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Roeder, George H., Jr. – Journal of American History, 1994
Contends that history is a nearly "sense-less" profession because reading is almost the only source of historical understanding. Reviews content related to sensory experiences in college history textbooks. Argues that including language about the senses in historical writing and instruction will enlarge the audience and the field of…
Descriptors: Historians, Historical Interpretation, History Instruction, History Instruction

Cruse, Joyce M. – Journal of American History, 1994
Discusses differences among the objectives, course content, and teaching methods of history instruction at high-school and college levels. Argues that improved communication and interaction among all professionals in the field, including teachers, archivists, librarians, and others, is necessary to improve teaching and learning. (CFR)
Descriptors: Articulation (Education), Historians, Historical Interpretation, History Instruction

Boykin, Arsene – Social Studies, 1981
Presents results of a study of student attitudes toward United States history 10-week minicourses. Course titles include America's West, Roaring Twenties and Desperate Thirties, Nuclear Age, and Popular American Image. Concludes that minicourses allow students to choose among a variety of offerings and to determine which subjects are relevant and…
Descriptors: Educational Innovation, History Instruction, Minicourses, Relevance (Education)

Mills, Randy K. – OAH Magazine of History, 1988
Briefly reviews theories of brain hemisphere functions and draws implications for social studies instruction. Maintains that the metaphor aids the development of understanding because it connects right and left brain functions. Provides a learning activity based on the metaphor of the U.S. government functioning as a machine. (BSR)
Descriptors: Brain Hemisphere Functions, Cognitive Processes, History Instruction, Learning Activities

Jordon, Frederick W. – New England Journal of History, 1992
Discusses the sparse coverage of religion in United States history textbooks. Presents four such textbooks' explanations of the stories of Christopher Columbus and the Massachusetts Bay Colonies. Underscores the relative absence of detail about the religious underpinnings of the two historical situations. Identifies other U.S. historical events…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, History Instruction, Publishing Industry, Religion

Farmer, Rod – New England Journal of History, 1991
Reports results of several surveys that show that social studies teachers would rather teach history than other courses. Concludes that researchers need to ask teachers why they prefer history. Argues that history is important in its own right and as part of an interdisciplinary social studies program. (DK)
Descriptors: Educational Research, History Instruction, Intellectual Disciplines, Interdisciplinary Approach

Sherry, Michael S. – Journal of American History, 1994
Discusses attitudes toward history instruction from a survey of historians. Contends that historians who prize history seem less interested in dispensing knowledge than in imparting a historical perspective. Concludes that many historians are comfortable with the relatively low status of teaching because it provides autonomy. (CFR)
Descriptors: Democratic Values, Faculty Publishing, Higher Education, Historians

Evans, Ronald W. – Social Science Record, 1990
Discusses a study of teacher conceptions of the meaning of history. Concludes that history teachers tend fall into five broad categories: (1) storyteller; (2) scientific historian; (3) relativist/reformer; (4) cosmic philosopher; and (5) eclectic. Suggests that teaching should be grounded in an explicit educational philosophy that is developed in…
Descriptors: Curriculum Research, Educational Philosophy, Higher Education, History

Cervone, Barbara Tucker – Clearing House, 1983
Reports responses to a survey of junior and senior high school students concerning (1) what they have learned from studying history, (2) what they think of the subject, (3) what importance they attach to the study of history, (4) how they would improve history instruction, and (5) their opinions of historians. (FL)
Descriptors: Educational Research, Elementary Secondary Education, History Instruction, Motivation Techniques
Armbruster, Bonnie B.; Anderson, Thomas H. – 1982
Theory and research in reading comprehension have confirmed the important role of text structure in learning from written materials. The previous work with story grammars provided the basis of this attempt to define frames for explanations in history that would be likely to aid learning. A suggested goal frame includes the goals, plan, action, and…
Descriptors: Content Area Reading, Elementary Secondary Education, History Instruction, History Textbooks

Tupper, Jennifer – Alberta Journal of Educational Research, 2002
Analysis of three Canadian grade 10 social studies textbooks illustrates how the discrimination and persecution endured by Japanese Canadians have been marginalized. As long as textbooks present perspectives of the dominant social group, inequalities embedded in society will remain hidden. Using textbooks critically to interrogate biases inherent…
Descriptors: Civil Liberties, Critical Reading, Educational Needs, Foreign Countries

Kelebay, Yarema Gregory – Canadian Social Studies, 1992
Critiques current views of multiculturalism. Reveals results of a student survey concerning a Canadian history curriculum. Indicates that students express concern for Eurocentrism, insensitivity to Native peoples, and sex bias uniformly, but ignore other minorities. Explores multiculturalism's ideological bases. Identifies the movement with…
Descriptors: Attitude Measures, Canada Natives, Curriculum, Ethnocentrism
Dyment, Janet; Watson, Lee; Kuiper, Beth – Pathways: The Ontario Journal of Outdoor Education, 2002
A 13-day camping trip to the Wendell K. Beckwith site in Wabakimi Provincial Park (Ontario) demonstrates how outdoor education programs can help students gain a rich understanding of the history of a particular tripping area and realize the interdependence of humans and nature. Such expeditions offer opportunities for curriculum integration,…
Descriptors: College Students, Environmental Interpretation, Experiential Learning, Foreign Countries
Bryant, Henry A. – 1982
With enrollments in the social sciences declining markedly and their educational values being deemphasized, a new approach must be taken to social sciences instruction. Social science courses are antiquated, need revision, fail to offer enough job relevance to draw most students, are taught too conservatively, and no longer enjoy a protected…
Descriptors: Community Colleges, Curriculum Design, Curriculum Problems, History

Cassity, Michael – Journal of American History, 1994
Asserts that, while historians value public communication, their view of the public is dominated by traditional college classroom demographics. Maintains that historians should broaden these boundaries to include nontraditional students. Describes efforts in Wyoming to present history in public meetings. (CFR)
Descriptors: Higher Education, Historiography, History Instruction, Intellectual Disciplines
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