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Hobbs, Angela H. – Journal of Philosophy of Education, 2021
Statues are in the news. Controversies are swirling around the slave trader and philanthropist Edward Colston in Bristol, Confederate generals, soldiers and leaders in the United States, and the sculpture in honour of Mary Wollstonecraft in Newington Green in North London. In some cases, the attacks have been physical as well as verbal, and such…
Descriptors: Sculpture, Historic Sites, Democracy, News Reporting
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Gibbs, Brian – Journal of Curriculum and Pedagogy, 2022
This manuscript describes the implementation of a co-created (teacher and researcher) unit of instruction focused on the teaching of war. This unit examines war through a critical lens and emphasizes anti-war movements. A design study this research investigated how the teaching of war as difficult knowledge can impact student sense of critical…
Descriptors: Grade 5, Elementary School Students, War, United States History
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Popa, Nathalie – History Education Research Journal, 2021
This article explores student meaning making in a Grade 11 US history unit on the Second World War. The 10-lesson unit was designed as an experiment that aimed to apply an instructional model of historical consciousness to a classroom context. Although the notion of historical consciousness has gained significant interest in the field of history…
Descriptors: Poetry, History Instruction, Classroom Communication, Grade 11
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Pearcy, Mark – High School Journal, 2020
Memorials and monuments represent a society's view of its own history and the conclusions we collectively wish to draw about its meaning. In America in recent years, public clashes over the presence of contested public memorials--including and especially monuments dedicated to the Confederate cause in the United States Civil War--have led to…
Descriptors: History Instruction, United States History, War, Historic Sites
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Kimberly Powell – International Journal of Multicultural Education, 2024
In this article, I discuss how walking as mapping serves as a method for observing and disrupting spatial geopolitics, opening possibilities for alternative systems of living. I explore three theoretical perspectives--posthumanism, Indigenous and decolonializing theories of land, and Black geography--that, while distinct, nonetheless share some…
Descriptors: Political Attitudes, Educational Theories, Humanism, Indigenous Knowledge
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Schieffler, G. David – History Teacher, 2018
What is environmental history? In the words of Brian Allen Drake, it is "the study of the interactions between humans and nature across time." It includes, but is in no way limited to, the study of the environment. Generally speaking, it is a way to interpret nature as an integral part of the past, as an important "actor." Or,…
Descriptors: History Instruction, United States History, War, Physical Environment
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Social Education, 2021
Ansel Adams and Dorothea Lange's photojournalist activism during World War II was a direct response to President Franklin Roosevelt's Executive Order 9066 (EO 9066), which led to the incarceration of 120,000 Japanese and Japanese Americans in 10 camps across seven mostly western states. Approximately two-thirds of those imprisoned were U.S.…
Descriptors: Photojournalism, Activism, War, Institutionalized Persons
JoeAnn Hien Nguyen – ProQuest LLC, 2021
This dissertation study used an intersectionality framework to examine the experience of Japanese American women in their educational and vocational trajectories before, during, and after internment. The study explores how the vocational education program and employment opportunities in internment camps changed the educational and vocational…
Descriptors: Japanese Americans, War, United States History, Vocational Education
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Beyer, Carl Kalani – American Educational History Journal, 2019
Throughout the nineteenth century and continuing after annexation, an American hegemony was exercised over Hawai'i and its people. It is the purpose of this article to continue the story of the use of hegemony as it pertains to education in Hawai?i. While prior research on the use of hegemony dealt with the 19th century and the first 40 years of…
Descriptors: United States History, War, World History, Patriotism
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McInnis, Edward C. – American Educational History Journal, 2019
Some writers connected to the Peace Movement, many of whom were Quakers, expressed conflicting views on history's value to society and its ability to prevent unnecessary wars. These writers, mostly opponents to the United States' War with Mexico, argued that history education sometimes contributed to war by romanticizing militaristic government…
Descriptors: History Instruction, Peace, Activism, War
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Brita A. Bookser – Pedagogy, Culture and Society, 2024
A critical reappraisal of the origin story of early care and education (ECE) in the United States, this article unsettles dominant narratives by investigating the carceral foundations and liberatory strategies that characterise the emergence and sociopolitical evolution of ECE. Integrating Foucauldian counter-historical genealogy and…
Descriptors: Early Childhood Education, Story Telling, Minority Group Influences, United States History
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Carolina Snaider; J. Eric Fisher; Katherina A. Payne – Social Studies and the Young Learner, 2024
Cisgender women were not permitted to join the armed forces until the Women's Armed Service Integration Act passed in 1984. During the Civil War, some people assigned female at birth enlisted as men. They used "male" names and wore short haircuts, pants, and other traditional "male clothing." Many stories of these soldiers have…
Descriptors: United States History, War, Military Personnel, Instructional Materials
Stephanie C. Jannenga – ProQuest LLC, 2020
Between 1636 and 1769, the American colonists established nine institutions of higher learning: Harvard College, the College of William & Mary, Yale College, the College of New Jersey, the College of Philadelphia, King's College, the College of Rhode Island, Queen's College, and Dartmouth College. These nine centers of learning, stretching…
Descriptors: Higher Education, United States History, Educational History, Colleges
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Thangaraj, Stanley Ilango – Urban Education, 2021
In this paper, I insert the importance of teaching race through Middle Eastern America and Muslim America. By bringing in critical analysis of Middle Eastern America and Muslim America, I offer theoretical insights and pedagogical strategies in the education curriculum to teach race that will deconstruct, destabilize, and interrogate the dominant…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Race, Islam, Fear
Rick Savage – ProQuest LLC, 2020
As secondary social studies education in the United States moves toward inquiry and constructivist models of teaching, much of the history that is taught is stuck in a fairly rigid narrative. This narrative has been written and refined by historians and high school textbook writers until the canon is homogenous across the United States (Brinkley…
Descriptors: United States History, High School Students, History Instruction, Controversial Issues (Course Content)
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