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Kay Cunningham

BBC - History: Ancient History in-depth - 3 views

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    Sections on Egypt, Greece, British prehistory, Rome, Vikings, Anglo-Saxons, Ancient India, from the BBC. Includes essays, images, etc.
Mark Pilson

Made from History - 11 views

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    The site features picture essays, timelines, videos, and interactive guides to significant events in European and World history. Made From History is divided into four sections; WWI, WWII, Civil Rights, and Referenced Blog
Eric Beckman

Yacob and Amo: Africa's precursors to Locke, Hume and Kant | Aeon Essays - 2 views

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    Article on philosophy emphasizing freedom of religion from outside of Europe.
Eric Beckman

The Boxer Uprising - 4 views

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    Essay illustrated with many primary source visuals
Jeremy Greene

Teaching History's Teaching Guides - 2 views

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    Lots of helpful essays here on how to teach various things big and small: from writing thesis statements and analyzing political cartoons to forming concepts and using primary sources
anonymous

Turabian Citation Guide - 0 views

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    A Manual for Writers of Research Papers, Theses, and Dissertations Turabian Quick Guide Kate L. Turabian's Manual for Writers of Research Papers, Theses, and Dissertations presents two basic documentation systems: notes-bibliography style (or simply bibliography style) and author-date style (sometimes called reference list style). These styles are essentially the same as those presented in The Chicago Manual of Style, sixteenth edition, with slight modifications for the needs of student writers. Bibliography style is used widely in literature, history, and the arts. This style presents bibliographic information in footnotes or endnotes and, usually, a bibliography.
Nate Merrill

The Korean War - 3 views

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    The Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History
Kay Cunningham

The History Engine: Doing History with Digital Tools | Academic Commons - 0 views

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    'One of the primary goals of the History Engine project has been to design a research and writing exercise modest enough in its analytical scope and its length that it allows students to "do history" long before a senior seminar or capstone course. (Another important goal, discussed below, is to capture this research to amass a large history archive.) The History Engine is an online archive consisting of thousands of "episodes" written and contributed by undergraduates.'
HistoryGrl14 .

Analysis of Hans Holbein's The Ambassadors / Art Theory Essay Writing Guide / School of... - 0 views

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    analysis of Holbein's 'The Ambassadors"
Christopher Potter

World History International: Main Contents Page - 1 views

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    This site has maps, articles and primary sources (well it says it does, but I can't find them). The articles might be useful for student research.
Raeanne Gillenwater

HistoryTunes - 18 views

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    Teaches American History through pop/rock music. Online resources include images, vocabulary, leveled questions, standardized prep, DBQ and thematic essay questions. Students learn American history with thier iPods and internet.
David Hilton

Digital History - 11 views

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    Has a funky graphic interface connected to different types of resources to do with digital history. From what I can tell this is a bit of a buzzword (term?): 'digital history'. It seems if you're doing anything educational online put 'digital' in front of it and you're in the 21st century. Simple, really...
David Hilton

activehistory.ca - 7 views

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    An interesting blog from Canada seeking to collect a, um, collection (it's the first day of the holidays and my frontal lobe still has not recovered from the marking season. Sorry...) of articles by historians which are relevant to the broader community. His argument that history has become too specialised and irrelevant is compelling. It gels with much of what I experienced at university, anyway. As I've said before, I use a blog reader (e.g. Google Reader, Bloglines) to collect these types of sites into one place. I get many of the sites I post to the group that way.
Historix Mueller

History Education in a World of Information Surplus | Democratizing Knowledge - 14 views

  • ut the problem of doing history this way in an age of information-surplus is that students spend much of their time as passive audience members, ingesting information, rather than grappling with it to find their own voices. Let’s be clear – it is inconceivable that students won’t have access to lecture information in the future: Wikipedia has every fact that I’ll cover in my AP U.S. History course this year, and if students want to hear an expert lecture they can always find one on iTunes University from Berkeley or MIT. So instead of coverage-style lecturing we need to use the very valuable classroom time to engage in deep inquiry about historical and current problems. Teachers should create powerful essential questions that require students to master information literacy skills they’ll need in a digital age, and to master historical inquiry. From these questions, students will behave as historians, researching, analyzing, evaluating, and creating DAILY. Isn’t that more valuable critical thinking than the odd essay question every few weeks between lectures? Liz Becker and Laufenberg and correct. The 20th century history classroom has to change. In a world of information surplus, we must recognize that good history education must transform students into power information critics, able to evaluate claims and build their own truths from myriad facts.
anonymous

Freedom's Story: Teaching African American Literature and History - 10 views

http://nationalhumanitiescenter.org/tserve/freedom/freedom.htm Essays, primary sources, bibliographies, images, ideas for classroom discussion, current scholarly debate, and more.

african american history us primary sources secondary

started by anonymous on 13 Feb 11 no follow-up yet
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