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Sara A. Rich – Journal of the National Collegiate Honors Council, 2024
It has become increasingly apparent that anti-colonial and antiracist pedagogies are necessary in higher education classrooms, and honors education as an experimental zone is an ideal place to test ideas that can be taken into the wider university community. Honors professors epitomize the teacher-scholar model, and this paper presents a six-year…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Honors Curriculum, Teaching Methods, Social Justice
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Duncan, Kristen E. – Multicultural Education, 2021
On a fall Thursday afternoon, the author sat with students, who were preservice social studies teachers, and discussed approaches to teaching slavery to high school students. As the discussion continued, the author began to ask about their experiences learning about the institution of chattel slavery in the United States South. During this…
Descriptors: Field Trips, Slavery, History Instruction, Race
Dawson, Julia; Mitchell, Jerry T. – Geography Teacher, 2017
The objects that represent our material culture--street signs, mascots, symbols etched into stone or printed on stationery--are silent bearers of history: the past tattooed on the present. The meanings given to those objects may change from one social or culture group to another. One seemingly innocent and overlooked example in this vein is the…
Descriptors: Cultural Influences, Social Influences, Food, Slavery
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Alarcón, Jeannette D.; Marhatt, Pratigya; Price, Emily – Social Studies and the Young Learner, 2017
The purpose of this lesson is to engage young students in thinking about the complexity of socio-historical symbols in the present day. After careful preparation, the authors decided to teach about the decision by the state legislature in July 2015 to remove the Confederate flag from the South Carolina statehouse grounds. Presenting the…
Descriptors: Current Events, Teaching Methods, History Instruction, Decision Making
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Anderson, Carl B.; Metzger, Scott Alan – Theory and Research in Social Education, 2011
This study is a mixed-methods text analysis of African American representation within K-12 U.S. History content standards treating the revolutionary era, the early U.S. republic, the Civil War era, and Reconstruction. The states included in the analysis are Michigan, New Jersey, South Carolina, and Virginia. The analysis finds that the reviewed…
Descriptors: United States History, Slavery, War, African Americans
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Breitborde, Mary-Lou – American Educational History Journal, 2013
The Civil War ended slavery but not the pernicious inequality of power and status that still characterizes relations between black and white America. As soon as they could, with the help of presidents bent on appeasement and the benign neglect of northerners who had fought the war to preserve the union but not necessarily to invite former slaves…
Descriptors: United States History, War, Racial Relations, Racial Discrimination
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Watson, Shevaun E. – College Composition and Communication, 2009
This essay offers an earlier chapter in the history of African American literacy by examining colonial literacy campaigns within the eighteenth-century Atlantic world. The discussion focuses on one such transatlantic effort spanning from London to Barbados, South Carolina, and West Africa, which used enslaved teachers as agents of literacy.…
Descriptors: African American History, Slavery, Group Membership, Language Teachers
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Turner, James; Perkins, William E. – Journal of Ethnic Studies, 1976
Notes that this book presents a wealth of material, both new and old, in a novel light concerning the African adjustment to their enslavement in North America. (Author)
Descriptors: American History, Black Community, Black Culture, Black History
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Metcalf, Faye – Social Education, 1992
Presents a lesson plan on the slave-based rice plantation economy in South Carolina from the late eighteenth century until the Civil War. Includes objectives, teaching activities, maps, handouts of student readings, photographs, and plans for visiting the sites. Discusses plantation life and the culture of the rice economy. (DK)
Descriptors: Agriculture, Black History, Cultural Context, Economics
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Dyro, Peggy – Social Education, 1998
Uses a fictional account of the Stono Uprising of slaves in South Carolina in 1739 to illustrate to students the dynamic relationship between literature and history. Provides a historical synopsis of the Uprising, points to think about while reading the account, and the story itself. (DSK)
Descriptors: Adolescent Literature, Black History, Childrens Literature, Elementary Secondary Education
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Holloway, Joseph E. – Western Journal of Black Studies, 1989
The Sea Islands off the coast of South Carolina, Georgia, and Northern Florida retain almost every element of African culture, including language, oral tradition, folklore, and aesthetics. Examines the African influence in the lifestyle of the Gullah people of the Sea Islands, especially in terms of their concept of time. (AF)
Descriptors: African Culture, African History, African Languages, Bantu Languages