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Showing 1 to 15 of 16 results Save | Export
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Golston, Syd – Social Education, 2010
The Federal Writers' Project was an arm of the Works Progress Administration (WPA), Franklin Delano Roosevelt's massive program to put the unemployed back to work. The Writers' Project was charged with producing an extensive guidebook for each of the 48 states; and more than 6,000 local newspaper writers, novelists, poets, college professors, and…
Descriptors: United States History, Economic Climate, Structural Unemployment, Authors
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Reich, Justin; Daccord, Thomas – Social Education, 2009
Used wisely, academic technology empowers students to take responsibility for their own learning. "In Leonardo's Laptop," Ben Shneiderman provides teachers with a powerful framework, "Collect-Relate-Create-Donate" (CRCD), for designing student-centered learning opportunities using computers. Shneiderman developed his model by…
Descriptors: Technology Uses in Education, Alignment (Education), United States History, Learner Engagement
O'Connor, Thomas H. – New England Social Studies Bulletin, 1982
Describes how the textile mills established in Lowell, Massachusetts, during the 1820s served as showplaces for American industrial progress and reformist social values. Their utopian purpose was to demonstrate that good working conditions could reinforce desirable moral values in the mill workers. (AM)
Descriptors: Industrialization, Moral Values, Secondary Education, Social History
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Mixon, Franklin G., Jr. – Journal of Economic Education, 2000
Provides background information on the Salem Witch Trials (Salem, Massachusetts) and the medical explanation of the young village girls' behavior in Salem called ergotism (bread poisoning). Presents an economic interpretation of those trials, stating that the ministers employed religious beliefs about witchcraft to maintain their churchs' monopoly…
Descriptors: Church Role, Churches, Diseases, Economic Factors
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O'Connell, Peter S.; Lavin, Patricia A. – Social Education, 1986
Describes a project, developed for elementary children, which compares childhood in 19th and 20th century New England. Study begins with patterns and characteristics of contemporary childhood, and proceeds to children taking roles as members of real families from the 1820s in Sturbridge, Massachusetts. Use of the living museum, Old Sturbridge…
Descriptors: Children, Cultural Education, Curriculum Enrichment, Elementary Education
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Rosenthal, Bernard – OAH Magazine of History, 2003
Presents information related to the attempts on discovering the true identity of Tituba. Focuses on theories presented about her identity and her role in the Salem (Massachusetts) witchcraft trials. Discusses the images of Tituba portrayed in literature and U.S. history. (CMK)
Descriptors: Biographies, Higher Education, Historical Interpretation, Historiography
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Bennett, Paul W. – History and Social Science Teacher, 1990
Discusses the Salem witchcraft trials as a reflection of the social and moral values of colonial Massachusetts and New France. Traces the history of the trials. Describes other instances of witchcraft and folk superstitions during that same historical period. Provides primary sources of a picture, map, and excerpts from letters pertaining to the…
Descriptors: Folk Culture, History Instruction, Maps, Moral Values
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Mulligan, William H., Jr. – Journal of Family Issues, 1980
This historical study of divorce practice has only recently begun. Using Worcester County, Massachusetts as a test case, a preliminary hypothesis that explains the increasing frequency of divorce in terms of basic changes of American life, particularly the increased economic independence of women brought about by industrialization, is presented.…
Descriptors: Divorce, Employed Women, Family Life, Industrialization
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Breslaw, Elaine – OAH Magazine of History, 2003
Presents a lesson plan that focuses on witchcraft in the Atlantic world. Describes each of the four sections of the lesson that encompasses learning about terms and religious views on witchcraft to the history of witchcraft in New England, in the United States, and the Salem (Massachusetts) witchcraft trials. (CMK)
Descriptors: Cultural Awareness, Educational Strategies, History Instruction, National Standards
Kaestle, Carl F.; Vinovskis, Maris A. – 1976
Focusing on Massachusetts as a case study, this research relates 19th century schooling patterns to social change. Indices of social change included schooling differences in rural and urban areas, industrial and economic development, school community relationship, and family life. The document contains 10 chapters; each chapter is based on both…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Data Analysis, Early Childhood Education, Educational Environment
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Banit, Thomas F. – New England Journal of History, 1994
Contends that, although the topic of sports and leisure seems suited for study primarily at the national level, local communities can be rich sources of information. Describes the role of sports history within the overall work of the Needham (Massachusetts) Historical Society. (CFR)
Descriptors: Athletics, Community Resources, Cultural Context, Elementary Secondary Education
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Nutting, P. Bradley – New England Journal of History, 1994
Contends that what a society does publicly to entertain itself reveals shared values. Maintains that public entertainment in Worcester (Massachusetts) prior to the War of 1812 was limited largely to Sundays, court days, and the Fourth of July. Describes changes in entertainment and social values after the War of 1812. (CFR)
Descriptors: Cultural Context, Elementary Secondary Education, Group Behavior, History Instruction
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Stearns, Liza – OAH Magazine of History, 1997
Presents a lesson plan using material from a primary source-based curriculum kit titled "The World of Barilla Taylor." The kit uses personal letters, maps, hospital and work records, and other primary sources to document the life of a young woman working in the textile mills in 19th-century Massachusetts. (MJP)
Descriptors: Consciousness Raising, Educational Resources, Elementary Secondary Education, Employed Women
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Smith, Rick; O'Connell, Peter – OAH Magazine of History, 1997
Profiles activities and exhibits at the Tsongas Industrial History Center and Lowell National Historical Park. Follows a group of students as they participate in a situation simulating 19th-century working conditions and subsequent union organizing. Includes two documents from a resource kit illustrating worker's lives. (MJP)
Descriptors: Exhibits, Experiential Learning, Extracurricular Activities, Field Instruction
Louie, Josephine – Civil Rights Project at Harvard University, 2005
Racial discrimination is an ongoing reality in the lives of African Americans and Hispanics in Metro Boston. Although the region has experienced significant growth in racial and ethnic diversity over the past several decades, racial minority groups continue to struggle for full acceptance and equal opportunity. African Americans and Hispanics…
Descriptors: African Americans, Neighborhoods, Racial Segregation, Metropolitan Areas
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