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Arnow, Pat, Ed. – Now and Then, 1987
This journal issue focuses on Appalachian veterans and on the premise that Appalachians and Americans in general are still fighting the battles and dealing with the psychic aftermath of the Civil War and all wars fought since then. One article notes that Appalachian soldiers were 20 to 25% more likely to be killed in Vietnam than other soldiers.…
Descriptors: Biographies, Essays, Geographic Regions, Personal Narratives
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Galpin, Charles Josiah – Rural Sociology, 1985
Shortened version of Galpin's reminiscences published in 1936 recounts early days of rural sociology research and his subsequent service in the United States Department of Agriculture's Office of Farm Management. (LFL)
Descriptors: Government Role, History, Intellectual Disciplines, Personal Narratives
Hauptman, Laurence M. – Northeast Indian Quarterly, 1988
Uses excerpts from letters and personal narratives to present the experiences of Iroquois soldiers in the Civil War. Describes initial U.S. resistance to Indian enlistment, Iroquois eagerness to enlist, heroic deeds, and conditions of starvation, filth, and disease in Confederate prisons. (SV)
Descriptors: American Indian History, American Indians, Civil War (United States), Experience
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Turner, Joy; And Others – Montessori Life, 1995
Twenty-five members of the Montessori community share their memories of Dr. Nancy McCormick Rambusch, charismatic founder of the American Montessori movement, early childhood professional, and innovative educator, who died of pancreatic cancer on October 27, 1994. Rambusch's work of 40 years now flowers as an institutionalized educational program…
Descriptors: Change Agents, Early Childhood Education, Educational Change, Educational Innovation
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Sarris, Greg – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 1992
An American Indian professor discusses his concerns, contradictions inherent in his insider/outsider position, and the nature of cross-cultural discourse related to his family's participation at a university showing of an ethnographic documentary about the last Bole Maru leader ("Dreamer") of the Kashaya Pomo (a deceased family member).…
Descriptors: American Indian Culture, Confidentiality, Cultural Education, Ethnic Relations
Harmon, Gwen Haley – Echoes: The Northern Maine Journal, 1993
The author reminisces about rural life and attending a one-room school in Maine during the 1920s. She recalls walking to school on cold winter days with her older siblings, the games they played, and a typical school day in which one teacher taught 30 children in 8 different grades. (LP)
Descriptors: Educational Experience, Educational History, Local History, One Teacher Schools
Roy, Loriene – 1996
This document is a portrait, scripted in a four-part reader's theater format, of the educational experiences and early professional work of librarians who emerged from formalized library education programs at the University of Illinois and the University of Texas in the years between 1897 and 1913. The script was derived from student journals and…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Employment Experience, Higher Education, Librarians
Kernan, Alvin – 1999
Alvin Kernan's personal memoir traces life in elitist American universities from post-World War II to the 1990's by recounting his life and career as a student, faculty member, and administrator at Columbia University (New York), Yale University (Connecticut), and Princeton University (New Jersey). The book describes what is was like to be at…
Descriptors: Access to Education, Administrator Attitudes, College Administration, Educational History
Lucas, Alice, Ed. – 1991
"Twelve Years a Slave" is a script intended to go with accompanying audio cassettes. It was developed for Voices of Liberty (a project of New Faces of Liberty) and was produced by the San Francisco Study Center as one of their "Cutting Edge Curriculum Materials." The story told by the script is excerpted from the 1989 edition…
Descriptors: Autobiographies, Black History, Black Studies, Males
Malden, Cynthia L. – 1993
Through the narratives of North American slaves a vivid picture of their lives, struggles, hopes, and aspirations emerges. The slave narrative arose as a response to, and a refutation of, claims that blacks could not write. Slave writings were often direct extensions of speech. Through a process of imitation and repetition, the black slave's…
Descriptors: Autobiographies, Blacks, Higher Education, Individual Development
Weidner, Heidemarie Z. – 1994
The diary of Lydia Short indicates that college study at Butler University provided somewhat more positive experiences for women than scholars such as Jill Conway, Ronald W. Hogeland, and LeeAnna Lawrence found in other coeducational institutions where women still occupied their prescribed roles. The second woman to graduate from Butler University…
Descriptors: Coeducation, College Curriculum, Diaries, Educational History
Jeanneret, Marsh – 1989
This book by the director of the University of Toronto Press, reviews the last 50 years in the history of university publishing (with emphasis on Toronto) and expresses concern about the accelerating trend by university presses to offset the cost of producing learned books and journals by profits from a simultaneous program of commercial…
Descriptors: Economic Factors, Higher Education, History, Opinions
Staton, Jana; Peyton, Joy Kreeft – 1986
The use of dialogue journals as a means of communication between students and teachers originated as a teacher-developed classroom practice rather than a research idea or theory-derived technique. It began in 1964 when a California teacher, Leslee Reed, became fascinated with the comments about learning that she solicited from her students, and…
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, Diaries, Educational History, Interpersonal Communication
Oliver, Paula Popow – 1999
This family history recounts the life and personal experiences of Marianne Wahnschaff Ballester who was born in the United States in 1929 to German parents. Marianne and her mother spent the World War II years in Stassfurt, Germany, and returned to the United States in 1946. The overview of her life includes a reunion with her father, attendance…
Descriptors: European History, Family History, Family Mobility, Foreign Countries
Oliver, Paula Popow – 1996
This booklet features an interview conducted with Hermine Kromnik (b. 1915) and also includes acknowledgments, her family photographs, genealogy, maps, and references (n=15). The interview in the booklet is a personal testimony of Hermine's survival and the results of living in Eastern Europe during World Wars I and II. Hermine's desire was to…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Genealogy, Interviews, Oral History
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