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Contents contributed and discussions participated by Ben Pope

Ben Pope

Examples of Virtual Tours and Electronic Field Trips - 13 views

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    virtual tours from many cultures/periods.
Ben Pope

Librarians' Internet Index - 8 views

shared by Ben Pope on 25 Oct 09 - Cached
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    A great site; giving a very large number of database links which do not necessarily show up on a standard google or yahoo search (because they're databases). It also indicates which databases are pay-to-view/subscription. Some of the links, however, seem to be dead - and each database will need to be searched independently once you are there, obviously.
Ben Pope

Medieval Manuscripts at the Syracuse University Library || Syracuse University Library - 3 views

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    As requested by David - here's the medieval manuscript database link for Syracuse University...
Ben Pope

History - Wordle - 0 views

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    This article suggests using 'wordle' to create a 'word cloud' from a selected text. It works really well in historical sources (or modern articles) for bringing out key terms. It's also a really efficient way for students to 'scan' a text to see if it might be relevant when researching - particularly for those who read slowly, or for ESL students who are daunted by large blocks of text - and it looks very nice too!
Ben Pope

Open Archive > Home - 0 views

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    British archaeological reports archived and searchable by name or map location.
Ben Pope

OpenLearn - The Open University - 0 views

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    Britain's Open University has put a great deal of old material online, and has made several interesting apps available to help work through the course notes and resources. You will need to register
David Hilton

How to teach source evaluation? - 70 views

sources evaluation
started by David Hilton on 27 Jul 09 no follow-up yet
  • Ben Pope
     
    I know I've just caught up with this thread, but I have to say I LOVE the berkeley link, Bette-Lou. I also teach History (Ancient) in Qld, and I know where you're coming from, David. The problem (I think) is made worse in Ancient History, as we have comparatively few sources, and so much conjecture about them. I often feel like I am repeating myself along these lines:
    So - the author is from the upper class - what is his point of view about the situation?
    Does this represent a female point of view?
    etc etc

    The problem I find is that there often are NO alternative voices, and anything we create is so artificial or one-dimensional - We really don't know how ancient people thought about particular things; so we don't know what they thought was important, or even 'true'.

    I often use the old Geoffrey Robinson's "Hypothetical" style of roleplay to set up the right kind of mindset for historical analysis - set up your base scenario and let the students play it out, without telling them the real names or events/people. Set constraints/opportunities similar to those enjoyed by historical periods, and see how different/similar your students' solutions are. This rarely needs more than a whiteboard and good stage management...
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