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Amy Haggstrom

The National Archives | Focus on Film | Film Archive - 0 views

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    Focus on Films is an archive of British portrayal of events Domesday, Tudors, Stuarts Early 20th Century Actuality films, Women's suffrage, Great War, Ireland, British Empire and Commonwealth, Inter-war Years, World War Two Post-war: Britain since 1945, British Empire and Commonwealth, Cold War
Amy Haggstrom

Empire of the Czars - 0 views

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    Imperial Russia Alexander I, Nicholas I, Alexander II, Nicholas II, Crimean War
Amy Haggstrom

JAPAN World War 2 - "The Complete Story" in Color - YouTube - 1 views

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    Holy War Japan's War In Colour WWII and Japanese Empire 1937-1945 Widespread famine, political extremism 1:36:35
Amy Haggstrom

ALLRUSSIAS - About This Site - 0 views

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    Historian: Alexander Chubarov The Fragile Empire: A History of Imperial Russia Russia's Bitter Path to Modernity
Amy Haggstrom

The Empire That Was Russia: The Prokudin-Gorskii Photographic Record Recreated - 0 views

shared by Amy Haggstrom on 27 Feb 10 - Cached
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    Photographic Record Recreated with exhibition sections on the Tsar, architecture, ethnic diversity, transportation and people at work
Amy Haggstrom

Thomas D. Fallace | Historiography and Teacher Education: Reflections on an Experimenta... - 1 views

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    "http://www.historycooperative.org/journals/ht/42.2/fallace.html From The History Teacher Vol. 42, Issue 2. Viewed February 1, 2010 2:50 EST Presented online in association with the History Cooperative. http://www.historycooperative.org Historiography and Teacher Education: Reflections on an Experimental Course Thomas D. Fallace University of Mary Washington, Fredericksburg, Virginia IN RECENT YEARS, professional historians have encouraged policy makers to increase content requirements in history in hopes of improving the overall teaching of history in American schools. Support for such proposals has come from many sources. The origins of this movement can be traced to the 1983 National Commission on Excellence in Education's Nation at Risk report, which declared that the ignorance of American youth was at a crisis level. E. D. Hirsch reiterated this concern in his best-selling Cultural Literacy, in which he also decried the lack of content knowledge of American students. Further studies, such as Diane Ravitch and Chester Finn's What Do Our 17-Year-Olds Know? and the Bradley Commission's Historical Literacy, argued that students were particularly deficient in historical knowledge. As a result, in the 1990s, many historians and policy makers endorsed a strengthening of history teacher requirements and the addition of expanded required historical content in the curriculum.1 1 In the 1980s and 1990s, new advances in cognitive and learning theory also supported increased disciplinary knowledge for teachers. In 1987, Lee Shulman's influential article, "Knowledge and Teaching: Foundations of a New Reform," introduced the concept of pedagogical content knowledge-"a special amalgam of content and pedagogy that is uniquely the province of teachers, their own special form of professional understanding."2 Shulman argued that effective history teachers draw upon techniques and understandings unique to the discipline, not upon a generic set of instructional tools t
Amy Haggstrom

Cambridge Histories Online : Frontmatter - 1 views

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    The Cambridge History of Russia
Amy Haggstrom

Map of Asia 19th Century - 0 views

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    Russia 1801-
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    19th Century Historical Maps of the World
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