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David Hilton

Free Online Course Materials | Courses | MIT OpenCourseWare - 0 views

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    If you scroll down or click 'History' you'll see the History lecture podcasts offered by MIT. Personally, I use iTunes to subscribe to university lecture podcasts. My students find them invaluable for their research.
David Hilton

Podagogy » Podcasting Resources - 0 views

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    Sorry, this isn't a site with sources or resources for history but I've been asked a lot lately about podcasting and I thought newbs (my students recently taught me that word) might find this useful. It has some information on key terms, how to set up classroom podcasting, etc. I found podbean.com really useful for that.
David Hilton

TwHistory - 0 views

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    You'll find quite a few historical figures on Twitter (Sulla is my favourite - he's a cranky conservative just like Sulla would have been) and this could presage an interesting development in education. Or it could just be a passing fad. By the time that question has been answered, most people will have forgotten it all anyway. A history teacher's lament...
David Hilton

History - Open Yale Courses - 2 views

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    Would the podcasts here be useful for your Revolutionary France subject Jess? I've found these Yale lectures useful for some of my classes.
applebee

Hippocampus - 2 views

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    Great short easily digestable film clips, documents, and challenges that follow the standards fairly closely. Both regular and AP versions of U.S. History - geared toward high school but I use these clips regularly with my 8th grade class. They tend to retain information from the clips much better than information fron their text (TCI).
David Hilton

Flickr: Your Photostream - 1 views

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    Here is the photostream including photos of activities I've run with my classes. I thought I'd add it to generate ideas on re-enactments and activities that people do with their students. I've found activities like this can be surprisingly educational by helping bring what the students have studied to life. I run them at the end of the term.
David Hilton

Flickr: mharrsch's Photostream - 0 views

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    Thanks Mary for these excellent images. They'll be extremely useful when I'm putting together resources for my Roman history classes.
Elizabeth Siarny

Brigid Schulte -- The Case for Year-Round School - washingtonpost.com - 0 views

  • Though different schools and districts have different schedules, our modified calendar works like this: The first day back to school typically falls in the first week of August. The children attend regular classes for nine weeks. Then they have a two-week break, or intersession, in October, when they can choose either to attend fun, creative classes or to go on vacation. Then they have nine more weeks of school, winter break, and then a week of intersession in January. Nine more weeks of school, then a two-week intersession that bumps up against spring break. The school year ends in June, at the same time as schools on the traditional calendar. But summer break lasts five or six weeks, rather than the traditional 10.
    • Elizabeth Siarny
       
      I would be willing to do this schedule. It makes more sense to break up the learning this way, in my opinion.
Annabel Astbury

The Forbidden City: Beyond Space and Time - 1 views

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    This looks very cool. Quite big (2G) but maybe you can talk to the ICT department... I saw a similar thing for Ancient Rome on Google Earth but you need a powerful computer to run it and my laptop wasn't up to the job. Gen-Y is so visual, things like this can be great tools.
David Hilton

Dan Carlin - Hardcore History - 5 views

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    My students like Dan. He has a dramatic and engaging way of going over historical topics and I've found him generally quite accurate. The podcasts cover a variety of topics; I subscribe to them through iTunes for free (^).(^) and then post them on moodle for the kids to download for their research. Does anyone know any other good podcasts?
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    I'd already saved this but Dan has just released the fourth show in his excellent 'Ghosts of the Ostfront' series so I thought I'd bookmark it again. If you're teaching World War II or the Indian Wars I strongly recommend you take a listen to Dan's podcasts. I put them up on our Moodle site so the students can use them for research; I usually download podcasts through iTunes. Some students enjoy them so much they listen to them on their own afterwards.
David Hilton

The History Network - 0 views

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    This podcast covers a few topics, but has since been discontinued. I found the material there pretty good for student research (actually I enjoyed listening to them). Not as entertaining as Dan Carlin. Like all my podcasts I use iTunes to subscribe to it.
David Hilton

Military History Podcast: Sargon the Great - 0 views

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    My students use podcasts like this for their research. It saves them from having to risk poisoning or injury by touching a book.
David Hilton

High School World History: Resources for Students, Teachers and Parents - 1 views

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    Contains a few useful links and is often updated so will just get better and better! (Please forgive my cheerfulness - holidays just started).
David Hilton

Ancient History with Alex - 0 views

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    This is a podcast produced by one of my year 11 students for an assignment.
David Hilton

Readings & Flowcharts - The Flow of History - 0 views

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    I've found these resources excellent. You buy them for 3 bucks and it's worth it. I use them now with all my classes and I've found them really effective.
Kristine Goldhawk

United States Institute of Peace - 0 views

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    Homepage for the USIP - Great lesson plan ideas and essay contest for high school students under Education & Training tab.
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    The essay contest for 2009-10 is not up yet, but the topic is the effectiveness of nonviolent civic action. My students participated last year when the topic was crimes against humanity and it lead to really great discussions.
David Hilton

MacroHistory : World History - 0 views

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    I usually avoid adding online secondary sources (most of them are so cursory and unreliable, in my experience) but this one has some substantial information on obscure topics that students often struggle to get information on, such as Bronze Age Mesopotamia. They'll definitely need to be careful with some of the details though and corroborate any information they use.
David Hilton

webcast.berkeley | UC Berkeley Video and Podcasts for Courses & Events - 0 views

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    I've found these really useful for my year 12s. Berkeley has an awesome history department and it's like the kids can be in the room during a lecture. They listen to them and take notes for their assignments. Parents love it, too. I've particularly found Isabelle Pafford useful for her lectures on the ancient world.
David Hilton

My History Network - a network of history students from around the world - 14 views

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    Here it is! If you'd like to become involved just please let me know and I'll give you teacher privileges. You can then approve your students' membership and monitor them. Any helpful feedback would be really appreciated - this is a collaborative effort and if we all feel ownership and have input it could be a great benefit to all of us. I suspect that especially our stronger students will benefit from this - those A students who need that extra stimulation can nerd it up on the network and help each other improve. Hope it works!
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    Several new members have joined in the last couple of days. I'd encourage you to get your students involved in 2010. Early results have been promising and we'd love to have you along!
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    I'm adding this again to try to drum up business; shameless promotion, I know. I'd encourage you to join up; it would be a great experience for your students. Hope to see you there...
David Hilton

History Guide NG - 0 views

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    Got sick of looking at this site in my tabs. I'll go back and add them individually. One day. There are nearly 2000 sites there related to medieval history. Guess someone had no life...
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