Collection: Unknown (Netflix) Documentary Film Quiz Collection

Make documentary days truly academic with this four-part Unknown (Netflix) film quiz collection. Each guide turns a streaming documentary into a ready-to-teach lesson set—with chronological short-answer questions, end-of-film reflections, discussion prompts, 10 SAT-leaning vocabulary words, and a self-grading 30-question Google Forms MC quiz. Print or assign digitally. All titles stream on Netflix, so planning is simple—one platform, four rigorous lessons.

What’s Inside Each Movie Guide

  • Teacher Guide (pacing tips, discussion stems) + Student Slides (editable)
  • 10 Vocabulary Words in authentic dialogue (with proof quotes)
  • 8/10/12 Chronological Short-Answer Questions (runtime-based)
  • 5 End-of-Film Reflection / Challenge Questions
  • Answer Keys + Standards Alignment (CCRA)
  • Bonus: Google Forms 30-Question Multiple-Choice Quiz (self-grading)

Four Documentaries, Four Social Studies Angles

  • Unknown: Cave of BonesAnthropology & Early Humans: burial practices, fire traces, symbolic marks.
  • Unknown: The Lost PyramidArchaeology & Ancient Egypt: dig strategy, artifact context, power & ritual.
  • Unknown: Cosmic Time MachineSpace History & Science: JWST engineering, infrared astronomy, public science.
  • Unknown: Killer RobotsGeopolitics, Ethics & Technology: autonomy, UN debates, human-in-the-loop safeguards.

Why Teachers Love This Collection

  • Netflix-ready: all four films on one platform—easy access, consistent captions.
  • Accountable viewing: evidence-based prompts (no “movie day fluff”).
  • Cross-curricular: Social Studies, ELA, and STEM connections in every guide.
  • Flexible: print PDFs or assign Google Slides/Forms for instant grading.

Perfect for: Social Studies mini-units, anthropology/archaeology modules, current issues and civics, space science tie-ins, debate units, sub plans, and skills practice (cause-effect, argument writing, academic vocabulary).

Note: This product provides classroom materials only and is not affiliated with Netflix. Teachers should preview films for local policy fit.