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Linda Doornbos; Ericka Murdock – Social Studies and the Young Learner, 2025
The power of democracy is its adaptability to a changing world. We can envision and work toward a society that is more just than the present. History education is more relevant now than ever. We offer ideas and strategies that can transform the history classroom into a space for understanding the past with the explicit purpose of learning from the…
Descriptors: Grade 4, History Instruction, Democracy, Social Justice
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Alistair Hattingh; Karen Dunak – History Teacher, 2025
Empire and its related themes of conquest, colonization, decolonization, and cultural imperialism loom large in the teaching of any history course on European, African, Asian, or Latin American history. "How to Hide an Empire" by Daniel Immerwahr argues that the image (North) Americans have of their nation is that of what scholar…
Descriptors: History Instruction, Foreign Policy, United States History, Global Approach
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deGuzman, Jean-Paul R. Contreras – History Teacher, 2023
"Why do people hate history classes?" That is a common question that the author, like countless other history instructors, poses to his students on the first day of class. From a recent survey of the author's "Introduction to Asian American History" course, which the author has taught at the University of California, Los…
Descriptors: Asian Americans, United States History, Museums, History Instruction
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Bohan, Chara Haeussler; Bradshaw, Lauren Yarnell; Pecore, John L. – Schools: Studies in Education, 2023
In the United States of America, democratic education has evolved philosophically over 200 years from Jeffersonian ideas of educated citizenry to Deweyan principles of democracy as a "mode of associated living." In contemporary society, Dianna Hess has written about democratic education as a process of deliberative democracy. Yet the…
Descriptors: Democratic Values, Democracy, United States History, History Instruction
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Michelle Reidel; Ariel Cornett; Erin Piedmont; Kania Greer; Betsy Barrow; Alex Reyes – Social Studies and the Young Learner, 2025
By some estimates, over 1.2 billion tons of soil was blown across the Great Plains during the height of the Dust Bowl. The so-called "black blizzards" these massive dust storms caused suffocated cattle, sickened children, and destroyed thousands of family farms. Formerly prosperous farmers, unsure why they had such bad luck, wondered if…
Descriptors: Systems Approach, United States History, History Instruction, Integrated Activities
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Anne Boyd – American Journal of Play, 2024
The author argues that, in the early 1920s, many urban White Americans saw in the Arctic an escape from a world of rapidly expanding technology and became captivated by images of Inuit communities. To pass down an antimodernist form of imperialism to children of the period, educators used lead ethnographic "Escimo" figurines, which…
Descriptors: Foreign Policy, Educational History, Eskimos, History Instruction
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Erika Rendon-Ramos – Multicultural Perspectives, 2023
For most undergraduate students, history prior to college has been dominated by learning through a settler colonialism lens. Settler colonialism embodies the typical United States, master, or traditional narrative. It erases marginalized perspectives, histories, culture, and identity in favor of the white settler perspective. By overlooking the…
Descriptors: Active Learning, Decolonization, Teaching Methods, Undergraduate Students
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Donavan, Janet L. – Journal of Political Science Education, 2023
This paper makes the case for why anti-racism pedagogy should be included and identified as anti-racism in political science courses and provides and evaluates an example of anti-racism pedagogy in an American Political Thought course. In addition, I address critics of anti-racism and ways of addressing those critics in the classroom. In…
Descriptors: History Instruction, United States History, Political Science, Racism
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Scott M. Waring; Natalia Cruz – Social Studies, 2024
Teaching with primary sources provides educators with opportunities to expose students to authentic analysis, critical thinking, and perspective taking. When students are exposed to primary sources in the classroom, they can examine the point of view of the source, what information they can gain from the source, what information is missing, and…
Descriptors: Primary Sources, Critical Thinking, Thinking Skills, History Instruction
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Joanna Batt – Social Studies and the Young Learner, 2024
There are notable historical figures commonly taught in social studies curriculums across the country, often without much controversy. Because they are seen as "elemental" to many World and U.S. histories, they mostly remain in standardized curriculum while recent censorship of content concerning race, gender, and sexuality has…
Descriptors: Elementary School Curriculum, Social Studies, Art Activities, LGBTQ People
Roxanne H. Souma – ProQuest LLC, 2024
This qualitative case study sought to analyze and describe both the quantity and quality of African American history curriculum integration into Virginia's U.S. History curriculum standards at three points in time (2008 standards, 2015 standards, and revised 2020 standards) in the three U.S. history courses (USI, 5th; USII, 6th; VUS; 11th).…
Descriptors: African American History, Grade 5, Grade 6, Grade 11
Elizabeth McCauley McDonald – ProQuest LLC, 2023
This study explores how a Black oral history project can be used in a secondary social studies classroom as a culturally sustaining practice. This study uses case study methodology to answer the research question, how are Black oral histories a form of culturally sustaining practice in secondary social studies classrooms? This dissertation…
Descriptors: Oral History, African American History, Culturally Relevant Education, Secondary Education
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Julie Anne Sweet – History Teacher, 2024
December 16, 2023, was the 250th anniversary of an event that has become known as the "Boston Tea Party." This article discusses an upper-level history class about that event that allowed students to take a closer look at what really happened that night. In addition to the traditional approach of having students read large volumes of…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Undergraduate Students, History Instruction, Role Playing
King, LaGarrett J., Ed. – Teachers College Press, 2022
This volume collects the work of historians, researchers, and classroom teachers to define what it means to be a racially literate educator and citizen. History classes should be spaces in which all students learn about their predecessors' legacies as a context for understanding and decision-making in contemporary society. In reality, the…
Descriptors: Racial Attitudes, Racism, Literacy, History Instruction
Wineburg, Sam – Phi Delta Kappan, 2021
History textbooks are less likely to be complete renderings of the truth than a series of stories textbook authors (and the many stakeholders who influence them) consider beneficial. Sam Wineburg describes how the process of writing history textbooks often leads to sanitized and inaccurate versions of history. As an example, he describes how the…
Descriptors: History Instruction, Misconceptions, Textbooks, Textbook Content
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