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Bedford, Alison – History of Education Review, 2023
Purpose: This essay engages with scholarship on history as a discipline, curriculum documents and academic and public commentary on the teaching of history in Australian, British and Canadian secondary contexts to better understand the influence of the tension between political pressure and disciplinary practice that drives the history wars in…
Descriptors: History Instruction, Comparative Analysis, Foreign Countries, American Indian History
Egiebor, Esohe E.; Foster, Ellen J. – Geography Teacher, 2018
This lesson describes a geohistorical unit in which the students demonstrate their understanding of significant events in American history. The purpose of the lesson is for students to understand that the rapid population growth of the United States was made possible by the removal of Native Americans. In the first part of the lesson, students use…
Descriptors: Geography, United States History, American Indian History, Maps
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Stoddard, Jeremy; Marcus, Alan; Hicks, David – History Teacher, 2014
In this article, the authors explore the nature of film that is both "about" and now more often made "for/by" indigenous peoples and its potential as a medium for introducing and engaging students in the study of indigenous history and perspectives in secondary classrooms. As a framework for analysis, the authors examine to…
Descriptors: History Instruction, Films, Indigenous Populations, Indigenous Knowledge
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Wilson, Raymond – OAH Magazine of History, 1987
Presents a plan for a lesson designed to introduce a unit on Indian history. Focuses on ethnocentrism and assimilation and how these concepts apply to the situations of Indians as revealed in several quotations. Provides a list of some quotations and suggested activities. (AEM)
Descriptors: Acculturation, American Indian History, American Indian Studies, Ethnocentrism
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Lankiewicz, Donald – Social Science Record, 1987
Presents methods for motivating, developing, and applying a lesson on genocide as it relates to the American Indian. Argues that according to the United Nations Genocide Convention, the U.S. government's actions toward the Indians constitute genocide. Includes a list of quotations pertinent to the subject which can be used as a student handout.…
Descriptors: American Indian History, Concept Teaching, Genocide, Secondary Education
Feder, Kenneth L. – New England Social Studies Bulletin, 1986
Describes the results of an archaeological dig of a 2000-year-old Woodland Period Indian village. Goes on to include quotes regarding Indians from early colonial inhabitants in an attempt to blend ethnohistorical evidence of Indian trade and wars with archaeological evidence gained from the dig. (JDH)
Descriptors: Adults, American Indian History, Archaeology, Colonial History (United States)
Chilcoat, George W. – Social Studies Teacher, 1988
Reviews how the popular stereotypes of American Indians have changed since the colonization of North America. Once seen as noble savages by European settlers, the popular stereotypes changed to become less and less positive as colonization advanced. Urges teachers to vigorously challenge the stereotypes and negative images. (JDH)
Descriptors: American Indian History, American Indians, Cultural Images, Ethnocentrism
Horak, Virginia – 1999
This lesson is based on the National Register of Historic Places registration file "Horseshoe Bend Battlefield," documents from archives at Horseshoe Bend National Military Park, and other resources. The lesson can be used in units on American Indian culture, early 19th-century westward expansion, the War of 1812, European American and…
Descriptors: American Indian Culture, American Indian History, American Indians, Secondary Education
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Cousineau, Sarah M. – Physics Teacher, 1999
Explains how to create a paper replica of the Bighorn Medicine Wheel, an ancient timepiece thought to have been constructed by the Lakota Indians around 1700 A.D. The Bighorn Wheel uses four key seasonal stars as well as the solstice sunrise and sunset to mark the passage of time through the summer. (WRM)
Descriptors: American Indian History, Astronomy, Higher Education, North American History
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Larner, John W. – OAH Magazine of History, 1987
Presents a lesson plan designed to make students empathize with early twentieth-century native Americans as they draft a provisional statement of goals for the nation's first secular inter-tribal native organization, the Society of American Indians, founded in 1911. (Author/AEM)
Descriptors: American Indian History, American Indians, Lesson Plans, Primary Sources
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Parisi, Lynn – OAH Magazine of History, 1987
Lists selected resources for teaching about American Indians available from the ERIC database. Topics of resources include Navajo history, Pacific Northwest history, Indians of Oklahoma, Indian traditions, Plains Indian culture, and Pawnee history. (AEM)
Descriptors: American Indian History, American Indian Studies, American Indians, Annotated Bibliographies
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Mihesuah, Devon – American Indian Quarterly, 1991
Opened in 1851, the Cherokee Male Seminary was the first nonsectarian secondary school west of the Mississippi River. It fulfilled the goals of the Cherokee national council to prepare students for higher education, promote the Cherokee economy, and expose children to white values and lifestyle. (SV)
Descriptors: Acculturation, American Indian Education, American Indian History, Boarding Schools
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Powers-Beck, Jeffrey – American Indian Quarterly, 2001
Beginning in 1897, American Indians endured their own integration experience in professional baseball. The experience was propelled by government boarding schools, which used baseball as a tool for assimilation and for prestige and profit. But the players on boarding-school teams often found in the sport their own means of cultural resistance and…
Descriptors: American Indian History, American Indians, Athletes, Baseball
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Frey, Charles H. – ALAN Review, 2001
Tells the story of the "dime" novel "Malaeska, the Indian Wife of the White Hunter." Recommends this story for young adult reading. Notes its consideration of issues in American history of the Colonial period, issues of race and culture, and issues concerning family and peer groups. (SG)
Descriptors: Adolescent Literature, American Indian History, Colonial History (United States), Cultural Differences
Landers, Jane – 1990
The history of the lives of non-white peoples in the United States largely has been neglected although the Spanish bureaucrats kept meticulous records of the Spanish Mission period in Florida. These records represent an important source for the cultural history of these groups and offer new perspectives on the tri-racial nature of frontier…
Descriptors: American Indian History, Black History, Colonial History (United States), Higher Education
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