Skip to main content

Home/ History Teachers/ Group items tagged Ages

Rss Feed Group items tagged

aaron harris

They Too Shall Remember - Home - 5 views

  •  
    They Too Shall Remember is a video/lesson plan project launched by two Ontario school teachers in a bid to make Remembrance Day very meaningful to school age children.
Mr Maher

‪Lincoln Assassination Eyewitness (Feb 9, 1956)‬‏ - YouTube - 2 views

  •  
    1950s game show appearance of witness to Lincoln Assassination.  Not many people would believe that one person can connect the mid 19th century and the age of television. This can also show students that there are different qualities to primary sources - some primary sources are more valuable than others. This is a primary source because he was a witness, but he is remembering something from 100 years ago. Is he still a primary source?
Bob Maloy

Kids Have All the Write Stuff | University of Massachusetts Press - 2 views

  •  
    Open up a world of imagination and learning for children when you encourage the expression of ideas through writing. Kids Have All the Write Stuff: Revised and Updated for a Digital Age shows you how to support children's development as confident writers and communicators, offering hundreds of creative ways to integrate writing into the lives of toddlers, preschoolers,
Eric Beckman

Race, Racism, and the Middle Ages: Tearing down the "whites only" medieval world | The ... - 4 views

  •  
    Introduction to a series of blog posts on the misuse and misrepresentation of medieval history by White Supremacists
Nate Merrill

Human-age, the free game that teaches you history. - 19 views

  •  
    Simulation games that engage in ancient history.
Eric Beckman

Globalization really started 1,000 years ago - 3 views

  •  
    Valerie Hansen article on global connections in the Middle Ages
erickjhonkdkk112

Stream Speech (3)Buy Verified CashApp Accounts - BTC Enable Aged CashApp by Leo Royer |... - 0 views

  •  
    Are you looking to buy verified cashapp accounts with BTC enable? We are able to provide you btc enable cashapp account at a reasonable price
erickjhonkdkk116

Stream Speech (6)Buy Verified CashApp Accounts - BTC Enable Aged CashApp by Leo Royer |... - 0 views

  •  
    Are you looking to buy verified cashapp accounts with BTC enable? We are able to provide you btc enable cashapp account at a reasonable price
Aaron Shaw

Popular: Did Marie-Antoinette really say "Let them eat cake"? - 10 views

  • in fact, Marie-Antoinette was a generous patron of charity and other members of the royal family were often embarrassed or irritated by her habit of bursting into tears when she heard of the plight of the suffering poor. There's also a problem with dates. During Louis the Sixteenth's time as king, there was only one case of bread shortages in Paris and that was shortly after his coronation. Marie-Antoinette was eighteen at the time and when she heard about the people's unhappiness at the food situation, she wrote a letter about it back to her mother in Austria, in which she said, "We are more obliged than ever to work for the people's happiness. The King seems to understand this truth; as for myself, I know that in my whole life (even if I live for a hundred years) I shall never forget". Marie-Antoinette's personality therefore seems to have been the exact opposite of someone who would joke about the starving poor.
  • The story of a princess joking "let them eat cake" had actually been told many years before Marie-Antoinette ever arrived in France, as a young princess of fourteen in 1770. Her brother-in-law, the Count of Provence, who hated her, later said that he heard the story as a child, long before his brother ever married Marie-Antoinette. The count claimed that the version he heard was that the woman who made the comment had been his great-great-great grandmother, Maria-Teresa of Spain, who advised peasants to eat pie crust (or brioche) during bread shortages. A French socialite, the Countess of Boigne, said she'd heard that it had been Louis the Sixteenth's bitter aunt, Princess Victoria, and the great philosopher, Rousseau, wrote that he had heard the "let them eat cake" story about an anonymous great princess. Rousseau wrote this story in 1737 - eighteen years before Marie-Antoinette was even born!
    • Aaron Shaw
       
      This is quite interesting. Many of my AP Euro students enjoy thinking it was the queen. This will give them something to "chew" on, and allow for a teachable moment. As another great Philosophe suggested we should accept nothing as truth except our own existance.
  • Others think that because the French Revolution was able to dress itself up as the force that brought freedom and equality to Europe, it had to justify its many acts of violence and terror. Executing Marie-Antoinette at the age of thirty-seven and leaving her two children as shivering, heart-broken orphans in the terrifying Temple prison, suggested that the Revolution was a lot more complicated than its supporters like to claim. However, if Marie-Antoinette is painted as stupid, deluded, out-of-touch, spoiled and selfish, then we're likely to feel a lot less pity when it comes to studying her death. If that was the republicans' intention, then they did a very good job. Two hundred years later and the poor woman is still stuck with a terrible reputation, and a catchphrase, that she certainly doesn't deserve.
  •  
    As a student and teacher of, among other things, propaganda and censorship, I think this is a great example for students to play with in thinking about how 'truth' gets established, politically and historically. In discussing nationalism I often talk about the importance of political myth in establishing identities, and here is a powerful example of a myth that became hegemonic.
David Hilton

Guardian Teacher Network | guardian.co.uk - 10 views

  •  
    Browse and use thousands of ready-made resources and lesson plans for ages 4-18 absolutely free, on the Guardian Teacher Network.
HistoryGrl14 .

Watch Online | The Age Of Aids | FRONTLINE | PBS - 2 views

  •  
    Good video to use in AP Human Geo for Population chapter part dealing with AIDS
Annabel Astbury

School history gets the TV treatment | Education | The Guardian - 10 views

  • His key episodes are based not around a grand organising narrative but a series of vignettes that make compelling stories.
  • If history is popular on TV, it can be made popular at school.
  • Teachers developed new methods, shifting away from chronology and narrative to topics and themes, where the emphasis was placed on "skills" of analysis over the regurgitation of facts.
  • ...8 more annotations...
  • . History in schools, they argue
  • without providing any connecting narrative thread that explains their relationship with each other. The solution is a return to narrative history, to a big story that will organise and make sense of historical experience.
  • Nonetheless, it remains an announcement that tells us more about the contradictions of government thinking and its reductive view of the humanities and social sciences than it does about the state of history teaching in our schools.
  • I agree with Schama that the real public value of history-teaching in schools (as in universities) lies in its capacity to re-animate our civil society and produce an engaged and capable citizenry. I disagree that good story-telling will get you there
  • History provides us with a set of analytical skills that are indispensable for citizens who want to understand our present conditions
  • We want students who aren't just entertained, but who can think critically and effectively about the world they live in.
  • For the creative and innovative teacher it may have been something of a constraint, but most now agree it led to a ‘golden age’ of history teaching in primary schools in the 1990s and ensured every child covered a coherent history syllabus from 11-14 without repeating topics. It also spawned a generation of excellent and accessible teaching materials and encouraged heritage organisations to provide for a standard history curriculum
  • Regardless this return to grand narrative and national myth goes against the very progress we as academic historians have made. History is more to do with how we think and evaluate things, the tools we use to come to conclusions than about dates and conveniently accessible stories self legitimatising the status quo.
hpbookmarks

The World of Seven Billion | National Geographic - 8 views

  •  
    Interactive website from National Geographic that illustrates "where and how we live" on planet earth.
David Hilton

Historical overview - 2 views

  •  
    A no-doubt perfectly impartial, disinterested version of Israel's ancient, medieval and modern history. 'The Iranian Threat' gets its own link...
David Hilton

Flickr: Wessex Archaeology's Photostream - 0 views

  •  
    This photostream from flickr is maintained by Wessex Archaeology in Britain. It contains images of their excavations and the artefacts they've recovered. Useful for investigations of pre-modern Britain, I would imagine.
David Hilton

Wessex Archaeology - 0 views

  •  
    This site is quite specialised but if you're doing research or looking for resources on archaeology in prehistoric, ancient or medieval Britain then this is the place for you. Lots of neat images - they have a link to their photostream on flickr.
David Hilton

Foreigners in Early Medieval Europe - 0 views

  •  
    This is an interesting site which has a map of archaeological sites from medieval Europe and you can browse them to look at the acculturation of the Germanic invaders/immigrants at the end of Ancient period. Will be useful for student research.
David Hilton

Extensive Information on Archaeology and Artefacts at Archaeology Expert (UK) - 0 views

  •  
    Another great site on things archaeological. Archaeologists seem to be making even better use of the possibilities the net has opened up than historians. This site provides some good quality, free services.
David Hilton

Collection: EGYPTE - 0 views

  •  
    This is a set of photo collections taken by Emma from Chamagne in her travels in Egypt. The French have a glorious history of historical discovery in Egypt and Emma has taken up the legacy well. Some sexy pics of the pyramids.
« First ‹ Previous 41 - 60 of 111 Next › Last »
Showing 20 items per page