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Christine Woyshner – Theory and Research in Social Education, 2024
Historians of social studies and race have focused overwhelmingly on formal educational settings, textbooks, and curriculum, thereby overlooking the informal educational spaces valued by African Americans. This study examines civic education in informal settings by considering the educational programs of Black voluntary organizations. Hundreds of…
Descriptors: Civics, Citizenship Education, African American History, United States History
Alex Hidalgo – History Teacher, 2024
In the early modern era, Spanish missionaries, cosmographers, chroniclers, and physicians wrote major studies on botany, ethnography, navigation, Indigenous languages, war, and history, aided by capable, though often reluctant, Indigenous informants. They penned this rich body of scholarship using iron gall ink -- a mixture of tannins, sulfates,…
Descriptors: History Instruction, Experiential Learning, Assignments, Undergraduate Students
Brittany L. Jones – Multicultural Perspectives, 2024
In recent years, under the guise of anti-CRT legislation, politicians nationwide have attempted, and at times succeeded, in prohibiting the teaching of race and racism in PK-12 public schools. Although these laws target a theory not taught in elementary and secondary schools, too often the voices and feelings of caregivers from marginalized…
Descriptors: African American Students, African Americans, Caregivers, Caregiver Attitudes
Paul Gregor – ProQuest LLC, 2024
Disabled individuals in Western history have encountered barriers, both physical and attitudinal, that limit their potential in society. These barriers are both constructed intentionally and unintentionally, according to disability studies. They have been unintentionally built as the disabled have been specifically excluded, making the need for…
Descriptors: Educational History, United States History, Higher Education, Access to Education
Black, Derek W. – Phi Delta Kappan, 2021
In a time when both American democracy and U.S. public schools appear to be in crisis, Derek Black argues that the best way forward is to look to the past at the ideals that the founding fathers espoused in the early years of the nation. Although early U.S. leaders placed a priority on expanding public education, Black explains that these ideals…
Descriptors: Democracy, Democratic Values, United States History, Public Education
Barczak, Timothy J.; Thompson, Winston C. – Journal of Philosophy of Education, 2021
This article provides a definition of monuments and describes their potential for removalist and preservationist controversy. The authors focus on the example of Confederate monuments in the United States as, on the basis of racist impacts, these monuments are candidates for widespread removal. The authors review influential existing philosophical…
Descriptors: Civics, United States History, Historic Sites, Slavery
Randall, David; Frohnen, Bruce P.; Gutzman, Kevin R. C.; Ross, Jason; Shlaes, Amity; Pettinger, William – National Association of Scholars, 2021
The study in this report focuses on four historical periods and five textbooks. The four historical periods are: (1) The European Settlement of North America (1492-1660); (2) Colonial America (1660-1763); (3) The Nation's Founding (1763-1789); and (4) The New Deal (1933-1940). Three of the 5 textbooks are intended for regular high school American…
Descriptors: United States History, Textbooks, History Instruction, High Schools
Teitelbaum, Kenneth – Phi Delta Kappan, 2022
Recent discussions about critical race theory (CRT) have exposed, once again, the heated disagreements that prevail in the United States regarding the nature of its racial past and present. This debate is highly significant in itself, but the dispute is also noteworthy for revealing how quickly a contentious issue can become a lightning rod for…
Descriptors: Critical Theory, Race, Curriculum, Course Content
Pogue, Neall – Journal of Educational Media, Memory and Society, 2022
This article explores the historical narrative developed by the two most popular Christian school publishers (A Beka Book and Bob Jones University Press) at their founding in the mid-1970s. Specifically, they promoted the idea that it was exclusively white Anglo-American men who heroically created the United States by separating order from chaos.…
Descriptors: Christianity, Religious Schools, Publishing Industry, Whites
Marcus, Kenneth H.; Hall, Jon – History Teacher, 2022
Art can be of great benefit for students to learn about history. This article presents results of a three-year research project at the university level on the use of specific examples from the arts for a variety of courses in U.S. and European history as well as a course on history methods. All the examples used consisted of images (painting and…
Descriptors: History Instruction, Art Education, College Students, United States History
An, Sohyun – Social Studies, 2022
Using critical refugee studies as a theoretical lens, I analyzed Southeast Asian refugee children's literature to identify its pedagogical values and limitations for critical teaching about the Vietnam War. The findings suggest the children's literature can help challenge the dominant narratives of the Vietnam War as exclusively an American…
Descriptors: Asians, Refugees, Childrens Literature, Foreign Countries
Lakisha Howell – ProQuest LLC, 2022
This ethnohistorical study returns to a historical site of Black education, The Mississippi Freedom Schools (MFS) of 1964, to excavate conceptions of teacher education and Black education held by the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) a predominantly Black social movement organization. The MFS served as an alternative site of…
Descriptors: African American Education, Teacher Education, Attitudes, Schools
Espinosa-Dulanto, Miryam; Calderon-Berumen, Freyca – Journal of Curriculum and Pedagogy, 2020
I/We are immigrants in the United States, passionately engaged in a decolonizing project, working with "testimonios encargados." I/We respectfully chose to share them as POC epistemologies to correct its omission in most history and presence of millions of residents of this land. Based on this sharing, we also subvert the Western…
Descriptors: Immigrants, Personal Narratives, Aesthetics, Epistemology
Beck, Bernard – Multicultural Perspectives, 2020
The disruption of ordinary life by a deadly pandemic, an outrageous display of police violence, and a tumbling economy have left Americans isolated, frozen, and terrified. For many, the television screen has become the only contact with the outside world and the only source of entertainment. In recent years, cable television networks have drawn…
Descriptors: Mass Media, Television, Diversity, Jews
Beck, Bernard – Multicultural Perspectives, 2020
Two current biopic movies, "Harriet" and "The Irishman," present the life stories of real people who have been involved with slavery and organized crime. These images contradict the virtuous image of America that is fundamental to our sense of national identity and patriotism. Could this contradiction lead to oppositional…
Descriptors: Films, Biographies, Slavery, Crime