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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and policy makers endorsed a strengthening of history teacher requirements and the addition of expanded required historical content in the curriculum.1 1 In the 1980s and 1990s, new advances in cognitive and learning theory also supported increased disciplinary knowledge for teachers.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

Online Library of Liberty - Historical Essays and Studies - 2 views

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    John Emerich Edward Daton "Historical Essays and Studies" [1907] Historical Essays: Italy: Cavour Causes of the Franco-Prussian War Talleyrand's Memoirs History of the French Revolution
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    Online Historical Essays of 19th Century European History
Amy Haggstrom

The Concord Review | Sample Essays - 0 views

shared by Amy Haggstrom on 13 Oct 10 - Cached
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    Sample Essays
David Carpenter

How to Write Timed Essays That aren't Crap (Education - Change.org) - 0 views

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    This blogger, Clay Burell, offers creative ways to teach writing.
Amy Haggstrom

IB History Essay Writing & Resources - 0 views

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    Sample essays, structure, answer the question
Van Weringh

A Case Study on Trianon - 0 views

    • Van Weringh
       
      Notion of Hungarian Nationalism, irrendentism (One who advocates the recovery of territory culturally or historically related to one's nation but now subject to a foreign government.)
  • This pamphlet described the Hungarians as a "nation of mediators" and Hungary as a "link" between the East and the West. Historic Hungary was also characterized as a "community of nations" that are bound together by common history, common traditions and common interests.17
  • While trying to apply the principle of national self-determination to Britain's adversaries in the war, however, Toynbee was reluctant to do so in the case of the Entente states and their allies. In the latter case, political and economic considerations seem to have taken precedence over ethnic matters.
  • ...2 more annotations...
  • Although obviously dejected as was virtually every Hungarian, Homan ended his essay of 1920 on a positive note by professing his faith in the unique destiny of his nation in the lands conquered by their ancestors: "In the course of the fifteen hundred years that preceded the Hungarian conquest, about thirty nations have conquered ... various regions of our country. Yet, none of them was able to establish a lasting rule. ... Hungary may be dismembered, divided and truncated, its political unity may be shattered, but the country's natural geographical and economic unity, and its people's cultural unity, which is the product of a long historical evolution, are indissoluble. For this reason, its political unity is bound to be restored within a short period by the mighty powers of the laws of nature and of history."36
  • Trianon in Interwar Hungarian Historiography
Ian Gabrielson

IB History - International School of Toulouse - 0 views

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    "International School History"
Amy Haggstrom

IB History : Developing an IB Essay - Mark scheme and tips - 0 views

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    IB History Writing Pre-IB markscheme
Amy Haggstrom

Cambridge Journals Online - Abstract - Changing Trends in the Historiography of Postwar... - 0 views

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    Available Cambridge Essays on Historiography available online
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