Skip to main content

Home/ History Teachers/ Group items tagged internet

Rss Feed Group items tagged

1More

Main Page - Wikisource - 1 views

  •  
    This is where using the net gets tricky for students. We tell them never to use wikis (for good reason) and then something like this comes along. It's awesome. A fast-growing wiki (a site that anyone can add to) of historical sources. Shows why we need something like Diigo to filter the internet and provide guidance for the students regarding what to use in their research. Run by the same people as Wikipedia (Wikimedia). If you're ever looking for historical images can I suggest Wikimedia Commons.
1More

Internet East Asian History Sourcebook - 3 views

  •  
    Another one of the excellent history sourcebooks. Contains an extensive collection of Asian sources.
1More

HTA NSW Regional Network - 5 views

  • From this page various other free internet sites will be inked. In this way we will develop a vibrant professional community using resources that you can easily apply to your classroom.
1More

HistoryTunes - 18 views

  •  
    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.
1More

100 Terrific Sites to Find Primary Source History Documents | Bachelor's Degree Online - 21 views

  •  
    Researching on the Internet means working from home, viewing collections from around the world and stumbling across rare finds from somewhat obscure libraries or museums. But it also means linking to garbage, weird conspiracy theories, and even plagiarized material. To connect you to the best historical references, we've generated this list of 100 terrific sites that feature primary source documents, recordings, images and more.
4More

Famous People Painting "Discussing the Divine Comedy with Dante" - 9 views

  •  
    Discussing the Divine Comedy with Dante. Wow!!
  • ...1 more comment...
  •  
    I have created a very successful lesson/activity around this painting. The details are as follows. This window has this year's assignment. The next reply has the previous years. Advice: WHAP Review Activity: The Twittering Masses Review activity (mostly 1914- and East Asia) Description - I previously set up 103 discussions on turnitin.com for this lesson so they post into that person's discussion board and all replies are kept under the initial post. This year they posted on our classes Ning.com in the discussion forum. Grading is also difficult - Since not every one will have the same amount of replies - people are more likely to write to Hitler than Cui Jian for instance. So, I am grading the posts holistically out of 10 (I often only have 100-200 points in a quarter, so for instance a test might only be worth 40 points). I have students use a heading that states who [character] is tweeting what topic they are focusing on and who they are writing to. I would be interested in feedback or improvements people think they can make on this lesson - should I use Moodle, [Again, I have switched to Ning.com] etc.? Many thanks. And you can add or subtract people as you wish, so we have actually added Marcus Garvey, Jomo Kenyatta, Stephen Biko, and Emiliano Zapata to our role play and taken the painters (of this painting) out of the role play - Write up for students: Go to http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/worldnews/article-1162771/The-Internet-sensation-dinner-party-painting-103-historical-guests--spot.html#comments to see who all these individuals are, in color. The rules: You will imagine that each of the historical actors above has access to twitter, the expanded edition, 140 words as compared to 140 characters, to communicate to the other guests present. You will choose six of them (from my list below - my list is the final list - some people pictured have been replaced) to role-play in the "Twittering Masses." As your historical
  •  
    See previous post for advice. This is how I set it up the first two years without specific WHAP content or themes: The rules: You will imagine that each of the historical actors above has access to twitter, the expanded edition, to communicate to the other guests present. You will choose up to four (at least three) of them to role play in the "Twittering Masses" role play. As your historical person, during the Twittering Masses role play you will write, "tweet," at least four other persons. Two of the people should be in close proximity to you based on the painting above. Another tweet should go to the person you feel closest to (not by proximity) at the party - this could be based on ideology (MLK Jr. and Gandhi), background (Tagore and Gandhi), lifestyle (Gandhi and Mother Theresa), etc. Explain in your tweet why you are writing them. The other tweet should go to the person you see as most opposed, or farthest from you - Gandhi and Hitler or Gandhi and Gates or Gandhi and Churchill - in this tweet you should either try to bridge the gap between your differences or explain why the person is wrong in their beliefs. If you have only three guests - you will need to make 5 initial tweets. You will respond to each initial tweet. Then who knows . . . All tweets should have some connection to WHAP content or themes. You may want to comment on the surroundings or other guests . . .
  •  
    I would love comments as to the posts above. Something similar I do is written up here: http://worldhistoryconnected.press.illinois.edu/7.3/gregg.html
1More

Marxists Internet Archive - 1 views

  •  
    A collection of sources on that idea that worked really well on paper; communism.
1More

Internet Archive: Free Download: The Plow That Broke The Plains (Part I) - 3 views

  •  
    1936
1More

Internet Global History Sourcebook - 7 views

  •  
    I'm still looking for quality source sites relating to indigenous history and although this site is still under construction it looks like it will be a valuable contribution. Blessed be Paul Halsall and his History Sourcebooks project, the bane of textbook tyranny everywhere!
2More

Confucius [The Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy] - 6 views

    • Aaron Shaw
       
      There is a tremendous amount of information on this page regarding Confucius. Use it wisely!
  • Given his extraordinary impact on Chinese, Korean, Japanese, and Vietnamese thought, it is ironic that so little can be known about Confucius.
2More

EXPOSITION LOUIS XIV - L'HOMME ET LE ROI - CHATEAU DE VERSAILLES - du 20 OCTOBRE 2009 a... - 2 views

  •  
    Une visite virtuelle et interactive de l'exposition, de nombreuses oeuvres commentées, des vidéos, une chronologie illustrée du règne du roi-Soleil. Un site pédagogique de grande qualité.
  •  
    All the exhibition website in English
1More

Active History - Games, quizzes, online revision, lessons and worksheets for the histor... - 23 views

  •  
    This site has some good Web 2.0 based resources, including ready-made Google Earth flyovers, overlays and 3-D models.
« First ‹ Previous 81 - 100 of 113 Next ›
Showing 20 items per page