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Showing 1 to 15 of 43 results Save | Export
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Garry, Josh – Teaching History, 2021
Josh Garry describes his effort to refresh his approach to teaching the British transatlantic slave trade. Drawing on reading, lectures and discussions during an Historical Association Teacher Fellowship programme, Garry built a sequence of lessons designed to contextualise the trade while showing African agency and complexity. The result was a…
Descriptors: African Culture, Foreign Countries, History Instruction, Fellowships
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Davies, Nathanael – Teaching History, 2020
Nathanael Davies explains his radical rethink of how to teach transatlantic slavery. He explains how he came to question his earlier approach of focusing on the causation of 'abolition' and 'emancipation' and, instead, allowed scholarship, sources and his own students' meaning-making to guide him to a different, and much more profound, analytic…
Descriptors: History Instruction, Slavery, Teaching Methods, Foreign Countries
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Peck-Bartle, Shannon Marie – Social Studies, 2020
World history curriculum continues to be plagued by Eurocentric narratives and perspectives eliminating local and community agency in Caribbean history. Textbooks and curriculum standards exclude much of Caribbean history and marginalize the influence and contributions of the African Diaspora. Oftentimes, Caribbean achievements are attributed to…
Descriptors: World History, History Instruction, Blacks, Foreign Countries
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Apps, Kerry – Teaching History, 2019
Readers of this journal will be familiar with a number of ways of approaching the Tudors. Kerry Apps provides here an article detailing her concerns about the differences between what she had been delivering at Key Stage 3 and the broader, connected experience she had as an undergraduate historian. How could she show her students that the world of…
Descriptors: History Instruction, Teaching Methods, Historians, Undergraduate Students
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Card, Jane – Teaching History, 2015
Drawing on her wealth of experience and expertise in using visual sources in the classroom, in this article Jane Card explores how a single painting, a portrait of Dido Elizabeth Belle Lindsay and her cousin Lady Elizabeth Murray, might form the basis for a sequence of lessons. Arguing that although highly accessible, images are not…
Descriptors: Painting (Visual Arts), Portraiture, History Instruction, Primary Sources
Mohamud, Abdul; Whitburn, Robin – Trentham Books, 2016
"Doing Justice to History" challenges everyday racism in society and offers counter-stories to the singular narratives that still prevail among national historians and in school curricula. It will be a key resource for the annual Black History Month in both the UK and the US. But the book's key purpose is to argue for deeper and…
Descriptors: Secondary Education, History Instruction, Racial Bias, Curriculum
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Whitburn, Robin; Yemoh, Sharon – Teaching History, 2012
Robin Whitburn and Sharon Yemoh describe the design of a school-generated GCSE course on the challenges that British people faced in forging a multicultural society in post-imperial Britain. Drawing on their own research into their students' experience, they build a discipline-based case for teaching about socio-political communal struggles…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, African American History, Civil Rights, History Instruction
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Yoder, Amarou – McGill Journal of Education, 2013
Members of a large, cross-Canada research project on using Canadian social justice literature in the classroom share strategies that teachers are using to teach some of these texts. Strategies range from multi-media projects to song adaptations. Texts and strategies suitable for different grade-levels are represented, and cover a range of…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Social Justice, Teaching Methods, Educational Strategies
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Dash, Paul – International Journal of Art & Design Education, 2007
This article looks at the concept of Black History Month and its implications for teaching and learning in art and design education. It argues that the concept of Black History Month should be discarded because it tends to promote a separatist notion of culture and that it deflects from an understanding of culture as a plural and intermeshing…
Descriptors: Young Adults, History Instruction, Curriculum Development, Art Education
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Gates, Henry Louis, Jr. – Social Education, 1992
Discusses the problem of ethnocentrism in the educational system of the United States. Suggests that knowledge needs to be redefined to reflect a multicultural view of the world rather than reflecting an "us against them" outlook. Argues that the humanities need to be decentered so that minority students are not alienated. (DK)
Descriptors: Blacks, Citizenship Education, Cultural Awareness, Cultural Differences
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Dimitriadis, Greg – Theory and Research in Social Education, 2000
Looks at how young people use historical knowledge, gained from media sources, to deal with current situations. A group of young African Americans draw on behavioral examples from the film, "Panther," instead of school-based learning, to give them ways to deal with the Ku Klux Klan in their neighborhood. (DAJ)
Descriptors: Adolescents, Blacks, Educational Research, Films
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Corbett, Katharine T.; Seematter, Mary E. – OAH Magazine of History, 1989
Describes the creation of Black history programing at the Missouri Historical Society. Delineates the historical resources utilized for the exhibit, stressing that there is a paucity of materials available in St. Louis on the Black experience. Reports on the project's usefulness and success with students of all grade levels. Recounts the museum's…
Descriptors: Black Culture, Black History, Black Studies, Blacks
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Wooster, Judith S. – Social Education, 1992
Discusses the Columbian Quincentenary statement of the National Council for the Social Studies. Recommends that key ideas and basic knowledge of the statement be used to evaluate instructional materials. Suggests questions developed from the ideas in the statement. Includes interconnectedness of world history and effect on Native Americans and…
Descriptors: American Indians, Blacks, Elementary Secondary Education, History Instruction
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Bunch-Lyons, Beverly A. – Journal of American History, 2000
Discusses the use of novels and other works written by African American women as tools for teaching the history of black women in the United States in an undergraduate course. Focuses on specific works used in the course, such as Octavia Butler's "Kindred" and Terry McMillan's "Waiting to Exhale." (CMK)
Descriptors: Black History, Blacks, Educational Strategies, Females
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Mensher, Gail B. – Young Children, 1994
Describes one school's annual celebration of Harriet Tubman, 19th-century African-American heroine of the Underground Railroad. Children ages 4-11 engage in multisensory and cognitive learning activities designed to help them understand the rich traditions of early African Americans and the abolitionist movement to end slavery. Activities…
Descriptors: Black History, Black Studies, Blacks, Elementary Education
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