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Draper, Mary – History Teacher, 2023
Teaching about slavery entails teaching about the archive. Punctuated with silences, scattered with compelling details, and laden with descriptions that oscillate between racist, harrowing, and heartbreaking, runaway ads provide a glimpse into the lives of enslaved people. The details embedded within them--or omitted from them--can also provide…
Descriptors: Slavery, Undergraduate Students, Biographies, Writing (Composition)
Headle, Barbara – Geography Teacher, 2019
Historians have long appreciated the value of the U.S. Census as a source of statistical data for studying nineteenth- and twentieth-century American history. However, in ways that many other primary source documents do not, the census reflects and addresses social, political, and economic issues on national, state, and community levels…
Descriptors: United States History, Census Figures, Slavery, History Instruction
Loewen, James W. – Teachers College Press, 2018
James Loewen has revised "Teaching What Really Happened", the bestselling, go-to resource for social studies and history teachers wishing to break away from standard textbook retellings of the past. In addition to updating the scholarship and anecdotes throughout, the second edition features a timely new chapter entitled…
Descriptors: History Instruction, United States History, World History, Teaching Methods
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Lapham, Steven S.; Reader, David; Houting, Beth A. Twiss; Moloshok, Rachel – Social Studies and the Young Learner, 2014
This article presents two lessons. The first one is "Carved in Stone: The Preamble to the Constitution" by Steven S. Lapham. In 1937, the Works Progress Administration (WPA) commissioned artist Lenore Thomas to create some sculptures for the planned community of Greenbelt, Maryland. Part of her work consisted of bas-relief friezes on the…
Descriptors: Standards, Social Studies, History Instruction, Thinking Skills
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Rulli, Daniel F. – Social Education, 2004
The featured document that is the main topic of this article, Robert E. Lee's Demand for the Surrender of John Brown and his Party [at Harpers Ferry], October 18, 1859, is from the Records of the Adjutant General's Office, 1780s-1917; Record Group 94, and is in the holdings of the National Archives. As a part of "Teaching with…
Descriptors: United States History, Social Studies, Slavery, Civil Rights
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Rael, Patrick – History Teacher, 2006
In 1860, 226,000 (47 percent) of the US' 478,000 free blacks lived in free states, and thus totaled over five percent of the black population in America. Though oppressed by popular prejudice and a range of legal and institutional constraints--in 1847, blacks at a convention labeled themselves "slaves of the community"--African Americans outside…
Descriptors: Historiography, Historians, African American Community, Slavery
Ladenburg, Thomas – 1988
This unit for teaching U.S. history was designed to help students understand, appreciate, and analyze the magnitude of the Founders' creation. It permits them to understand issues confronting the Founders in 1787, to become involved in the process of resolving these issues, to comprehend the actual solutions developed by the Founders, and to…
Descriptors: Constitutional History, History Instruction, Secondary Education, Slavery
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Costa, Tom; Doyle, Brooke – Social Education, 2004
In this article, the authors discuss how children can learn from runaway slave advertisements. The advertisements for runaway slaves that masters placed in eighteenth- and nineteenth-century newspapers are among the documentary sources available to teachers for studying the lives of African-American slaves. Such advertisements often describe a…
Descriptors: History Instruction, United States History, Slavery, African Americans
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Chism, Kahlil – Social Education, 2006
This article discusses the Bureau of Refugees, Freedmen, and Abandoned Lands (Freedmen's Bureau), which was established by the Congress on March 3, 1865, to assist former slaves in acquiring land, securing employment, legalizing marriages, and pursuing education. After the bureau's abolition through an act of Congress approved on June 10, 1872,…
Descriptors: United States History, Refugees, National Standards, Archives
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Tabone, Carmine; Albrecht, Robert – Stage of the Art, 2000
Claims drama in the classroom offers teachers an opportunity to "bring to life" the challenges and triumphs of African Americans. Describes a drama workshop based on the story of Harriet Tubman and the Underground Railroad. (NH)
Descriptors: Black Culture, Blacks, Colonial History (United States), Drama Workshops
Metcalf, Fay – 1993
This document, part of the lesson plan series, "Teaching with Historic Places," examines the role of rice farming in U.S. history. The lesson, which focuses upon the era of the Southern plantations, includes sections setting out student objectives and teaching activities, as well as notes on visiting the sites. There are subsections of…
Descriptors: Agriculture, Elementary Secondary Education, History Instruction, Instructional Materials
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Daniel, Robert A.; Robinson, Charles C. – School Arts, 1984
Described is a project which made the study of Black history more real to fifth graders by having them make wire jewelry, smaller versions of the ornate filigreed ironwork produced by slave blacksmiths. (RM)
Descriptors: Art Activities, Art Education, Black History, Course Descriptions
Perry, Douglas – 2001
Many historians call the Civil War the central event in U.S. history. The formation of the U.S. Constitution corrected the autonomy of individual states that the Articles of Confederation did not harness. The young country struggled for 75 years to find a graceful balance between the power of the federal government and that of the states. The…
Descriptors: Civil War (United States), Government Role, Photographs, Photography
Banfield, Beryle – Instructor, 1981
An elementary social studies unit on slavery for Afro-American History Month. (Editor/SJL)
Descriptors: Black Culture, Black History, Elementary Education, Slavery
Trumbauer, Lisa – Instructor, 2002
Presents three Internet-based activities for teaching elementary students about the Underground Railroad. The activities include creating a freight-train of facts about the Underground Railroad, mapping the routes of the Underground Railroad, and participating in an electronic simulation of life as a fugitive slave. (SM)
Descriptors: Computer Uses in Education, Elementary Education, History Instruction, Internet
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