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Showing 1 to 15 of 16 results Save | Export
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Katie Nagrotsky; Jason Mizell – Middle School Journal, 2024
This article examines the ways teachers, students, and teacher educators interacted in a unit around Christopher Columbus and other historical figures that have been given places of privilege within the dominant society. The authors trace how color-evasiveness and explicit engagement with race in the classroom intermingle with the implementation…
Descriptors: Middle School Students, Youth, Participatory Research, Action Research
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Burgard, Karen L. B. – Kappa Delta Pi Record, 2020
For students to understand the narratives of heritage sites, teachers must equip them with the skills to question the public curriculum, engage with it, create meaning from it, and when needed, challenge it.
Descriptors: Museums, Field Trips, Curriculum Evaluation, Historic Sites
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Baron, Christine; Sklarwitz, Sherri; Coddington, Nicholas – Teacher Development, 2021
This article reports on Year 2 of a three-year project to assess historic site-based teacher professional development programs. The intended focus was assessing pre-post Q-sorts and interviews of 29 teachers regarding how they see their work at historic sites affecting their professional development. However, data analysis revealed exceptionally…
Descriptors: Museums, Historic Sites, United States History, Historical Interpretation
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Kafadar, Tugba – International Journal of Progressive Education, 2021
The present study aimed to determine the cultural heritage elements in the social studies course curriculum in Turkey and the awareness of the middle school students about cultural heritage. In the study, the case study approach, a qualitative research design, was adopted. The study group was assigned with criterion sampling method, a purposive…
Descriptors: Cultural Background, Heritage Education, Historic Sites, Social Studies
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Baron, Christine; Sklarwitz, Sherri; Bang, Hyeyoung; Shatara, Hanadi – Journal of Teacher Education, 2020
Using a broad-based assessment for understanding what teachers learn in historic site-based professional development (HSBPD), this study follows 29 teachers from a HSBPD at Thomas Jefferson's Monticello to see how their work at historic sites affected their practice upon return to their classrooms. Influenced by the Interconnected Model of Teacher…
Descriptors: Faculty Development, Retention (Psychology), Place Based Education, Historic Sites
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Wasino; Suharso, R.; Utomo, Cahyo Budi; Shintasiwi, Fitri Amalia – Journal of Social Studies Education Research, 2020
The objectives of this research are to analyze the implementation of social science education learning and the construction of students' knowledge after participating in social science education learning activities using cultural eco-literacy approach. This research is a qualitative approach using a case study design, that focuses on analyzing…
Descriptors: Social Studies, Multiple Literacies, Ecology, Cultural Awareness
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Christine Baron; Sherri Sklarwitz; Hyeyoung Bang; Hanadi Shatara – Theory and Research in Social Education, 2019
Despite decades of formal work with teachers, little is known about what they gain from professional development at and with historic sites. This article presents the first data-set from a 3-year Institute for Museum and Library Services National Leadership Grant project designed to develop a broad-based assessment for understanding what teachers…
Descriptors: Elementary School Teachers, Middle School Teachers, High School Teachers, United States History
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Uztemur, Servet; Dinc, Erkan; Acun, Ismail – International Journal of Research in Education and Science, 2019
The aim of this study is to determine the usefulness of the teaching activities prepared for effective utilization of museums and historical places in the context of grade seven social studies teaching to increase the efficiency of teaching-learning processes. Designed as an action research, the current study includes 34 learning activities to be…
Descriptors: Social Studies, Historic Sites, Teaching Methods, Content Analysis
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Fahrurozi, Achmad; Maesaroh, Suci; Suwanto, Imam; Nursyahidah, Farida – Journal of Research and Advances in Mathematics Education, 2018
This research aims to produce a Learning Trajectory Based Instruction (LTBI) that can help the ninth grade students understand the concept of congruence of the two-dimensional shape by examining Lawang Sewu as one of Central Java historical buildings. LTBI is defined as a teaching and learning trajectory that uses Hypothetical Learning Trajectory…
Descriptors: Advanced Students, Learning Processes, Teaching Methods, Building Design
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Lafferty, Karen Elizabeth; Summers, Amy; Tanaka, Stephanie; Cavanagh, Jeanne – Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy, 2016
Introduction of the Common Core State Standards and assessments like the synthesis performance task pose new challenges for secondary English teachers. As students of all ability levels engage with complex text and in tasks that target higher level cognitive skills, teachers need strategies to support their understanding. This article describes…
Descriptors: Secondary School Students, Grade 9, Summative Evaluation, Credibility
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Ward, Cara; Matthews, Travis – Social Studies and the Young Learner, 2017
History labs invite students to examine primary and secondary source documents related to an essential question. The sources used in a history lab should represent multiple perspectives so that students are aware of the varying accounts of and opinions about historic events. By being exposed to multiple perspectives, students also learn about…
Descriptors: Presidents, Slavery, History Instruction, United States History
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Savenije, Geerte M.; van Boxtel, Carla; Grever, Maria – Theory and Research in Social Education, 2014
The history and heritage of slavery and the trans-Atlantic slave trade are sensitive topics in The Netherlands. Little is known about the ways in which students attribute significance to what is presented as heritage, particularly sensitive heritage. Using theories on historical significance, we explored how students attributed significance to the…
Descriptors: Questionnaires, Surveys, Focus Groups, Slavery
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Villeneuve, Pat; Sheppard, Donald – Art Education, 2009
A local focus can give art educators a familiar basis to introduce and expand content. A community-inspired curriculum helps students realize that artists do not operate in a vacuum; rather, they are part of a social world in which art objects are created. In this article, the authors provide an overview of Community-Based Art Education (CBAE)…
Descriptors: Art Education, Art Teachers, Teaching Methods, Artists
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Ardito, Carmelo; Lanzilotti, Rosa – International Journal of Distance Education Technologies, 2011
Distance education has experienced profound changes due to the introduction of new technologies, especially mobile devices of different types. It is necessary to define new learning techniques which are able to capture students' attention and to engage them in their learning activities, reducing problems like distraction generated by the use of…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Expertise, Educational Games, Distance Education
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Kahl, Jonathan D. W.; Berg, Craig A. – Social Studies, 2006
Much of Mesoamerica's rich cultural heritage is slowly eroding because of acid rain. Just as water dissolves an Alka-Seltzer tablet, acid rain erodes the limestone surfaces of Mexican archaeological sites at a rate of about one-half millimeter per century (Bravo et al. 2003). A half-millimeter may not seem like much, but at this pace, a few…
Descriptors: Pollution, Historic Sites, Interdisciplinary Approach, Web Sites
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