K12 Movie Guides
Texas State History: The Alamo Film Quiz & Movie Guide Questions (NR - 1960)
Texas State History: The Alamo Film Quiz & Movie Guide Questions (NR - 1960)
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Texas State History: The Alamo Film Quiz & Movie Guide Questions (NR - 1960)
Make The Alamo easier to teach with a no-prep film quiz focused on the texas revolution, the siege of the alamo, travis’s letter, goliad, san jacinto, and texas historical memory.
This resource helps high school students follow the film with purpose while connecting key scenes, dialogue, places, and conflicts to Texas state history. The questions keep students grounded in film evidence instead of treating the movie as passive viewing.
Use this movie guide for Grades 9–12 history, state history, U.S. history, film study, media literacy, sub plans, or discussion-based classes.
Where is the preview? Will this lesson meet your needs?
Check out a full FREE state history movie guide example here:
West Virginia State History: Matewan Film Quiz (1987)
Classroom Use at a Glance
- Best for: Grades 9–12 Texas History, U.S. History, revolution, and historical memory
- Use cases: full-film lesson, sub plan, state standards review, discussion-based classes, or film study
- State focus: the Texas Revolution, the siege of the Alamo, Travis’s letter, Goliad, San Jacinto, and Texas historical memory
- Key themes: revolution, leadership, sacrifice, political conflict, military strategy, and historical memory
- Skills addressed: cause and effect, leadership analysis, historical context, source comparison, dialogue evidence, and written response
- Differentiation: students can complete the written movie guide or use the 30-question multiple-choice quiz as an alternate assessment
- Time needed: movie runtime plus about 45–60 minutes for pauses, discussion, and written work
- Formats included: printable worksheet, Google Slides/PPTX, Google Forms quiz, teacher guide, answer keys, and standards alignment
Guidance & Summary
The Alamo (1960) is rated Approved and has a runtime of about 167 minutes. Teachers should preview the film and follow school policy for movie approval.
The Alamo dramatizes the siege at San Antonio and helps students connect the battle to the wider Texas Revolution, including leadership, morale, military delay, historical memory, and the later campaign toward San Jacinto.
State-Specific Questions & Standards Focus
Focuses on TX TEKS §113.19(b)(3)(C), significant events of the Texas Revolution including the siege of the Alamo, Travis’s letter, Goliad, and San Jacinto, with supporting attention to roles of Sam Houston, Santa Anna, Juan N. Seguín, William B. Travis, and other figures.
The time-stamped questions focus on the alamo siege, revolutionary leadership, tejano participation, mexican and texian perspectives, travis’s letter, goliad, san jacinto, and texas historical memory.
Why Teachers Use This Movie Guide
This guide gives students a clear structure for watching the film with purpose. Instead of passively following the plot, students track how specific scenes connect to state history, civic conflict, historical memory, and evidence-based interpretation.
The questions work well for teachers who want students to discuss Texas Revolution strategy, leadership conflict, Tejano perspectives, patriotic memory, and source comparison with campaign history using specific film evidence.
Differentiation Options
The teacher guide includes a written-response path and a multiple-choice quiz path.
- Use the written worksheet when students are ready to explain scene evidence, historical context, and state-history connections in more detail.
- Use the 30-question multiple-choice quiz when students need fewer writing demands, a faster assessment, or a more accessible review option.
- Support options include reading questions aloud, offering small-group testing, allowing extended time, or having students explain selected answers orally.
What’s Included
- Rigorous short-answer questions, chronological and time-stamped
- End-of-film reflection and challenge questions
- 30-question multiple-choice quiz for differentiation
- Teacher guide and lesson plan
- Answer keys after each written and multiple-choice question
- State standards alignment and CCSS alignment
- Pre- and post-movie discussion questions
- 3-day, 4-day, and 5-day pacing options
Flexible Lesson Pacing
- 3-Day Sprint: best for tight schedules or classes that do better with smooth viewing and discussion after the film.
- 4-Day Flexible Plan: best for teachers who want either discussion before and after the film or selected pause-and-write checkpoints during viewing.
- 5-Day Full Week: best for classes that need more guided discussion and writing time in class, with less take-home work.
Skills Addressed
- Cause and effect
- Leadership analysis
- Historical context
- Source comparison
- Dialogue evidence
- Historical memory
- Evidence-based written response
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I use this as a sub plan?
Yes. The movie guide includes structured questions, answer keys, and flexible pacing options, so it can work as a planned film lesson or a reliable sub plan.
Does this include a digital version?
Yes. The guide includes Google Slides/PPTX materials and a Google Forms version of the multiple-choice quiz.
Is there an answer key?
Yes. The teacher guide includes answer keys after each written question and each multiple-choice question.
How long does the resource take?
Plan for the movie runtime plus about 45–60 minutes for questions, discussion, and written work.
How is this differentiated?
Students can complete the written-response movie guide or use the 30-question multiple-choice quiz as an alternate assessment with more accessible language.
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