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Huson, Julie Alice – Online Submission, 2007
The educational publisher Pearson/Scott-Foresman in 2006 introduced curriculum to address California History/Social Studies standards. Fifth grade students have difficulty comprehending non-fiction text that is informative enough to have historical accuracy. The publisher promotes a program that features a standard in every lesson, and promises no…
Descriptors: Academic Discourse, United States History, Grade 5, Social Studies
Estes, Todd – History Teacher, 2007
In this article, the author describes a syllabus which he designed in his United States history survey courses to help his students learn to think like historians. It contains important information about the way historians work and think, along with descriptions of the reading materials the student will use to further their practice of history.…
Descriptors: Reading Materials, Introductory Courses, Historians, History Instruction
Mucher, Stephen – History Teacher, 2007
The purpose of this paper is two-fold. First, the author wants to describe generally how the Teaching American History (TAH) grant stakeholders in the Plymouth Canton Schools prioritized a professional development model that emphasized historical thinking. Rather than describing specific institutes, programs, and curriculum projects, the author…
Descriptors: United States History, Grants, Epistemology, Thinking Skills
Gunderson, Gerald – Social Education, 2007
The American economy has had the fastest and most dramatic development of all the world's major economies. Four hundred years ago, the economic output of the area that became the United States was negligible by world standards. Yet only 250 years later, the U.S. economy had become the largest in the world, surpassing all other countries, including…
Descriptors: United States History, Heuristics, Human Geography, Economic Factors
Manfra, Meghan McGlinn – Social Education, 2007
In this article, the author provides an overview of teaching and learning activities that combine both historical and civics instruction with the study of technology, in line with NCSS thematic strand "Science, Technology, and Society." Specifically, these integrative teaching activities focus on Lowell Mill and Ralph Waldo Emerson, within the…
Descriptors: United States History, Science and Society, Industrialization, Democratic Values
Baker, Bernadette – Curriculum Inquiry, 2007
This article elaborates the impact that crises of authority provoked by animal magnetism, mesmerism, and hypnosis in the 19th century had for field formation in American education. Four layers of analysis elucidate how curriculum history's repetitive focus on public school policy and classroom practice became possible. First, the article surveys…
Descriptors: Curriculum, Educational History, United States History, Educational Policy
Snyder, Mark R. – Journal of Technology Studies, 2007
This article serves as a foundation for understanding the earliest form of technical instruction in colonial America. It is a synthesis of historical studies that have addresses the education of indentured servants and apprentices in colonial America. It defines indentured servitude and contrasts it with apprenticeship--a form of indentured…
Descriptors: United States History, Slavery, Foreign Countries, Technical Education
Lark, Lisa A. – Social Education, 2007
For many of the students in the author's American history class, early twentieth-century American history seems far removed from their daily lives. Being first and second-generation American citizens, many of the students do not have the luxury of hearing grandparents and great-grandparents telling stories about FDR and Henry Ford. More…
Descriptors: United States History, Oral History, War, Teaching Methods
McNatt, Missy; Traill, David – Social Education, 2007
On October 5, 1957, the headline on the front page of the "Baltimore News-Post" proclaimed "Russ "Moon" Circling Earth." The "Russ" Moon was Sputnik I, launched by the Soviet Union a day earlier. The launch had far-reaching and unexpected outcomes for the United States. Almost immediately, President Dwight…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Primary Sources, Presidents, United States History
Schur, Joan Brodsky – Social Education, 2007
Most students assume that a thriving society runs smoothly because people abide by the laws. But there are various informal, as well as formal, means of social control such as gossip, ridicule, and shame that function even in complex societies to achieve social control, or conformity to group norms. Good teaching ideas have the potential to lead…
Descriptors: United States History, Protestants, Community Schools, Social Control
Wiggins, Kyle; Holmberg, David – Great Plains Quarterly, 2007
David Milch, creator of HBO's critically acclaimed Western series, "Deadwood," said, "The only reason the town of Deadwood exists is gold." Milch bluntly discards the Western genre's foundational ideology of self-determination, considering these principles a delusion that obscures the material realities of the late nineteenth…
Descriptors: Social History, Television, United States History, Mining
Benz, Brad – Great Plains Quarterly, 2007
In "The New Language of the Old West," "Deadwood"'s creator and executive producer David Milch offers an extended exposition of the television show's language: "Language--both obscene and complicated--was one of the few resources of society that was available to these people.... It's very well documented that the obscenity…
Descriptors: Sentence Structure, Television, Geographic Regions, Language Usage
Dighe, Ranjit S. – Journal of Economic Education, 2007
Although recent research strongly suggests that L. Frank Baum did not write "The Wonderful Wizard of Oz" as a monetary or political allegory, the Populist-parable interpretation of his book remains a tremendous teaching tool in economics classes. The author offers some background on the rise and fall of the Populist interpretation, in recognition…
Descriptors: Novels, Economics Education, Political Attitudes, United States History
Riley, Karen L.; Brown, Jennifer A.; Braswell, Ray – American Educational History Journal, 2007
The purpose of this paper is to present an analysis of the Scopes Trial based upon the film "Inherit the Wind" (United Artists 1960) and how it helped to shape the public's perception of teachers, within the context of historical accounts of the trial, including the trial transcript and daily reports from individuals such as H. L. Mencken, a…
Descriptors: United States History, Evolution, Court Litigation, Content Analysis
Hughes, Richard L. – Social Studies, 2007
As historians and publishers scrambled to revise American history textbooks in the wake of the 1960s, textbooks increasingly strove to include the experiences of African Americans and avoid dangerous racial stereotypes. After the Civil Rights movement and decades before scathing criticism of textbooks for their inability to address racism in…
Descriptors: Race, Textbooks, Stereotypes, Historians