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Peer reviewedAllen, Rodney F.; Hammons-Bryner, Sue – Social Studies, 1990
Advocates using broadsides, a form of public announcements in the colonial era, as an example of easily obtainable historical source materials. Examines how studying broadsides promotes skills associated with historical inquiry. Outlines a six-step model for teaching with broadsides. Provides three sample lessons for classroom use of broadsides.…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, History Instruction, Instructional Materials, Learning Activities
Peer reviewedAdams, Bruce F. – History Teacher, 1989
Suggests themes in Russian history that can be integrated into existing history, social studies, civics, or religion classes. Expounds on the following themes: agriculture and collectivization, police force and legality, Jews and dissidence, plurality and ideology, and the arms race. Provides bibliographic sources. (RW)
Descriptors: Anti Semitism, Bibliographies, Civics, Communism
Peer reviewedGottlieb, Stephen E. – History Teacher, 1989
Maintains that in order for students to participate effectively in a democracy they must be exposed to different viewpoints. Shows that high school history textbooks avoid controversy, leave out vital information, and are biased. Argues textbooks should be subject to a fairness test that includes constitutional scrutiny. (RW)
Descriptors: Citizenship Education, Controversial Issues (Course Content), Democracy, History Instruction
Peer reviewedFairbanks, Joseph H. Jr. – Social Studies, 1990
Provides a classroom exercise, known as Synergistic Convergence (SYNCON), in which students are divided into small groups, and then into successively larger groups, until the entire class is involved in one problem. Asks students to develop a list of five heroes and five villains in history. Generates insights into the nature of historical…
Descriptors: Class Activities, Group Activities, Higher Education, Historiography
Kelly, Kathryn – Learning, 1989
A Maryland teacher used Alaska's Iditarod sled-dog race to spark learning and bring adventure into a fourth grade history and geography course. Students followed the Iditarod, conducted reading races on related material, studied race strategies, and considered necessary mathematics. They learned about Alaska while experiencing cooperation and…
Descriptors: Class Activities, Creative Teaching, Educational Games, Educational Innovation
Peer reviewedHeilbron, J. L.; Kevles, Daniel J. – History Teacher, 1988
Examines four representative U.S. history textbooks dealing with science and technology. Finds that these books omitted the sources, authors, and context of scientific and technological events, and stressed instead their social and economic impact. Proposes ways to restructure history textbooks. (KO)
Descriptors: Higher Education, History Instruction, History Textbooks, Science and Society
Lankiewicz, Donald – Georgia Social Science Journal, 1990
Illustrates the way that writing imaginary interviews with dead people can enhance students' grasp of history. Recounts author's personal experience with a college history assignment in which he interviewed the Confederate President Jefferson Davis. Includes a copy of the interview. Describes the assignment as a combination of primary source…
Descriptors: Civil War (United States), Higher Education, History Instruction, Interviews
The Effects of Expository and Narrative Prose on Student Achievement and Attitudes toward Textbooks.
Peer reviewedCunningham, Lawrence J.; Gall, M. D. – Journal of Experimental Education, 1990
Five classes of secondary school students were involved in an experiment to compare student interest in expository versus narrative text structures. Results with 313 ninth graders in Guam, using history texts, indicate that students favored narrative structure in face-to-face comparisons of texts. (TJH)
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Comparative Analysis, Expository Writing, Foreign Countries
Peer reviewedJohnson, R. E. – History and Social Science Teacher, 1990
Discusses the use of quantitative methods in historical research. Maintains that numbers are essential to understanding certain historical phenomena and contends that statistical sources must be approached with a critical stance. Describes the integration of quantitative methods into the history curriculum, and the establishment of an…
Descriptors: Course Content, Critical Thinking, Curriculum Development, Higher Education
Peer reviewedKneeshaw, Stephen – OAH Magazine of History, 1988
Offers ideas for using comparative history in the classroom. Includes suggestions for using guided design, role playing, and an approach for a series of sequenced writing exercises. Uses the 1920s and 1970s for comparison, focusing on Teapot Dome and Watergate. (LS)
Descriptors: Content Area Writing, History Instruction, Learning Strategies, Lesson Plans
Peer reviewedSmith, Timothy L. – Religion and Public Education, 1988
Identifies developments in U.S. history in which religion played a decisive role. Investigates the way these religious forces were dealt with in 10 high school U.S. history textbooks used in Alabama. Concludes that they ignored or distorted the place of religion to the extent that students are denied knowledge of recent historical research. (LS)
Descriptors: Content Analysis, History Instruction, History Textbooks, Religion
Peer reviewedThelen, David – Journal of American History, 1989
Discusses the issue of memory and U.S. history. Emphasizes the social dimension of memory rather than accuracy of verification. Notes that while most discussion in the past has centered upon what content students should be required to learn. The issue of how to teach about memroy is of equal importance. (KO)
Descriptors: Cultural Background, Cultural Education, Higher Education, History Instruction
Peer reviewedBrink, Dean C. – OAH Magazine of History, 1989
Illustrates the difficulties of adjusting to freedom through observations of former slave owners from the United States and Africa, letters written by former slaves to their former masters, and recollections of former slaves in Cuba and the southern United States several years after abolition. (KO)
Descriptors: Black History, Civil War (United States), Foreign Countries, History Instruction
Peer reviewedKeller, Clair W. – OAH Magazine of History, 1989
Offers a lesson plan for comparing the ideas and context of the Emancipation Proclamation issued by President Abraham Lincoln on September 22, 1862, and the Emancipation Manifesto issued on March 3, 1861, by Alexander II of Russia. Gives background information on the Emancipation Manifesto, discusses preparation and lesson procedures, and suggests…
Descriptors: Black History, Civil War (United States), Foreign Countries, History Instruction
Peer reviewedMugleston, William F. – Teaching History: A Journal of Methods, 1989
Suggests that teachers of required history courses have a particularly challenging task in their first class meeting because of the captive nature of their audience. Proposes using the technique of providing humorous information and intriguing anecdotes to stimulate student interest. Provides a list of such items for teacher use. (KO)
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, Higher Education, History Instruction, Humor


