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Jamie Gravell

BBC News - Audio slideshow: Mapping Africa - 13 views

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    Audio Slideshow - Mapping Africa Mapping Africa is a five minute narrated overview of the changing map of Africa from the 14th Century through today. The slideshow features explanations of the features of different historical maps of Africa.
Joellen Kriss

home - Smithsonian's History Explorer - 7 views

    • Joellen Kriss
       
      Can search by keyword, or historical era with restrictors like grade level and type of resource you're looking for.
David Hilton

Education Week: Inverting Bloom's Taxonomy - 11 views

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    A fascinating analysis of the misuse of 'critical thinking' models in the history classroom.
David Hilton

Real USSR - Lifting the Iron Curtain - 3 views

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    I don't usually add blogs however this one has so much quality historical material on real life in the USSR that I thought some people might find it useful. Might help to dispel some of the myths about life in the big bad evil Soviet Empire.
David Hilton

Historical Sources - 13 views

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    A pretty comprehensive guide for beginners on evaluating sources. Useful for students.
David Hilton

Using Sources: MLA - 6 views

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    Goes through some of the basic errors of high school and university students in historical research and writing.
David Hilton

Reading, Writing, and Researching for History: A Guide for College Students - 11 views

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    Has some neat tips. Might be useful in helping your students develop their historical thinking skills.
David Hilton

Making Sense of Letters and Diaries - 10 views

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    Looks like a useful guide by an experienced history teacher. Might be good for homework or a lesson activity? I'm focussing at the moment on training my students with 'historical thinking.' I find it much more useful a model than the 'critical thinking' models so common these days, and the results are promising. If anyone has any tips I'd be most appreciative...
David Hilton

Social Studies Rap Songs: Teaching US History, Government, and Geography with Education... - 15 views

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    A useful resource for engaging with Gen Y. The rap isn't bad (I think) and the quality of the historical information is quite good for a middle or high school level. They aren't free however they're not too expensive either.
David Hilton

New Deal Network: The Great Depression, the 1930s, and the Roosevelt Administration - 4 views

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    A great collection of historical resources on the New Deal.
David Hilton

Georgetown University Library - 1 views

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    A varied collection which is not well organised for searching for digital resources, however if you're willing to spend some time looking around you'll find WWI propaganda posters, artworks and other useful historical sources.
David Hilton

University of California History Digital Archives - 1 views

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    "This websource provides access to a growing collection of digitized historical documents, images and materials, along with past and current analysis on the history of the University of California." Just what we like!
David Hilton

European History Sources - 2 views

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    This site is briliant! A bunch of exemplary librarians maintain a list of high-quality sites which can be used for historical research on Europe. It's especially good for World War One but also some of the smaller European countries which are often hard to find information on.
Emily Hagan

The Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History - 8 views

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    he Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History is a nonprofit organization devoted to the improvement of history education. The Institute has developed an array of programs for schools, teachers, and students that now operate in all fifty states, including a website that features more than 60,000 unique historical documents in the Gilder Lehrman Collection. Each year the Institute offers support and resources to tens of thousands of teachers, and through them enhances the education of more than a million students.
Ed Webb

BBC News - History, with rose-tinted hindsight - 5 views

  • As one official explained, "we understand that school is a unique social institution that forms all citizens"; which means it is essential they should be taught history, especially the right kind of history. "We need a united society," the apparatchik goes on, and to achieve that end, "we need a united textbook".
  • in 1934, it was Stalin himself who convened an earlier meeting of historians to discuss the very same issue, namely the teaching of history in Russian schools. He disapproved of the conventional class-based accounts then available, which were strongly influenced by Marxist doctrines, and which traced the development of Russia from feudalism to capitalism and beyond. Not even Stalin's hometown wanted to be associated with him anymore... "These textbooks," Stalin thundered, "aren't good for anything. It's all epochs and no facts, no events, no people, no concrete information." History, he concluded somewhat enigmatically, "must be history" - by which, in this case, he meant a cavalcade of national heroes, whose doings might appeal more broadly to the Russian people than the arid abstractions of class analysis and social structure.
  • Who, for example, should decide what history is taught in schools: should it be the government, or academic experts, or examination boards, or the schools themselves, or even the parents?
  • ...1 more annotation...
  • for the last 18 months, I've been leading a project, based at the Institute of Historical Research, which is looking into the history of the teaching of history in schools in England since it first became a serious activity early in the 20th Century. And one of our most important discoveries so far has been the extent to which similar questions have been asked across the decades and generations, and often in complete ignorance of how they've been answered before.
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