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Blythe, Hal; Sweet, Charlie – Eureka Studies in Teaching Short Fiction, 2003
Shows how the mini-casebook approach, with a few modifications, works well with upper-division writing assignments. Notes that a mini-casebook approach is nothing more than a self-published document including a primary work of literature, selected secondary sources on that work, and a selection of several specified topics on the primary source.…
Descriptors: English Instruction, Higher Education, Instructional Effectiveness, Literature
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Festle, Mary Jo – Journal of American History, 1997
Discusses the use of primary texts to introduce students to the period of reconstruction after the Civil War. Shows how texts can be used not only to illustrate the feelings and beliefs of the time, but also to engage students in debates over the correct uses of primary sources. (DSK)
Descriptors: Active Learning, Civil War (United States), Higher Education, Historiography
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Frye, David – History Teacher, 1999
Describes an assignment in an undergraduate course on Roman history for junior and senior history majors in which students create their own 15-page textbook using primary sources. Explains how each class session developed student analysis of primary sources. (CMK)
Descriptors: Ancient History, Course Content, Higher Education, Historical Interpretation
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Reeve, Kay – Teaching History: A Journal of Methods, 2000
Describes a project for a history survey course where students visit a historic site and write an essay that identifies a broad theme in history relating the site to the theme; the students must also reflect upon their own learning process. Discusses the merits of the project providing student responses. Gives an appendix. (CMK)
Descriptors: Active Learning, Critical Thinking, Educational Benefits, Educational Strategies
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Carter, John Marshall – Social Education, 1995
Presents a learning activity to help students see themselves as part of the historical process. Describes the nine-week project in which students solicit written or oral remembrances of family, local, and national history. Maintains that the project integrated history and writing in a meaningful way for students. (CFR)
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Content Area Writing, Family (Sociological Unit), Grandparents