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Wheeler, Schaun – History Teacher, 2007
In this article, the author shares how he was able to change the negative attitude of his students towards their United States history class. The first section of this article outlines the changes the author made to the history curriculum in his class; the second section outlines the effects of those changes; and the third section explains why his…
Descriptors: United States History, Negative Attitudes, Ethnography, History Instruction
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Landman, James H., Ed. – Social Education, 2007
This article is adapted from "Chew Heong v. United States: Chinese Exclusion and the Federal Courts", written by Lucy Salyer, associate professor of history at the University of New Hampshire, for inclusion in the Federal Judicial Center's project, "Federal Trials and Great Debates in United States History." In 1882, Congress…
Descriptors: United States History, Federal Courts, Laborers, Public Policy
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Crocco, Margaret Smith – Social Studies, 2007
The author considers the treatment of women's rights as human rights in the social studies curriculum. She discusses the role of the United Nations in promoting women's rights since the adoption of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights in 1948. She also reviews the treatment of women's rights within social studies curriculum today through a…
Descriptors: Civil Rights, Females, Guidelines, Social Studies
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Waters, Tony – Social Studies, 2007
The question of why students think there are two kinds of American history taught--one in the K-12 system and one in the university system--can be examined critically using Emile Durkheim's (1973) description of the sacred and the profane. The history taught in K-12 classrooms often focuses on idealized accounts of the past that protect the status…
Descriptors: United States History, Elementary Secondary Education, Social Change, History Instruction
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McCall, Ava L. – Social Studies and the Young Learner, 2006
Elementary teachers frequently face the challenge of teaching about their state with limited time and resources. Teaching state or regional history is a longstanding tradition in fourth grade and has been part of the social studies curriculum since the beginning of the 20th century. In addition, national and state standards include attention to…
Descriptors: Federal Legislation, Grade 4, Teaching Experience, State Standards
Diaz, Sandra; Kempson, Lauri – American Council of Trustees and Alumni, 2009
What will they learn? That is the simple question the American Council of Trustees and Alumni (ACTA) asks in this report. The authors do so by exploring the state of general education, those courses designed to give college students a firm grounding in the areas of knowledge they will use for a lifetime. Specifically, the authors evaluate whether…
Descriptors: General Education, Core Curriculum, College Curriculum, Required Courses
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Garcia, Sara Soledad – Forum on Public Policy Online, 2008
This is an analysis of California history of the shifting of language policies from Spanish to English, as an Official Language The focus is English as an imposed language that from the beginning of schooling policies stifle a process of language acquisition for the majority of Spanish speakers. In 1849 the California Constitution stipulated that…
Descriptors: Sociolinguistics, Sociocultural Patterns, State History, State Policy
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Eick, Gretchen Cassel – Great Plains Quarterly, 2008
This article lays out U.S. Indian policy in the Great Plains during the twenty-five years after the Civil War by examining chronologically specific "players" that shaped and reshaped that policy: the U.S. Army, the President and Interior Department, Congress, religious organizations, whites in the Indian reform movement, settlers surging…
Descriptors: Federal Indian Relationship, United States History, American Indian History, Land Settlement
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Camicia, Steven P. – Theory and Research in Social Education, 2008
Frame analysis was used to examine how competing stakeholders framed a sixth grade curriculum controversy over whether the WWII internment of Japanese Americans should be categorized as a controversial issue. Teachers and administrators in a northwestern U.S. school claimed that the internment was clearly wrong and not controversial, but these…
Descriptors: Grade 6, Social Studies, Controversial Issues (Course Content), War
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Journell, Wayne – Theory and Research in Social Education, 2008
This study examines the effectiveness of asynchronous communication in facilitating historical discussions among adolescents, with a specific focus on the ways in which teachers can affect this process. Threaded discussion board posts and teacher-student email correspondence from a five-week American history summer course are analyzed and…
Descriptors: Instructional Effectiveness, Asynchronous Communication, United States History, Computer Mediated Communication
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Peters, Michael A. – Critical Studies in Education, 2008
This paper examines the neoconservative critique of the university and particularly the attack on multiculturalism and postmodernism that initiated the culture wars. It seeks to explain these developments by an analysis of the thought of Leo Strauss. The paper begins by providing an introduction to US neoconservatism and latest challenges to it…
Descriptors: Cultural Pluralism, Postmodernism, Humanities, Politics of Education
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Dean, Janet – Studies in American Indian Literatures, 2008
At the close of Sherman Alexie's "Indian Killer," in a final chapter titled "Creation Story," a killer carries a backpack containing, among other things, "dozens of owl feathers, a scrapbook, and two bloody scalps in a plastic bag." Readers schooled in the psychopathologies of real and fictional serial killers will be familiar with the detail:…
Descriptors: Violence, American Indians, Archives, Novels
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Russell, Caskey – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2008
American Indian treaties and treaty law may seem to fall solely within the purview of legal methodology and critical analysis, yet the 367 American Indian treaties signed with the US federal government beg for the type of dissection and analysis generally associated with cultural and literary critical theory. The tools by which texts are dissected…
Descriptors: Critical Theory, Treaties, American Indians, State Government
Glass, Fred, Ed. – 1989
The history of the California Federation of Teachers, spanning 70 years, is documented in this book that contains two parts. The first part of the book discusses the teachers' union in the context of each of the seven decades of its existence: "1920s: The Conditions of Teachers"; "1930s: A Debating Society Struggles to…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Labor Relations, State History, Teacher Associations
1999
The broad themes of U.S. history usually have specific expressions in Alabama. Specific examples of history close by can enrich the teaching of U.S. history. This packet of materials was prepared to assist teachers in establishing the link between national issues and the local examples. The packet contains supplemental information about each of…
Descriptors: Heritage Education, High Schools, Local History, Social Studies
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