allegiance).
Rights of the Accused
Amendments 4, 5, 6, 7, and 8. When accused of a crime, what rights do you have - and why?
The Right to Privacy
Amendment 9: The right to privacy, reproductive rights, economic rights, freedom of association, and more. Amendment 10: States’ rights, full faith and credit, and same-sex marriage.
Civil Rights
The 14th Amendment - the Civil Rights struggle from integration to affirmative action. The 15th Amendment - the Civil Rights movement won the right to vote.
The Two-Party System
The rise of the two-party system - and the role of third parties in U.S. history. The Progressives: direct democracy - the initiative, referendum and recall. The Conservatives: reapportionment, redistricting, and gerrymandering.
The Presidential Campaign - 2008
Everything you needed heading into the 2008 presidential race! The political parties. The candidates. The issues. Campaign finance. Campaign advertising. The Primary. Polls. Voting behavior. Electronic voting machines. The Electoral College.
Comparative Governments
Forms of government. Part I: Constitutional Democracy: The parliamentary system. Part II: Totalitarianism: Communism & Fascism. The Universal Declaration of Human Rights. The fall of communism. Part III: Authoritarian regimes, especially military dictatorships. Part IV: The trend today is democracy.
Presidents: Washington to Lincoln
Presidents: George Washington to Abraham Lincoln
Presidents: Johnson to McKinley
Presidents: Andrew Johnson to William McKinley
Presidents of the 20th Century

World History

The Stone Age
From the Stone Age to the Agricultural Revolution. 53 test questions.
Ancient Mesopotamia
Birthplace of the world’s first civilization! The Fertile Crescent, Tigris & Euphrates rivers, irrigation, polytheism and Hammurabi’s Code. Cuneiform, Sumerian math, the wheel and sail. Compare and contrast Mesopotamia and Egypt. 84 test questions.
Ancient Egypt and Kush
The Nile River Valley, the afterlife, pharaohs, pyramids. Hieroglyphs and the Rosetta Stone. Mediterranean trade. Queen Hatshepsut and Ramses the Great. Includes the Kingdom of Kush. 104 test questions.
The Ancient Hebrews
The world’s first monotheists! The Hebrew Bible. The religion of Judaism. Mapping the Exodus. Speeches from Abraham, Moses, Naomi, Ruth and David. The Babylonian Captivity, destruction of the Temple, and the Diaspora. Includes the board game, “The Greatest Story Ever Told”. 92 test questions.
Ancient Greece
The world’s first democracy! The Aegean Sea, Athens and the Acropolis. Forms of government: tyranny, oligarchy, democracy and dictatorship. Direct vs. representative democracy. Greek mythology, Homer’s Iliad and Odyssey, and Aesop’s fables. The Persian Wars. Compare and contrast Sparta and Athens. The Peloponnesian Wars. Alexander the Great and the spread of Greek culture. Speeches by Pericles, Socrates, Plato, Aristotle, Euclid and Thucydides. Includes the board game, “The Rise & Fall of the Greek Empire.” 201 test questions.
Ancient India
The latest archaeological discoveries about the Harappan Civilization. The Indus River Valley, the Aryans and Sanskrit, Brahmanism and the caste system. An A+ explanation of Hinduism. The Mauryan Empire, the life and moral teachings of Buddha, and the political achievements of Emperor Asoka. The spread of Buddhism. Literature: the Rig Veda, the Ramayana, the Mahabharata and the Bhagavad Gita. The Hindu -Arabic numerals we use today. 185 test questions.
Ancient China
The only civilization that never fell. The rise of a civilization in the Huang He Valley, geographic isolation, hereditary rule, ancestor worship, calligraphy, the use of bronze. The “Mandate of Heaven.” How the Age of Warring States gave rise to Confucius and Confucianism. The first Emperor builds a centralized government and the Great Wall. The Han dynasty - expansion of the empire, bureaucratic state, civil service test, the Silk Road, Buddhism spreads to China and the invention of paper. 185 test questions.
Ancient Rome
The rise of the Roman Republic. Written constitution, tripartite government, checks and balances, civic duty. The stories of Aeneas, Romulus and Remus, Cincinnatus, Cicero, Julius Caesar and Augustus. The rise of the Roman Empire: control of the Mediterranean Sea, expansion of the empire and trade. The rise of Christianity: The Diaspora, Jesus of Nazareth, and St. Paul the Apostle. The Roman legacy: Art and architecture, science and technology, language and literature, law and government. 213 test questions.
The Middle Ages - The Fall of Rome
Why did Rome fall? What was the significance of the Byzantine Empire? What was the Great Schism? Student speeches by Constantine the Great. 114 test questions.
The Middle Ages - Europe
How geography shaped life in medieval Europe. How Christianity spread throughout northern Europe. The rise of feudalism and life on the manor. The rise of towns. The rise of monarchy. Kings & Popes. The story of Charlemagne. William the Conqueror and the Norman invasion. The Magna Carta, Parliament, the English court system - and how they influenced the U.S. Causes and results of the Crusades. Trace the route of the bubonic plague. The Catholic Church’s impact on Europe. Ferdinand, Isabella, and the Reconquista. 1,364 test questions.
The Middle Ages - Islam
The life of Muhammad and the religion of Islam. The Koran: beliefs, practices, and law. The Five Pillars. A pilgrimage to Mecca. Ramadan. What beliefs do Muslims share with Jews and Christians? Sunni vs Shiite Muslims. How geography shaped Arab culture. Compare the nomadic and sedentary way of life. The spread of Islam by military conquests, cultural blending, and the spread of the Arabic language. The rise of cities. The role of merchants and their caravan trade routes throughout Asia, Africa and Europe. The Golden Age of Islam: Muslim scholars and their intellectual achievements. 348 test questions.
The Middle Ages - China
The Golden Age of China. Four dynasties - Tang, Sung, Mongols, and Ming. The reunification of China. Buddhism spread through China, Korea and Japan. Block printing was invented. The Mongol invasion, Genghis Khan, Kublai Khan, and Marco Polo. Confucianism. The Grand Canal. The Silk Road. Sea expeditions. The imperial state and its bureaucracy. Chinese inventions (tea, paper, woodblock printing, the compass, and gunpowder) and their impact on world history. 338 test questions.
The Middle Ages - Africa
Life in the Niger River Valley. How geography shaped the caravan trade. Desert people traded salt; rainforest people traded gold. The two peoples met in the savanna, “where the camel meets the canoe.” The Empire of Ghana was founded on the gold-salt trade. The story of Mansa Musa and the Empire of Mali. The importance of family, specialized jobs, and the oral tradition in West Africa. How Arab merchants spread the Arabic language and the religion of Islam. 246 test questions.
The Middle Ages - Japan
How geography shaped the culture. Nara. Prince Shotoku. The Golden Age of Literature: Lady Murasaki Shikibu’s The Tale of Genji, The Pillow Book, and haiku. The rise of a military society. Shinto and Zen Buddhism. The rise of cities like Edo (Tokyo). How weak Ashikaga shoguns tried to rule, yet the daimyo warred among themselves. The samurai’s impact on culture. Noh and Kabuki theater. How medieval Japan and medieval England were very similar. 631 test questions.
The Maya, Aztec & Inca
The Maya carved a civilization out the rainforest of Central America: slash-and-burn farming, pyramids, a system of writing, math and astronomy. The Aztecs moved to the Plateau of Mexico and built a floating city: Tenochtitlan, Lake Texcoco, floating gardens, tomatoes, maize, chocolate, causeways, aqueducts, a warlike society with slavery and human sacrifice. Like the Romans, the Inca were engineers: The Andes, roads along the rides, terrace farming, royal messengers, the quipu, the potato, Cusco and Machu Picchu. 178 test questions.
Renaissance & Reformation
THE RENAISSANCE: What was the Renaissance? Florence and Venice. Trade along the Silk Road. Marco Polo. The impact of the printing press. The achievements. The stories of Dante, Leonardo da Vinci, Michelangelo, Gutenberg, and Shakespeare. THE REFORMATION: What was the Reformation? The leaders - Erasmus, Martin Luther, John Calvin, and Tynedale. The impact of Protestantism. The Counter-Reformation: Jesuits, the Council of Trent, and Catholic missionaries throughout Asia, Africa, and Latin America. The Inquisition. 743 test questions.
Scientific Revolution & Enlightenment
SCIENTIFIC REVOLUTION: What was the Scientific Revolution? The impact of Copernicus, Galileo, Kepler, and Newton. The inventions - telescope, microscope, thermometer, barometer. Bacon and Descartes. The scientific method. The impact of rationalism on democratic ideas. THE AGE OF EXPLORATION: What made exploration possible? Trace the routes of the great explorers. The stories of Magellan and all the explorers. The impact of the cultural exchange on all the continents. The rise of mercantilism on a global scale. THE ENLIGHTENMENT: What was the Age of Reason? John Locke and Montesquieu - how did their philosophy evolve into democratic institutions? How the principles of the Magna Carta ended up in the English Bill of Rights, the Declaration of Independence, and the U.S. Constitution. 356 test questions.
Testbook: World History - the Middle Ages
Over 4300 unique test questions covering Fall of the Roman Empire, The Rise of Islam, Medieval China, Africa in the Middle Ages, Medieval Japan, Medieval Europe, The Maya, Inca, Aztec, The Renaissance & Reformation, The Scientific Revolution, Age of Exploration, and The Enlightenment. Using Bloom's Taxonomy, we take every term, person, quote and event and ask questions 6 different ways. This is how the people that write End Of Course Tests do it. It is the practice your students need!
The Modern World - The Three Revolutions
The Modern World - The Industrial Revolution
The Modern World - Imperialism
The Modern World - World War I
The Modern World - The Rise of Dictators
The Modern World - World War II
Everything you need to know about World War II, from A to Z. The causes, events, people, and consequences of the war. The Axis and Allies. Appeasement. Theaters of war, turning points, and war conferences. Churchill, FDR, Hirohito, Hitler, Mussolini, Stalin, MacArthur, and Eisenhower. The Holocaust. Plus: What was happening on the home front? 656 test questions.
The Modern World -The Cold War Across The Globe
Everything you need to know about the Cold War, from A to Z. The two superpowers (U.S. and U.S.S.R.) face off. The causes: Yalta, Eastern Europe, the nuclear arms race. The Marshall Plan, rebuilding Germany and Japan. The Truman Doctrine, the Korean War, Vietnam. Competition for hearts and minds in Asia, Africa, the Middle East and Latin America. China from Mao to Tiananmen Square. Eastern Europe from the Iron Curtain to the 1990s. The Middle East from the birth of israel to the 1990s. 602 test questions.
The Modern World - The World Today
Famous People of the Ancient World
We tell you about their dilemma, now YOU predict what they did! It's hard to remember historical figures, much less why each became famous. Story telling makes each historical figure an individual and therefore memorable. Brand new! Read a true story about a famous person – and then predict what happens to him or her. Nonfiction, high-interest stories (Grade 5 readability; interest level up to Grade 12). Each story is brief – just half a page. Each is personal, fascinating – and memorable. Combines history and language arts; helps students identify people on standardized tests. Perfect for students at risk. You need only one workbook for the whole class.
Famous People of the Middle Ages
It's hard to remember historical figures, much less why each became famous. We tell you about their dilemma, now YOU predict what they did! Story telling makes each historical figure an individual and therefore memorable. This book covers all the ones that are on the test! The fall of the Roman Empire: from Julius Caesar to Attila the Hun. Islam in the Middle Ages: from Muhammad to Ibn Battuta. Africa in the Middle Ages: from Sundiata to Mansa Musa. China in the Middle Ages: from the Han dynasty to the Mongols. Medieval Japan: including Prince Shotoku and Lady Murasaki. Medieval Europe: everybody from Charlemagne and William the Conqueror to Eleanor of Aquitaine and Joan of Arc.
Famous People of the Renaissance & Reformation

World Regions (Geography/Economics/Culture/Government)

World Regions - Asia
World Regions - Africa
World Regions - The Middle East
World Regions - Central Asia
World Regions - Eastern Europe
World Regions - Western Europe
World Regions - Canada
Everything you need to know about our northern neighbor! The five themes of Canada's geography. The economy, natural resources and industries. Canada's history and government, its people, culture and cultural diversity. The section on Canadian comedy is hysterically funny. 411 pages. 133 lessons. 1,008 test questions.
World Regions - Latin America
Latin America Social Studies Workbook. History, politics, culture, economics and geography of Mexico, South America, Central America, and the Caribbean.
World Regions - Australia
World Regions - Australia
Global Studies: Trade
Global Studies: Country Comparisons


What do students think about you?

We spend a great deal of time talking to students and observing how they learn and interact with teachers, their peers and their materials, and there are powerful reasons why they prefer our approach:

Action:
They love the action packed activities which makes a welcome break from all that sitting still.

Variety:
They get to change gears every 15 to 20 minutes so boredom is never an issue

Fun:
Many of the games are hilarious and fun to perform

Student Centered:
Students do almost all the work, which keeps them engaged and motivated.

Peer pressure:
Most students enjoy a sense of competition, and are provided ample opportunity to “shine” in front of their peers.

Success:

Students want to succeed, and if they complete 180 days of practicing Bloom’s Taxonomy they will do well on the test.
Here's what teachers are saying about Performance Education
Leanne in CA: "You guys are making teaching so much easier and much more fun!"

Lewis in AL: “I am a big fan of your material. I am still loving the shipment from Performance Education that I received at the end of this past school year. I look forward to using the information in the upcoming year. Other teachers are jealous. I was elected as Teacher of the Year for my school this year.”

Marybeth in MI: “As a first year teacher, the website and emails have been an absolute savior in many cases. I appreciate the reminders that I am not alone and my frustrations and struggles are everyone elses.”

Evelyn in South Korea: I am currently teaching in South Korea and have passed your information on to our Social Studies Dept... You guys do such a great job of getting (teaching resources) for all of the educators out here.

TEACHER SPOTLIGHT

Jane

Where: Suburban high school just north of San Francisco
What: She teaches special ed in high school
How long?: This is her 30th year of teaching.

What does she think?
"Performance Education? I love it. It’s the best I’ve ever seen – and I’ve been teaching a long time. I’ve told the other teachers in my high school about it. I really push your product.”

Special education
“I’m a special ed teacher. I teach students with severe learning disabilities. The lessons are easy to read, easy to use, very user friendly. I use the overheads – they work really well for short lectures and graphic organizers. But the kids love the games, especially The Bell Game. I went out and bought the bells, of course – and so did the other Social Studies teachers at my high school.”

Students love the speeches
“This week we’re doing the Civil Rights movement. I follow along in your workbook. The kids really got into the activities on Jim Crow. When it came to speeches, each student became a different person in the Civil Rights movement. As you recommend, we’re watching the film ‘Eyes on the Prize.’ And then we’ll do the postcards.”

The California standards
“It definitely fits the California standards.” “I loved the workbook on Africa . . . and I’ve been to Africa. I used to work for the State Department in Washington, D.C.”

Do I Need Special Software?

In order to view the books, you will need to have a current version of Adobe Reader (or other .pdf reading software.) Most computers already have this software available, if you do not, you can download it here for free.

How long before I get access?

As soon as you check out, you will have immediate access to begin downloading books.

Can I share with other teachers?

No. We strive to make sure our price to value structure is the best you will find anywhere. Unless you have purchased a school or district subscription, the sharing of these materials is a violation of copyright law.

What if I Only Teach One Subject?

No problem. Take advantage of one of our single subject subscriptions.

What if my school decides to purchase after I do. Can I get my money back?

Absolutely. If you purchase and then your school or district decides to purchase a subscription, we will refund the pro-rated portion of your subscription purchase price.

How will I know when new products are available?

We use weekly and monthly emails to let you know when new products or updates are ready.