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Dalbo, George D. – ProQuest LLC, 2022
This research study examined how students and I navigated learning and teaching about genocide and mass violence in the context of a semester-long high school comparative genocide and human rights elective course at DeWitt Junior-Senior High School in rural south-central Wisconsin. Specifically, the study examined how students individually and…
Descriptors: Death, Land Settlement, Elective Courses, Teaching Methods
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Bryant, James A., Jr. – History Teacher, 2020
When Colin Kaepernick, a quarterback with the San Francisco 49ers football team, "took a knee" during the playing of the National Anthem, he outlined his rationale for protest: "this country stands for freedom, liberty, and justice for all. And it's not happening for all right now." He also spoke specifically about police…
Descriptors: Athletes, Team Sports, Activism, Freedom
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Eder, Elizabeth K. – Social Education, 2011
Artists today draw on a range of sources--newspapers, magazines, photographs, film, audio, and of course the Internet--to create artworks that serve as visual "texts" of a specific place and moment in time. Using artworks as sources and understanding how to decode them in the service of "drilling down" into difficult topics can create powerful…
Descriptors: Presidents, Thinking Skills, Class Activities, Art Activities
Bigelow, Bill – Rethinking Schools, 2010
Howard Zinn was a brilliant teacher, a passionate activist, and a warm and generous friend. His most influential work, "A People's History of the United States," was a gift to teachers everywhere--an eloquent anti-textbook that pointed the way to an approach to the past that was at once angry, passionate, and hopeful. Corporate textbooks…
Descriptors: United States History, Textbooks, Integrity, Activism
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Blutinger, Jeffrey C. – History Teacher, 2009
A fundamental problem faced by anyone who wishes to teach the Holocaust, or any other mass slaughter, is the tension between the desire " to allow the dead their voices to make the silence heard," and a historical narrative that often deals almost exclusively on perpetrator actions. This bias in the narrative derives from the tendency in history,…
Descriptors: United States History, Jews, Victims of Crime, Death
Sheppard, Maia G. – ProQuest LLC, 2010
Academic standards for history in all states require students to learn about deeply troubling events, such as war, genocide, and slavery. Drawing on research and theories related to trauma studies and history education, this ethnographic study aims to better understand what happens when teachers and students examine the pain and suffering of…
Descriptors: Evidence, Historical Interpretation, History, Ethnography
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Bredhoff, Stacey – Social Education, 2007
On April 14, 1865, at approximately 10:20 p.m., John Wilkes Booth, a prominent American actor, sneaked up behind President Abraham Lincoln as he watched a play from the presidential box at Ford's Theater and shot him in the back of the head at point-blank range. Of the 14 doctors who attended to President Lincoln on the night of his assassination,…
Descriptors: Presidents, United States History, Physicians, Court Litigation
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Maxwell, Bruce – Ethics and Education, 2008
This paper challenges a pervasive curricular justification for educationally acquainting young people with stories of genocide and other moral horrors from history. According to this justification, doing so favours the development of psycho-social soft skills connected with interpersonal awareness and the establishment and maintenance of positive…
Descriptors: United States History, Death, History Instruction, Ethics
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Hamscher, Albert N. – OAH Magazine of History, 2003
Describes research that students can undertake while studying history in a cemetery. Explains that, for example, students can study the changes in the cemetery, select a tombstone and write a biography of the person identified on the headstone, and learn about the memorial park and what it says about society. Includes a bibliography. (CMK)
Descriptors: Death, Experiential Learning, Historic Sites, History Instruction
Heywood, Janet; Breitkreutz, Cathleen Lambert – 2002
Land was at a premium during the first quarter of the 19th century in the newly incorporated city of Boston (Massachusetts). Among the first priorities was the development of a safer, healthier city. Boston's burial grounds were seriously overcrowded, and additional space was no longer available within the city limits. Attitudes about death and…
Descriptors: Bereavement, Built Environment, Death, Heritage Education
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Russell, William Benedict, III, Ed. – International Society for the Social Studies, 2010
The "ISSS Annual Conference Proceedings" is a peer-reviewed professional publication published once a year following the annual conference. (Individual papers contain references.) [For the 2009 proceedings, see ED504973.]
Descriptors: Social Studies, Proverbs, Social Justice, Global Approach