Showing posts with label U.S. History. Show all posts
Showing posts with label U.S. History. Show all posts

Friday, October 9, 2009

National Humanities Center Fall Workshops: FREE!!

From: National Humanities Center [ckiplik@nationalhumanitiescenter.org]
Subject: Online Professional Development - National Humanities Center

Live, Online Professional Development
U.S. History and American Literature

Fall 2009 Workshops
FREE for California Teachers!!!


Thurs., Oct. 8
The Consumer Revolution in Colonial America
Maurie McInnis, University of VA

Tues., Oct. 13
Why Some New World Colonies Succeeded and Others Failed
Kathleen DuVal, UNC-Chapel Hill and NHC Fellow

Tues., Oct. 20
Lincoln's Gettysburg Address
Andrew Delbanco, Columbia University and NHC Fellow

Tues., Oct. 27
Civil War Art
Kirk Savage, University of Pittsburgh

Wed., Oct. 28
The Cult of Domesticity
Lucinda MacKethan, North Carolina State University and NHC Fellow

Tues., Nov. 10
Emancipation
Reginald Hildebrand, UNC-Chapel Hill

Thurs., Nov. 12
The Ashcan School
Angela Miller, Washington University - St. Louis

Thurs., Nov. 19
In Search of the Civil Rights Movement
Kenneth Janken, UNC-Chapel Hill and NHC Fellow


Who Should Enroll: K-12 U.S. History and American Literature teachers.

Cost: $35.00 -- but read attachment below for special FREE offer to California teachers, through partnership of CDE with NHC!!

Reading Assignments: Workshop texts are provided free online at the National Humanities Center's Toolbox Library and TeacherServe® websites. Prior to each workshop, reading assignments will be emailed to participants.

Recertification Credit: The National Humanities Center programs are eligible for recertification credit. Each workshop will include ninety minutes of instruction plus ninety minutes of preparation. Because the workshops are conducted online, they may qualify for technology credit in districts that award it. The Center will supply documentation of participation.

Technical Requirements: The workshops are conducted online using conferencing software. To participate, you need a computer, an internet connection, speakers, and a microphone. If you need a headset with a built in microphone, one will be provided.

Sponsor: The National Humanities Center, located in North Carolina's Research Triangle Park, is the country's only independent institute for advanced study in all branches of the humanities. Since 1984, it has been offering rigorous, content-based professional development programs for high school teachers.

Be sure to visit the Center's online resources for teachers:
*The Toolbox Library provides primary sources-- historical documents, literary texts, visual images, and audio material--illuminated by notes and discussion questions.
*TeacherServe®, collections of essays by leading scholars that explore important topics in American culture and offer advice on how to teach them.

Caryn Koplik
National Humanities Center
919-406-0111
7 Alexander Drive
P.O. Box 12256
Research Triangle Park, NC 27709

Tuesday, March 31, 2009

Workshop Series: American Volunteers in the Spanish Civil War

*JOIN US FOR TWO DAYS OF EXCITING GROUP STUDY*

APRIL 18 AND APRIL 25

9 AM – 3 PM

AT THE ALAMEDA COUNTY OFFICE OF EDUCATION



DID YOU KNOW…

§ The Spanish Civil War was the “first battle” of World War II, in which U.S. citizens faced choices that affected the course of events leading to the war and American involvement?

§ Volunteers supporting the Republic represented the first fully-integrated American military operation in terms of race, gender and sexual orientation, establishing a standard for diversity in government action not met again until long after?

§ The diaspora of one million Spanish citizen refugees forced from their country changed the face of the many places to which they fled, particularly to Mexico and, from there, to South, Central and North America?

§ Members of the Abraham Lincoln Brigade and others who helped Spanish refugees were among the first to suffer political persecution during the McCarthy era?

WE WILL MEET as a study group for two Saturdays to explore a rich range of primary sources – posters, poetry, postcards, paintings, photos, letters and more - and to develop lessons around such topics as:

§ The roles of women and people of color in the Abraham Lincoln Brigade and other volunteer corps

§ Participation of such notable artist activists as Pablo Neruda, Langston Hughes, Paul Robeson, Dorothy Parker, Lillian Hellman and Ernest Hemingway

§ The relationship of the Spanish Civil War to the advent of WWII and to global immigration patterns

§ Persecution of political dissenters during the McCarthy era


BENEFITS YOU WILL RECEIVE INCLUDE:

§ A stipend of $300
§ Breakfast and lunch on each workshop day
§ Teaching resources including books, videos and lesson plans

See attached flyer for details

To register: use the attached registration form

Contact: AVI BLACK, ACOE History-Social Science Coordinator

PH: 510-670-4239

E: ablack@acoe.org



Meet the Scholars 2009: Presidents in Times of Economic Challenge

From: Avi Black (ablack@acoe.org)

The Alameda County Office of Education, Words That Made America 2 and the Oakland Museum of California

PRESENT

Meet the Scholars

Join us for a series of collegial conversations between teachers and eminent historians around the theme:

Presidents in Times of Economic Challenge

  • How have national crises shaped the role of the American presidency over time?

  • How have American presidents dealt with challenges facing the nation?

  • How do past crises inform how we understand the role of the presidency today?


  • Session 3: April 3
    Gerald Henig, Prof Emeritus of History, CSU-East Bay

    Author of "A Nation Transfored: How the Civil War Changed America Forever"
    Winner of CSU-East Bay Outstanding Professor Award


    LINCOLN'S LEADERSHIP:
    A BLUEPRINT FOR THE 21ST CENTURY


    All pre-registrants get FREE admission to "First Friday" programming and guaranteed seating to this program.

    *REGISTRATION DEADLINE FOR THIS SESSION: APRIL 1*

    Please see the attached flyer for details, and use the attached form to register.

    Click here for more details on the entire “Meet the Scholars” series.

    Meet the Scholars sessions are held at:

    THE OAKLAND MUSEUM OF CALIFORNIA
    Lecture Hall
    1000 Oak Street (at 10th Street)
    Oakland, CA 94607

    “First Fridays” from 5-7PM

    FOR MORE INFORMATION, PLEASE CONTACT:
    Avi Black, ACOE History-Social Science Coordinator
    PH: 510-670-4239
    FAX: 510-670-3239
    Email: ablack@acoe.org




    Monday, March 30, 2009

    UCBH-SSP's Summer Institute Offerings for 2009

    From: UC Berkeley History-Social Science Project [mailto:karen@ucop.ccsend.com] On Behalf Of UC Berkeley History-Social Science Project

    See this information at our website. http://history.berkeley.edu/ucbhssp/institutes

    Dear Friends of the UC Berkeley History-Social Science Project,

    We are excited to announce our Summer Institute offerings for 2009! We are offering an academic literacy institute, a world history history institute, and an American history institute. For more information, flyers, or to register online for any of these institutes, please visit our new website: http://history.berkeley.edu/ucbhssp.

    Please contact us with any questions.

    Best wishes,

    The UCBH-SSP Team


    Building Academic Literacy through History Institute
    An Institute for 4th-12th Grade Teachers
    July 13-17, 2009


    WHAT:
    This is the 8th year we have offered this institute. Each year, through our teachers' classroom inquiries we've added to our understanding, helping all history students be better readers, writers, and thinkers. In this five day institute, we will focus on discipline-specific literacy strategies designed to increase student reading, writing, and critical thinking skills while teaching the California Historical-Social Science Content Standards. Local teachers will lead workshops with classroom-tested model lessons. Teachers will create their own standard-based lesson integrating the literacy strategies learned at the institute. Interdisciplinary teacher cadres are also encouraged to attend this institute.

    COST: $410 before April 30; $450 after April 30

    GROUPS: $400 per teacher, cadre of four or more teachers

    WHERE: This institute will be held on the UC Berkeley campus.

    REGISTER: Register online or by mail. Go to our website: http://history.berkeley.edu/ucbhssp/institutes to register online or download the printable registration form. Teacher cadre groups should mail or fax their registrations together.


    Information and Technology in World History Institute
    An Institute for World History Teachers, Grades 6, 7, & 10; Other Interested Teachers
    July 20-24, 2009


    WHAT:
    We live in an age of globalization characterized in part by rapid developments in technology and information systems. But information and technology have often been powerful forces for historical change. This institute will place our current information and technological revolutions in a world historical perspective through a set of case studies drawn from different cultures and contexts from antiquity to the present day. In examining the effects of information and technology on political, economic, and social development, we will explore several major themes, including writing and print/information technology; science and society; technology and warfare; and empire and the diffusion and consolidation of knowledge. Presented by professors from UC Berkeley's History Department, and organized around the Content Standards for California Public Schools, these case studies will provide a number of useful tools and strategies for teaching information and technology in world history.

    COST: $410 before April 30; $450 after April 30

    GROUPS: $400 per teacher, cadre of four or more teachers

    WHERE: This institute will be held on the UC Berkeley campus.

    REGISTER: Register online or by mail. Go to our website: http://history.berkeley.edu/ucbhssp/institutes to register online or download the printable registration form. Teacher cadre groups should mail or fax their registrations together.


    Teaching American History for All Institute
    An Institute for 5th, 8th, & 11th Grade Teachers of U.S. History/English-Language Arts
    August 10-14, 2009


    WHAT:
    This institute focuses on the theme of Changing Definitions of Citizenship in the U.S. for 5th, 8th, and 11th grade teachers of U.S. History/English-Language Arts. Participants will increase their content knowledge in U.S. History and learn how to incorporate reading, writing, and thinking strategies into standards-based classroom planning. The institute includes daily professor lectures followed by models of teacher-created lessons tying lecture topics into the standards-based citizenship theme and integrating reading and writing strategies in their own curriculum. Teachers will receive standards-based, grade-specific model lessons and develop lessons incorporating academic literacy strategies and primary and secondary sources. Please visit the TAH website for further information: http://tah4all.org.

    COST: $410 before April 30; $450 after April 30

    GROUPS: $400 per teacher, cadre of four or more teachers

    WHERE: This institute will be held in Concord, CA.

    REGISTER: Register online or by mail. Go to our website: http://history.berkeley.edu/ucbhssp/institutes to register online or download the printable registration form. Teacher cadre groups should mail or fax their registrations together.


    Frequently Asked Questions

    What is the registration deadline?

    The registration deadline is May 29, 2009. Teacher cadres and interdisciplinary teachers should register by April 1 so that we may plan our staffing needs accordingly.

    What does my registration fee include?

    The registration fee includes a binder of resources to help you design your standards-based lessons, professor and teacher leader presentations, access to the Berkeley campus library, breakfast, and refreshments. The registration fee does not include lunch, transportation, or parking on the UC Berkeley campus.

    What is the institute schedule?

    The institutes meet from 8:30am to 4:30pm, with one hour for lunch.

    Are there any follow-up meetings or feedback after I implement my lessons?

    We hold two follow-up meetings in the academic year following the institute. They are typically in early November and in late April.

    Can I earn credit for my attendance and work at the institute? What do I have to do?

    Yes! Three "professional level" credits are available from the UC Berkeley Extension School. The cost for the credits is $275.00 and is conferred after the Spring follow-up meeting in 2010. If you enroll for credit, attendance at both follow-up meetings is mandatory.

    UC Berkeley History-Social Science Project

    Donna Leary
    Director
    http://history.berkeley.edu/ucbhssp
    ucbhssp@berkeley.edu
    (510) 643-0897

    Tuesday, February 24, 2009

    Meet the Scholars 2009: Presidents in Times of Economic Challenge

    From: Avi Black (ablack@acoe.org)

    The Alameda County Office of Education, Words That Made America 2 and the Oakland Museum of California

    PRESENT

    Meet the Scholars

    Join us for a series of collegial conversations between teachers and eminent historians around the theme:

    Presidents in Times of Economic Challenge

  • How have national crises shaped the role of the American presidency over time?

  • How have American presidents dealt with challenges facing the nation?

  • How do past crises inform how we understand the role of the presidency today?


  • Session 3: March 6
    CLAYBORNE CARSON
    Professor of History, Stanford University
    Director, Martin Luther King, Jr. Research and Education Institute

    OAH Frederick Jackson Turner Award-winning author of In Struggle: SNCC and the Black Awakening of the 1960s
    Senior advisor for Eyes on the Prize


    PRESIDENT JOHNSON AND DR. KING: THE STRUGGLE FOR WORKERS' RIGHTS


    Registration and Benefits


    All pre-registrants get FREE admission to "First Friday" programming and guaranteed seating to this program.

    *REGISTRATION DEADLINE FOR THIS SESSION: FEBRUARY 27th*

    Please see the attached flyer for details, and use the attached form to register.

    Click here for more details on the entire “Meet the Scholars” series.

    Meet the Scholars sessions are held at:

    THE OAKLAND MUSEUM OF CALIFORNIA
    “First Fridays” from 5-7PM

    FOR MORE INFORMATION, PLEASE CONTACT:
    Avi Black, ACOE History-Social Science Coordinator
    PH: 510-670-4239
    FAX: 510-670-3239
    Email: ablack@acoe.org




    Tuesday, January 27, 2009

    Meet the Scholars 2009: Presidents in Times of Economic Challenge

    From: Avi Black (ablack@acoe.org)

    The Alameda County Office of Education, Words That Made America 2 and the Oakland Museum of California

    PRESENT

    Meet the Scholars

    Join us for a series of collegial conversations between teachers and eminent historians around the theme:

    Presidents in Times of Economic Challenge

  • How have national crises shaped the role of the American presidency over time?

  • How have American presidents dealt with challenges facing the nation?

  • How do past crises inform how we understand the role of the presidency today?


  • REGISTRATION AND BENEFITS


    All pre-registrants get FREE admission to “First Friday” programming and guaranteed seating to this program.

    The first fifteen teachers who pre-register for the entire program will receive:
    - post-session dinner with each scholar (from 7-8:30 PM)
    - a signed copy of one book from each of the scholars

    Use the registration form at the bottom of this announcement!


    Feb 6
    ALAN TAYLOR
    Professor of History, UC Davis

    Pulitzer Prize-winning author, and winner of UC Davis Prize for Undergraduate Teaching and Scholarly Achievement

    ECONOMICS AND THE DECLARATION OF WAR: PRESIDENT JAMES MADISON AND AMERICAN FOREIGN POLICY, 1812


    All pre-registrants get FREE admission to "First Friday" programming and guaranteed seating to this program.

    *REGISTRATION DEADLINE FOR THIS SESSION: JANUARY 30*

    Please see the attached flyer for details, and use the attached form to register.

    Click here for more details on the entire “Meet the Scholars” series.

    Meet the Scholars sessions are held at:

    THE OAKLAND MUSEUM OF CALIFORNIA
    “First Fridays” from 5-7PM

    FOR MORE INFORMATION, PLEASE CONTACT:
    Avi Black, ACOE History-Social Science Coordinator
    PH: 510-670-4239
    FAX: 510-670-3239
    Email: ablack@acoe.org




    American Volunteers in the Spanish Civil War" Workshop Series

    From: Avi Black (ablack@acoe.org)


    Click image to enlarge

    Contact Avi Black, ACOE History-SS Coordinator, for registration information at:
    ablack@acoe.org
    510-670-4239

    Wednesday, December 17, 2008

    Meet the Scholars 2009: Presidents in Times of Economic Challenge

    From: Avi Black (ablack@acoe.org)

    The Alameda County Office of Education, Words That Made America 2 and the Oakland Museum of California

    PRESENT

    Meet the Scholars

    Join us for a series of collegial conversations between teachers and eminent historians around the theme:

    Presidents in Times of Economic Challenge

  • How have national crises shaped the role of the American presidency over time?

  • How have American presidents dealt with challenges facing the nation?

  • How do past crises inform how we understand the role of the presidency today?



  • REGISTRATION AND BENEFITS


    All pre-registrants get FREE admission to “First Friday” programming and guaranteed seating to this program.

    The first fifteen teachers who pre-register for the entire program will receive:
    - post-session dinner with each scholar (from 7-8:30 PM)
    - a signed copy of one book from each of the scholars

    Use the registration form at the bottom of this announcement!



    Spring 2009 Schedule

    Feb 6
    ALAN TAYLOR

    Professor of History, UC Davis
    Pulitzer Prize-winning author, and winner of UC Davis Prize for Undergraduate Teaching and Scholarly Achievement

    March 6
    CLAYBORNE CARSON
    Professor of History, Stanford University

    Director of Martin Luther King, Jr. Research and Education Institute and senior advisor to “Eyes on the Prize

    April 3
    GERALD HENIG
    Professor Emeritus of History, CSU-East Bay

    Author of A Nation Transformed: How the Civil War Changed America Forever and winner of CSU-East Bay Outstanding Professor Award

    May 1
    MARK SUMMERS
    Professor of History, University of Kentucky

    ”…has become the generation’s reigning expert on historical political corruption…” (The Historian)


    Sessions will be held at:

    THE OAKLAND MUSEUM OF CALIFORNIA
    “First Fridays” from 5-7PM

    FOR MORE INFORMATION, PLEASE CONTACT:
    Avi Black, ACOE History-Social Science Coordinator
    PH: 510-670-4239
    FAX: 510-670-3239
    Email: ablack@acoe.org




    Thursday, November 20, 2008

    Online Workshops from the National Humanities Center

    National Humanities Center

    Online Resource Workshops
    for High School Teachers of
    U.S. History and American Literature
    Spring 2009


    Want to learn more about teaching primary documents in U.S. history classes?

    Want to explore thematic connections between American literature and U.S. history?

    Want to bring art into your history or literature lessons?

    Sign up for a live, online resource workshop from the National Humanities Center.

    The Center's online resource workshops give high school teachers of U.S. history and American literature a deeper understanding of their subject matter. They introduce teachers to fresh texts and critical perspectives and help teachers integrate them into their lessons. Led by distinguished scholars and running sixty to ninety minutes, they are conducted through lecture and discussion using conferencing software.

    A resource workshop identifies central themes within a topic and explores ways to teach them through the close analysis of primary texts, including works of art, and the use of discussion questions. Texts are drawn from anthologies in the Center's Toolbox Library. To participate, all you need is a computer with an internet connection, a speaker, and a microphone.

    Enrollment in each workshop is limited to eighteen participants.

    Ten to thirty-five pages of reading
    $35 registration fee (The registration fee may be paid by a school, district, professional development consortium, Teaching American History project, or other organization.)

    The National Humanities Center will supply documentation for certificate renewal credit (including technology CEUs).

    For information about group participation, contact Richard R. Schramm, Vice President for Education Programs, National Humanities Center, at rschramm@nationalhumanitiescenter.org.


    SCHEDULE

    Jacob Riis and Progressive Reform

    In what ways is Jacob Riis's How the Other Half Lives a document of progressive reform?
    What does How the Other Half Lives tell us about urbanization and immigration?
    How does Riis use photography in How the Other Half Lives?

    Leader:
    Joy Kasson
    National Humanities Center Fellow
    Professor of American Studies, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

    Date and Time: January 8, 2009; 6 p.m. (EST)

    Registration Deadline: December 12, 2008 » Register now


    Industrialization and Progressivism

    What constituted progress during the Progressive era?
    How did Americans define the "old" and "new," "backward" and "progressive" during this period?
    How did economic and industrial ideas and methods influence other areas of American life during the Progressive era?

    Leader:
    Henry Binford
    National Humanities Center Fellow
    Associate Professor of History, Northwestern University

    Date and Time: January 22, 2009; 6 p.m. (EST)

    Registration Deadline: January 5, 2009 » Register now


    Community in African American Culture: 1917-1968

    How was African American community constructed during this period?
    Under what circumstances was it created?
    How did evolving concepts of community affect and reflect notions of African American identity?

    Leader:
    Stephanie Shaw
    National Humanities Center Fellow
    Professor of History, Ohio State University

    Date and Time: February 12, 2009; 6 p.m. (EST)

    Registration Deadline: January 16, 2009 » Register now


    What It Meant to Be Enslaved

    What did it mean to be enslaved in the United States?
    How did the enslaved respond to bondage?
    How did labor shape their daily lives?
    In what ways did the enslaved resist bondage?
    How did the enslaved maintain their identities?

    Leader:
    Daina Berry
    National Humanities Center Fellow
    Professor of History, Michigan State University

    Date and Time: February 19, 2009; 6 p.m. (EST)

    Registration Deadline: January 23, 2009 » Register now


    Teaching African American History with WPA Slave Narratives

    What do recollections of formerly enslaved people, gathered by the Works Progress Administration in the 1930s, tell us about slavery in America?
    What interpretative challenges do the WPA slave narratives pose?
    How can the WPA slave narratives be used with students?

    Leader:
    Marianne Wason
    Assistant Director, Education Programs
    National Humanities Center

    Date and Time: February 26, 2009; 6 p.m. (EST)

    Registration Deadline: February 6, 2009 » Register now


    Civil War Home Fronts

    How did the total mobilizations of the Civil War affect the northern and southern home fronts?
    What was life like for women on the northern and southern home fronts?
    What was life like for African Americans on the northern and southern home fronts?

    Leader:
    W. Fitzhugh Brundage
    National Humanities Center Fellow
    Umstead Professor of History, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

    Date and Time: March 12, 2009; 6 p.m. (EST)

    Registration Deadline: February 20, 2009 » Register now


    Life on an Antebellum Plantation

    How did the self-contained environment of a plantation--its layout, buildings, isolation, and use of the land--influence the lives and self-image of the enslaved?
    What made a plantation "home?" What made a plantation "hell"?
    How did a slave reconcile "home" and "hell"?
    What can plantation photographs tell us about plantation life?

    Leader:
    John Vlach
    Professor of American Studies, George Washington University

    Date and Time: March 26, 2009; 6 p.m. (EST)

    Registration Deadline: March 6, 2009 » Register now


    Native American and European Power Rivalries in North America: 1690-1763

    By 1690 what factors and issues dominated European-Native American relationships throughout North America?
    How had these relationships changed by the end of the British imperial wars in 1763?
    How did these changes influence British America on the eve of the Revolution?
    How did these changes influence Native American culture and politics?

    Leader:
    Alan Taylor
    National Humanities Center Fellow
    Professor of History, University of California, Davis

    Date and Time: April 7, 2009; 6 p.m. (EST)

    Registration Deadline: March 20, 2009 » Register now


    Art and American Identity: 1690-1789

    In 1690, to what extent were the arts and material culture of the British Atlantic colonies "American"? To what extent were they "American" by 1789?
    What major factors defined the evolution in American arts and material culture in this period?
    To what extent did this evolution reflect the changing self-image of Americans?
    Leader:
    Maurie McInnis
    Professor of Art History, University of Virginia

    Date and Time: April 23, 2009; 6 p.m. (EST)

    Registration Deadline: April 3, 2009 Register now

    Thursday, October 23, 2008

    Abraham Lincoln Brigade Archives (ALBA) Event - San Francisco

    From: Carroll Ferrary [mailto:retap1@stanford.edu]



    Join us for our November 1st San Francisco event

    La Despedida
    70th anniversary celebration commemorating the U.S. volunteers’ departure from Spain.
    Seventy years ago the free people of Spain gave their hearts in farewell to the International Brigades—volunteers from many nations who came to defend the Republic. La Despedida or farewell—a spontaneous eruption of love and grief on the streets of Barcelona on October 28, 1938—was the last hope of the Spanish Republic to gain support from the western democracies. Within months the Republic fell to Franco, assisted by Mussolini and Hitler in what is nowwidely seen as the opening salvo of World War II.

    This anniversary will be celebrated across Spain as part of a national effort to reassess a long suppressed history.

    Our San Francisco event will include:
    Newly discovered film footage of this historic event
    Dramatic readings of eyewitness accounts by members of the Abraham Lincoln Brigade
    Songs and greetings from Spain
    Time: 2pm
    Location: Delancey Street Screening Room, 600 Embarcadero
    Tickets: $25
    Online tickets are available: click here.

    This event is hosted by the Abraham Lincoln Brigade Archives (ALBA), a non-profit educational organization dedicated to promoting public awareness, research, and discussion about the Spanish Civil War and the American volunteers who risked their lives to fight fascism in Spain.

    ALBA thanks Casal del Nord de California, a non-profit organization that promotes Catalan culture and maintains links between California and Catalonia, for their support.

    Wednesday, October 8, 2008

    "Benjamin Franklin and the Invention of America" at Humanities West

    From: Patricia Lundberg [mailto:patti@humanitieswest.org]

    “BENJAMIN FRANKLIN AND THE INVENTION OF AMERICA” on October 17 and 18, 2008
    http://www.humanitieswest.org/currentBen.html

    This fabulous program is now open to teachers AND their students across Alameda County!!


    Humanities West is pleased to offer special programming and discounts to U.S. History teachers and students at the Herbst Theatre in San Francisco, 401 Van Ness at McAllister.

    · Reduced admission for all teachers and students

    · $100 stipend for teachers who bring 5 or more students and co-lead discussion group

    · Exclusive session before Saturday program and during lunch, including a discussion with CSU East Bay historian Dee Andrews and UCLA historian Gary Nash

    · Free lunch on Saturday

    See the attachment for details.


    Patricia Lundberg, PhD
    Executive Director, Humanities West
    P O Box 546
    San Francisco, CA 94104
    Direct line: 415 994 5929 (cell)
    www.humanitieswest.org

    Resources for Teaching U.S. History

    From: [mailto:mail-service@tappedin.org]

    The Constitution, U.S. government, international relations, nations of the world, pivotal moments in U.S. history, early childhood education, calculator-controlled robots, and polar sciences are among the topics of new resources at FREE, the website that makes teaching resources from federal agencies easier to find:
    http://www.free.ed.gov/

    =======
    History
    =======

    Country Background Notes
    provides factual descriptions of the world's independent states, from Afghanistan to Zimbabwe. Learn about the people, history, government, political conditions, economy, geography, and foreign relations of China, Georgia, Pakistan, Russia, and some 200 other nations and areas of special sovereignty.
    Descriptions are regularly updated. (Department of State)
    http://www.free.ed.gov/resource.cfm?resource_id=2069

    Educational Resources
    features lesson plans that invite students to examine George Washington's annotated copy of an early draft of the Constitution, compare Thomas Jefferson's original draft of the Declaration of Independence to the final document, determine which of 12 amendments they would ratify to produce a Bill of Rights, identify techniques Jefferson used in a letter persuading Congress to purchase his library, and investigate Waldseemuller's 1507 map (the first to use the label "America"). (Library of Congress)
    http://www.free.ed.gov/resource.cfm?resource_id=2068

    Historians on America
    looks at 11 developments that altered the course of U.S.
    history: the trial of John Peter Zenger and the birth of freedom of the press, the Constitutional Convention (1787), George Washington's concept of a limited Presidency, the Common School movement, the Sherman Anti-Trust Act of 1890, the Interstate Highway System (1939-1991), the GI Bill of Rights, the Marshall Plan, Brown v. Board of Education, Gideon v. Wainwright, and the Immigration Act of 1965. (Department of State)
    http://www.free.ed.gov/resource.cfm?resource_id=2067

    How the United States Is Governed
    examines federal, state, and local governments in the U.S.
    Elections and the electoral process, nongovernmental organizations and institutions that influence public policy, and how the U.S. system of government is similar to (and different from) other forms of democratic government are also described. (Department of State)
    http://www.free.ed.gov/resource.cfm?resource_id=2062

    U.S. Institute of Peace: Publications
    features analyses and policy recommendations on current international affairs issues, particularly on the prevention and resolution of conflict. Recent publications focus on Iran's internal politics and influence in the Middle East, Iraq's Interior Ministry, civilian casualties in Afghanistan, democracy in Egypt, why we should still study the Cuban Missile Crisis, the conflict in the Niger Delta, Bosnia and the EU, peace prospects in Lebanon, and more. (U.S. Institute of Peace)
    http://www.free.ed.gov/resource.cfm?resource_id=2066
    Forwarded from EdInfo
    by BJ Berquist
    bjb@tappedin.org

    Great Resources

    From: Jack Bareilles [mailto:jbareilles@nohum.k12.ca.us]

    Folks,

    Here are a number of things for your use. As always, please share them as you see fit.

    Special thanks go to Gary Dei Rossi from San Joaquin COE for a number of these items.

    Jack Bareilles

    1) I Have a Dream Speech

    2) LBJ and Civil Rights

    3) Federal Curriculum Resources




    1. "I Have a Dream" speech.


    Audio of the speech can be found at: http://www.americanrhetoric.com/speeches/mlkihaveadream.htm


    Video can be found at: http://www.mlkonline.net/video.html


    FYI: The full speech is less than 18 minutes long.


    _____________________________________________________________________________________

    2. LBJ and Civil Rights

    Speaking of Civil Rights, Lyndon Johnson's 100th Birthday recently passed. There is a tremendous article by Robert Caro, the author of the Pulitzer Prize winning book on Robert Moses (the guy who built much of modern New York). Caro is working on the final volume of his biography of LBJ and has a superb column in the NY Times about LBJ and the speech he gave to Congress in the wake of the beating of the marchers on the Edmund Pettis Bridge in Selma, Alabama. It will take about five minutes to read--but is more for you than the kids.

    The article can be found at: http://www.nytimes.com/2008/08/28/opinion/28caro.html?_r=2&th=&oref=slogin&emc=th&pagewanted=all


    I've also attached the article as a Word document.

    _____________________________________________________________________________________

    3. Free.ed.gov

    Here is the Federal Gov't's webpage with all kinds of free online resources: http://www.free.ed.gov/

    Picturing America Grant: October 31 Deadline!

    From: Jack Bareilles [mailto:jbareilles@nohum.k12.ca.us]
    Folks,

    This is free and available. I think their goal is to put it in every school in the country--so your odds of getting it are pretty good!

    Here is the website and below is information about the application. Picturing America

    Jack

    Please apply by the October 31 deadline. I just looked at the application process and is shouldn't take more than five or ten minutes.


    About Picturing America FAQ

    "American Lives": Historical Portrayals Coming to California!

    From: Darci Tucker [mailto:darci@americanlives.net]

    Hello, my friends!

    It’s that time of year, and attached you will find the latest information about my programs. I’ll be in CA for several months in the spring, and the attached form has specifics about when I’ll be in each area. I’ve already got a number of bookings, and in past years I haven’t been able to accommodate everyone, so if you’re interested, jump quickly!

    If you are interested in having me visit, please fill out the attached form and email or snail mail it back to me by October 10. If you have already contacted me, please go ahead and fill out the attached form so that I’ll know what dates are good/bad for you.

    While “Revolutionary Women” is my standard program, I have others in which you may be interested, so please check my website: www.americanlives.net.

    ALSO: I may have the opportunity to do some electronic outreach this fall, portraying characters other than those in “Revolutionary Women,” and perhaps doing storytelling and/or teacher workshops. If you’re interested, let me know and I’ll send you more information.

    Thanks, and I hope to see you soon!

    New Issue of History Now: Theodore Roosevelt and the Progressive Era

    From: Gilder Lehrman Institute [mailto:gli@gilderlehrman.org]

    Issue 17, September 2008: Theodore Roosevelt and the Progressive Era

    The Institute is pleased to present the seventeenth issue of History Now, a quarterly online journal for history teachers and students, available at www.historynow.org.

    In this issue of History Now, leading scholars of Theodore Roosevelt and of the Progressive Era offer new insights into the man, his philosophy, and his political achievements. From hunter to teddy bear, from trust-buster to champion of capitalism, from Republican president to Bull Moose challenger, T.R. remains controversial, contradictory, and above all, larger than life. Our contributors suggest the rich possibilities for exploring the man and the era in the classroom.

    Friday, October 3, 2008

    History Project: Saturday Seminars for History Teachers

    From: Pamela Tindall [mailto:ptindall@ucdavis.edu]

    Dear Friends of the History Project at UCD,

    Our Saturday Seminars are back by popular demand!

    Join us on October 11 for “Local History, American History,” the first in this year’s series. Historian Louis Warren and three practicing teachers will explore local connections to the national narrative. The content of Dr. Warren’s talk and the model lessons will be particularly useful for 4th, 5th, and 8th-grade teachers and of interest for all other history lovers and teachers.


    Dates & Details

    Where: Sutter Square Galleria, 2901 K Street in Sacramento

    When: Saturday, October 11, 2008. Registration, continental breakfast, and networking from 8:30-9:00 am; Lessons to noon

    Tuition:$45 for this workshop alone; $250 to attend all 6 seminars.


    Click here to view the flier or here to register for this event.

    Please forward this to your friends and colleagues. Hope to see you there!

    Cheers,

    Pam

    Pamela Tindall, Director

    The History Project at UC Davis

    One Shields Avenue, 653 Kerr Hall, Davis, CA 95616

    phone: 530.752.4286 mobile: 916.837.9781

    Wednesday, September 24, 2008

    Teaching American History in a Global Context

    From: Carl Guarneri [mailto:cguarner@stmarys-ca.edu]

    Hi Avi,

    Hope the start of the academic year finds you well. I'm attaching information about a teachers' resource book I've just published that combines conceptual pieces, topical essays, syllabi, and lesson plans.

    See you at the CWHA!

    Carl

    Teaching American History Flyer.doc

    Guarneri Order Form.doc

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