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Strength and Courage: Women’s History Month Lesson Plans
Christy Walters
February 15, 2024
When you hear the word “woman,” what other words and phrases come to mind? Do you think about gender roles and changing expectations? Do you think about definitive qualities, words like strong, resilient, and courageous? This short exercise shows the truth: women are multifaceted. They come from diverse backgrounds and cultures and they all have unique stories to tell.
To help your students celebrate the variety of lived experiences of influential women of history and in their own lives, we’ve curated articles, videos, and interactive activities you can use during instruction. Browse the text sets and resources by subject to create your perfect, personalized Women’s History Month lesson plans that you can tie to other topics in your curriculum:
Dive into women’s history with Newsela Social StudiesSee how women have lived out some of their multifaceted qualities—like being resourceful, innovative, and courageous—throughout history with engaging articles and interactive primary sources.
Celebrate women authors and poets with Newsela ELAExplore how women have changed the world with words in the past, present, and future by browsing text sets, research projects, and Women’s History Month novel studies for each grade band.
[Discover today’s women’s history makers with Newsela Lite](id-lite)
Each week in March, we’re sharing stories of current women’s history events in the making on Newsela Lite! Log in or sign up for your free Newsela Lite account to browse the latest content and share selections with your students.
[Dive into women’s history with Newsela Social Studies](id-ss)
Discover how the Flappers of the 1920s and their dances helped the women’s liberation movement.
Learn how the Daughters of Bilitis organization started potlucks to bring together and empower the LGBTQIA+ community as early as the 1950s.
Find out how on Ukraine-based nonprofit group called Zemliachky is helping to outfit the country’s women army servicemembers during the Russo-Ukrainian War.
Women leaders in history
Discover empowering women who took charge and made change in their lifetimes with this informational text set:
Teach students about some of the women leaders of the American Revolution like author Mercy Otis Warren, activist Esther DeBerdt Reed, and a leadership group called the Edenton Ladies.
Learn about how Northern Black women formed an abolitionist army during the years leading up to the Civil War and how they worked to help emancipate the South.
Explore how women forged a path on the American frontier by introducing students to people like Native American Diplomat and spy Molly Brant, frontier scout Anne Bailey, and translator and guide Sacagawea.
Discover how women disguised themselves as male soldiers during the Civil War to fight in both the Union and Confederate armies… and what would happen if others discovered their secret.
See how young activists from the organization AAPI Youth Rising created a history lesson for schools to speak out against anti-Asian violence.
Learn about Holocaust survivor Lily Ebert and how she used TikTok to tell her story of surviving time at Auschwitz-Birkenau—and refute Holocaust deniers.
Read about how tennis star sisters Venus and Serena Williams made history at the 2001 Australian Open.
Discover how a girls’ tackle football team in Utah helps players work through emotions like anger on the field.
Watch a video about how Title IX, a law that protects women and girls from discrimination in school, affects youth sports and the athletes that play them.
Explore Women’s History Month through interactive speeches and primary sources
Take a walk through history with some of the women who changed the world. Explore these primary sources on Newsela Social Studies. Then use the interactive activities on Formative to help students review, retain, and show what they learned from the lesson:
Women authors are making news (and good books and poetry!) all the time. Have students explore these news and nonfiction articles throughout your lesson to provide background information about some of the most famous—and their most favorite—women authors:
Learn how Toni Morrison’s short story “Recitatif” went from a rare manuscript to a full-fledged published book.
Read about women authors like Mary Ann Evans, better known as George Eliot, who are finally receiving credit for their works under their own names, rather than male pseudonyms.
Discover how two teenage sisters from Michigan started a nonprofit organization to put more books with women Muslim main characters in their schools and libraries.
ELA in the real world: Women changing the world through words
ELA lessons don’t have to be about fictional characters or authors who were alive centuries before your students were born. Explore some selections from our ELA in the Real World collection that cover the works of interesting writers of today:
Learn about Denise Lajimodiere, an Ojibwe woman and North Dakota’s first Indigenous poet laureate.
Discover how singer and songwriter Taylor Swift’s knack for including literary references in her lyrics led one Belgian university to launch a brand new literature course.
Explore how author and poet Jacqueline Woodson’s stories are coming to life on the stage and how she makes her works reflective of the communities she’s lived in.
Women’s History Month novel studies
Create your Women’s History Month lesson plans around novels and books with women main characters for each grade band, like:
Elementary Women’s History Month novel and book studies
Dive into how and why women and their allies fight gender inequality in the United States. Some guiding questions for their projects could include inquiries like, “Who were the key figures in the early women’s movement,” and “How do gender stereotypes affect children?”
[Discover women’s contributions to STEM with Newsela Science](id-sci)
Explore the history of women at NASA and the different jobs and opportunities they’ve had with the organization since its founding.
Meet scientist Lindsay Rizzardi and look at the research she did to examine twins and see if there were any long-term effects of space travel on the human body.
See how women redesigned NASA’s space suits to make them more inclusive and widely available for all genders and body types.
Environmentalists Rachel Carson and Wangari Maathai
Physicist Chien-Shiung Wu
Marine educator Symone Barkley
Go further with your Women’s History Month lessons
We hope these resources make it easier to help you develop relevant, engaging lessons about women’s history in your class this March. For even more great Women’s History Month content, check out some favorite articles about trailblazers and empowerment from our women staff members at Newsela!
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