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Shearer, Sam – Journal of the National Collegiate Honors Council, 2015
After an accomplished military career leading up to and during World War II, Truman Smith (1893-1970) was seemingly forgotten. His name was seldom mentioned after the war until his memoirs were published posthumously in 1984. History shows Smith to be an astoundingly successful figure in military intelligence. This article provides a biography on…
Descriptors: Foreign Policy, United States History, Military Personnel, Career Development
Davis, O. L., Jr. – American Educational History Journal, 2014
On the day before the Thanksgiving school recess in 1912, teacher L. Thomas Hopkins made an unusual admission to his small American history class at Brewster High School on Massachusetts' Cape Cod. He told his students that he knew they disliked the course. He confessed that he, too, disliked how the course was going. Following a short period of…
Descriptors: United States History, History Instruction, Instructional Innovation, Intellectual History
Wesson, Stephen – Social Education, 2014
Every iconic document owes a debt to a document that came before it, just as its creators were influenced by the thinkers and writers who came before them. The Declaration of Independence, U.S. Constitution, and Bill of Rights were revolutionary works, and have become powerful symbols of democracy worldwide. Behind them stands an even older…
Descriptors: Historical Interpretation, Constitutional Law, Critical Viewing, Intellectual History
O'Brien, Jason L.; Verlaan, Wolfram – Social Education, 2013
The nation's classrooms have become more diverse, and children of Hispanic heritage represent a large and an important part of this multicultural mosaic. Events such as the commemoration of Spanish explorer Juan Ponce de Leon's historic voyage offer teachers the opportunity to reflect on important events of the past and connect them to students'…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Teaching Methods, United States History, Educational Strategies
Lindsay, Thomas K. – Academic Questions, 2012
The question of the relation between liberal education and political liberty, perennially important, is driven for this forum by the Obama administration's endorsement of "A Crucible Moment: College Learning & Democracy's Future," according to which the chief ends of postsecondary civic education ought to include the promotion of sweeping…
Descriptors: Guidelines, Educational History, Politics of Education, Educational Policy
Edbrooke, Odette; Ambrose, Meg Leta – Social Education, 2012
What would Benjamin Franklin's Facebook page look like? Would he be "friends" with William Pierce, James Madison, or Alexander Hamilton? Would there have been a separate Facebook group for the framers of the Constitution, where they would have posted comments on the wall regarding the different stipulations that needed inclusion in the…
Descriptors: United States History, Perspective Taking, Influence of Technology, Privacy
Crick, Nathan; Engels, Jeremy – Quarterly Journal of Speech, 2012
We are still coming to terms with the legacy of Randolph Bourne. Although he died at the age of 32 just as the United States was cheerfully entering the First World War under the banner of "democracy," the words he penned in an unfinished essay still resonate in the American social conscience: "War is the Health of the State." This maxim, once…
Descriptors: Rhetoric, Democracy, War, Politics of Education
Jamieson, Kathleen Hall – Social Education, 2012
Because in his Gettysburg Address, President Abraham Lincoln said, "we here highly resolve that these dead shall not have died in vain," and "...that government of the people, by the people, for the people, shall not perish from the earth," it is accurate to report that he spoke the words "perish from the earth" and "died in vain." But if his 1864…
Descriptors: Public Policy, Critical Thinking, Thinking Skills, Historical Interpretation
Schaub, Diana – Academic Questions, 2012
A "civic recession" is as worrisome as an economic recession. "A Crucible Moment: College Learning & Democracy's Future" (The National Task Force on Civic Learning and Democratic Engagement, 2012) should be praised for acknowledging the peril and seeking to rebuild the "depleted civic capital." Welcome, too, is the report's conviction that…
Descriptors: Citizenship Education, Civics, Democracy, Citizenship
Hoerl, Kristen – Quarterly Journal of Speech, 2012
The mainstream press frequently characterized the election of President Barack Obama, the first African American US President, as the realization of Martin Luther King's dream, thus crafting a postracial narrative of national transcendence. I argue that this routine characterization of Obama's election functions as a site for the production of…
Descriptors: News Reporting, News Media, Presidents, Mass Media Effects
Potter, Lee Ann; Eder, Elizabeth K. – Social Education, 2009
On July 23, 1787, delegates at the Constitutional Convention established a Committee of Detail to prepare a report and a printed draft of a Constitution "conformable to the proceedings of the convention." Two weeks later, the committee submitted a printed rough draft to the delegates for their consideration. In this first draft, the Preamble began…
Descriptors: Conferences (Gatherings), United States History, Constitutional Law, Sculpture
Hershenson, David B. – Career Development Quarterly, 2008
It is an indisputable but conveniently overlooked fact that trait-and-factor career counseling was widely practiced in the United States at least 35 years before Frank Parsons provided this service and that the practitioners were phrenologists. This article proposes the reasons why career counseling arose in phrenology at that time and argues that…
Descriptors: Career Counseling, Career Guidance, Brain, Intellectual History
Maxwell, D. Jackson – Library Media Connection, 2008
The history behind the holiday commonly called "Presidents' Day" is a bit confusing. It started as a federal holiday called Washington's Birthday. It was a day set aside to honor George Washington for his accomplishments as a founding father of the country. Later, many northern states began to recognize Abraham Lincoln's Birthday as well for his…
Descriptors: Holidays, United States History, Presidents, Historical Interpretation
West, Natalie – Social Education, 2009
The First Amendment's guarantee of an independent press that may freely collect and disseminate news is often considered the bedrock of American democracy. Yet more than a century and a half after the "New York Herald's" John Nugent became the first American reporter jailed for refusing to identify a confidential source, reporters…
Descriptors: Constitutional Law, Confidentiality, Democratic Values, Intellectual History
Kuehner, Trudy – Foreign Policy Research Institute, 2008
On October 18-19, 2008, FPRI's Wachman Center hosted 40 teachers from 21 states across the country for a weekend of discussion on teaching the history of innovation. The Institute was hosted by the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation. In his opening remarks, Walter A. McDougall noted that while Americans take for granted a frantic pace of change in…
Descriptors: Innovation, United States History, Intellectual History, Technology