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Anna Liddle – Education, Citizenship and Social Justice, 2025
Generated by the centenary of the First World War, there has been an increased interest in how war is commemorated in English schools. Whilst other authors have argued that the way in which remembrance is marked in schools is militarised and nationalistic, this article reports on a single school case study to provide a deeper discussion of how…
Descriptors: War, World History, Memory, Foreign Countries
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
Jo-Anne Reid – Asia-Pacific Journal of Teacher Education, 2024
One of the Editors' 2022 "Challenges to the Field" was: "What is the story this government wants us to tell our children?" "What is education for?" Continuing this conversation leads to a related question: What can be learnt from reviewing the history of schooling in Australia in this light? I argue here that the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational History, Colonialism, Modern History
Sol Gamsu; Stephen Ashe; Jason Arday – Discourse: Studies in the Cultural Politics of Education, 2024
Elite schools in the UK are bound to the history of British colonialism. This paper examines the material ties between these schools and the transatlantic slave trade. We combine multiple sources to examine which schools and their alumni accrued substantial economic capital derived from the enslavement of Black people. We find two principal…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Secondary Schools, Slavery, World History
Mehmet Gultekin – European Education, 2024
Children's literature can serve as mirrors, windows, and sliding glass doors. They are mirrors for marginalized groups to see themselves represented, windows for dominant cultures to learn about marginalized groups, and sliding glass doors to develop empathy. In this study, I examined Middle East Picture Book Award to address what books are…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Childrens Literature, Books, Awards
Elena Panova; Juliya Danilova; Elena Platonova; Ekaterina Otts; Natalia Yakushkina; Julia Lovanova – Novitas-ROYAL (Research on Youth and Language), 2024
This article examines Soviet social, political, and moralizing posters. The textual and visual images of Soviet poster-making with their thematic meanings are explored, and the role of poster creativity in forming the moral and ethical qualities of the younger generation is analyzed. Results suggest that the Soviet poster becomes a means of…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Advertising, Visual Aids, Communication (Thought Transfer)
Ryan Ziols; Kathryn L. Kirchgasler – Educational Studies in Mathematics, 2024
This paper adopts a biopower lens to examine emergency declarations that posit race or racism as problems to be addressed through mathematics education. We argue that attending to "slow emergencies" of racism must avoid sustaining mathematics education as a self-evident cause and cure for societal problems. We analyze how declarations of…
Descriptors: Racism, Mathematics Education, Social Problems, Educational History
Mati Keynes – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2024
This article explores how recent curricular reform in Australia has been responsive to a culture of redress. It argues that taken together, the 2008 National Apology to the Stolen Generations and the 2010 national curriculum reform marked a turning point, whereby settler colonial injustices have since been systematically included in the…
Descriptors: Land Settlement, Colonialism, Social Justice, Educational Change
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
Patrick Naoya Shorb – History of Education Quarterly, 2024
The Occupation of Japan (1945-1952) sought to democratize the nation's education system; pupil guidance was expected to play a key part of this process. American reformers promoted new guidance practices (e.g., the comprehensive collection of students' personal data, guidance interventions based on the case-study method, an expanded homeroom…
Descriptors: Asian Culture, World History, War, Educational History
Noah Merksamer – Educational Studies: Journal of the American Educational Studies Association, 2024
In response to rising antisemitism in the United States, state governments have legislated Holocaust education mandates into their public school curriculum to encourage social-emotional growth in their students. This dynamic of Holocaust education is not unfounded, as the implementation of certain Holocaust education curricula have been shown to…
Descriptors: European History, Educational Policy, Policy Formation, State Legislation
Thomas Clough Daffern – Teaching Theology & Religion, 2024
This paper introduces the reader to the "Periodic Table of the World's Religious and Philosophical Traditions" (PTWRPT). It summarizes its background history, the conceptual thinking that underlies it, and explains why and how it was created. Using the same thinking that underlies Mendeleyev's Periodic Table of the Elements, it sets out…
Descriptors: Religion, Philosophy, Folk Culture, Visual Aids
Julia Sarbo – Journal of Museum Education, 2024
Amsterdam's National Holocaust Museum is due to open in March 2024. It is the first and only museum to tell the story of the attempt by the Nazis to eradicate Jews from the Netherlands, a history of segregation, persecution, and murder. Yet the story is also one of rescue, survival, and solidarity. One of the museum's main goals is to engage…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Museums, History Instruction, Jews
Danielle M. De'Braux – ProQuest LLC, 2024
This quantitative research examined the effect of the implementation of project-based learning and assessment on the standardized test scores of high school students. Data were collected through a quantitative approach using standardized test scores for ninth-grade students taking the end-of-course World History and Geography to 1500 A.D. (C.E.)…
Descriptors: Active Learning, Student Projects, Standardized Tests, High School Students
David Fleming – Reading Research Quarterly, 2025
Abstract When he returned to Amsterdam in spring 1945, Otto Frank discovered that not one but two versions of his daughter's diary had survived the Holocaust: the three notebooks of so-called version A and the revision of that diary on loose sheets of paper, called version B. Other texts also survived, including a notebook Anne titled "Tales…
Descriptors: War, World History, Authors, Writing (Composition)
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