Iran Through the Looking Glass

Description

"This 3-day summer institute will give participating teachers an opportunity to deepen their understanding of Iranian culture and politics, and explore critical issues in Iranian-U.S. relations. Major themes covered during this institute will include Islam and Iranian society, the role of Islam in politics, democratic forces in Iran, the history of Iranian-U.S. relations, and current pressing issues in Iranian-U.S relations, including nuclear proliferation and Iran’s involvement in the Iraq conflict."

Contact email
Registration Deadline
Sponsoring Organization
Choices for the 21st Century Education Program
Phone number
1 401-863-3155
Target Audience
Secondary
Start Date
Duration
Three days
End Date

MindSparks

Teaser

MindSparks is for-profit and provides curriculum sets for grades 4-5, 5-8, and 8-12.

Description

<p>MindSparks is for-profit and provides curriculum sets for grades 4-5, 5-8, and 8-12. </p>

<p>Curriculum sets consist of primary source documents, worksheets, overheads, DBQs, maps, posters, and teacher’s booklets. Teacher’s booklets contain discussion questions, follow-up activities, points to make with students, and suggestions for additional activities.</p>

<p>All periods of American History are covered by the MindSparks series. Series available are: Debating the Documents – reproducible booklets, approximately 20 pages in length, consisting of pairs of conflicting primary source documents, worksheets, overheads of the documents, and a final DBQ on the documents; Editorial Cartoons – sets of six political cartoons featured on posters, a teacher’s guide with further background material, questions and follow-up activities; Excursions in History – timelines, maps, games, posters, and reproductions of documents; History Unfolding – sets of 10 student workbooks, one teacher’s manual, and a binder of 14 MindSparks sets, organized by era; and, The Way We Saw It – a 20-page booklet with transparencies of photos, poster art, cartoons, and historical prints, and a teacher’s booklet with discussion questions, reproducible lessons with background information and individual or small group follow-up activities. </p>

<p>Samples are available online and titles may be ordered through the MindSparks website.</p>

Publisher
Highsmith, Inc.

The Stanford Program on International and Cross-Cultural Education (SPICE)

Teaser

SPICE is non-profit and develops multidisciplinary curriculum materials on international themes for elementary, middle school, and secondary students.

Description

<p>SPICE is non-profit and develops multidisciplinary curriculum materials on international themes for elementary, middle school, and secondary students.</p>

<p>SPICE units include thorough lesson plans with subject overviews, primary source materials, handouts, worksheets, in-class activities, projects, and assignments. Many units are interdisciplinary.</p>

<p>While SPICE curricular materials focus primarily on international issues, a number of curricular units are appropriate for an American history course. Selected titles include: Diamonds in the Rough: Baseball and Japanese-American Internment; Security, Civil Liberties, and Terrorism; Comparative Health Care: The United States and Japan; Introduction to Diasporas in the United States; San Francisco Peace Treaty: The Cold War and the Peace Process; and, U.S.-Mexico Economic Interdependence: Perspectives from Both Sides of the Border. </p>

<p>Only the tables of contents for units are available online, though titles may be ordered through the SPICE website.</p>

Publisher
Stanford University

National Center for History in the Schools (NCHS)

Teaser

NCHS is non-profit, funded by grants from both the public sector and private foundations, and produces teaching units for grades 5-12.

Description

<p>NCHS is non-profit, funded by grants from both the public sector and private foundations, and produces teaching units for grades 5-12.</p>

<p>Each reproducible unit is rated for grade-level appropriateness and accompanied by background readings, primary source documents, discussion questions, lesson activities, and evaluation activities. Units are between 50 and 150 pages in length. </p>

<p>American history titles are available for Pre-Colonial history; Colonization and Settlement; Revolution and the New Nation; Constitutional Issues; Women in American History; Culture and the Arts in American History Native Americans; Slavery and Civil Rights; Immigration; and, Conflicts and Foreign Policy. </p>

<p>Previews of units are available in pdf form online and titles may be ordered online through Social Studies School Services at <a href="http://www.socialstudies.com">http://www.socialstudies.com</a&gt;, which also offers many NCHS titles for immediate download as e-books. </p>

Publisher
University of California, Los Angeles

The Choices Program

Teaser

The Choices Program is non-profit and develops curriculum units for use at the secondary level.

Description

<p>The Choices Program is non-profit and develops curriculum units for use at the secondary level. </p>

<p>Each Choices unit is built around a framework of alternative policy options that challenges students to think critically about the issue at hand. The unit includes extensive background readings, primary sources, study guides, a role-play or simulation exercise, and an individual assignment in which students are asked to articulate their positions on a policy issue.</p>

<p>Selected American history topics include A Forgotten History: The Slave Trade and Slavery in New England; Beyond Manifest Destiny: America Enters the Age of Imperialism; To End All Wars: World War I and the League of Nations Debate; Between World Wars: FDR and the Age of Isolationism; Ending the War Against Japan: Science, Morality, and the Atomic Bomb; The Cuban Missile Crisis: Considering its Place in Cold War History; U.S. Immigration Policy in an Unsettled World; Responding to Terrorism: Challenges for Democracy; and, The U.S. Role in a Changing World. </p>

<p>Samples are not available online, though titles can be ordered through the Choices website.</p>

Publisher
The Watson Institute for International Studies at Brown University

Hard Times and Public Policy: Facing Economic Challenges, Past and Present

Description

This 2009 American Studies Summer Institute, presented with the University of Massachusetts Boston, will offer a critical and historical examination of the social and political impact of severe downturns in the U.S. economy.

Registration Deadline
Sponsoring Organization
John F. Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum
Phone number
617-514-1581
Target Audience
K-12
Start Date
Cost
$100 without graduate credit; $195 with.
Course Credit
Teachers may earn three graduate credits (fee of $195) or 35 PDPs (fee of $100).
Duration
Twelve days
End Date

Metro DC and National Lincoln Teacher Seminar and Fellowships

Description

By preparing and performing historical speeches, interpreting letters, and "reading" artifacts, images, and places, participants in this seminar will develop teaching techniques that strengthen reading comprehension and critical thinking skills. They will work with teachers from across the country to develop web resources to support themselves and others in teaching the Civil War.

Over the course of five mornings, participants will travel to three historic sites in Washington's historic neighborhoods. In the afternoons, they will participate in interpretations of important speeches and letters, learning tools that lead to rigorous visual and experiential learning.

During the school year, participants will receive priority access to field trips at each of the three historic sites; updated online study guides and lesson plans from each of the three Civil War Consortium historic sites; access to additional free professional development and arts and cultural opportunities in and around DC; a network of supportive teachers and scholars to reinforce learning; and the chance to become a paid Lincoln Teacher Fellow Consortium faculty fellow in future summers.

This program is designed for teachers in the DC Metropolitan area, and also welcomes teachers interested in Civil War Washington history from around the country.

Contact name
Flack, Jake
Contact email
Registration Deadline
Sponsoring Organization
Ford's Theatre; Frederick Douglass National Historic Site; Tudor Place Historic House and Garden
Phone number
202-638-2941
Target Audience
K-12
Start Date
Cost
$300 for commuters; $600 for out-of-town
Contact Title
Education Programs Coordinator
Duration
Five days
End Date

Journeys of Nonviolence: Gandhi and King

Description

Ahimsa Center's 2009 Summer Institute for K–12 teachers—the third one in a series on Education about Nonviolence—will focus on Mohandas K. Gandhi (1869–1948) and Martin Luther King, Jr. (1929–68), the pioneers of nonviolent action for social transformation. Participants will work with expert faculty and scholars to learn, reflect, and critically assess the significance of Gandhi and King in their own times and their continuing relevance in our times as leaders of nonviolent mass movements, and also as thought-leaders who seem to have anticipated so many of today's critical issues and vexing problems. Themes and topics covered in the institute will provide a solid foundation for curricular innovations that will help students gain critical insights into the relevance of Gandhi, King, and their respective journeys of nonviolence.

Contact name
Sethia, Tara
Contact email
Registration Deadline
Sponsoring Organization
Ahimsa Center
Phone number
909-869-3868 x3808
Target Audience
K-12
Start Date
Cost
Free
Course Credit
Institute training will qualify the participants for eight units of graduate course credits. These credits may be used toward a Master's degree and/or salary advancement.
Contact Title
Director
Duration
Two weeks
End Date

Colorado Council for the Social Studies Annual Conference

Description

The theme for this conference will be "Social Studies: A New Standard."

From the Colorado Council for the Social Studies website:

"Planning for schools and classrooms will be in progress by the time of this conference, and questions are numerous about the new state of Colorado Social Studies standards:

  • How will these standards and expectations impact the teaching and learning of social studies?
  • Will the state's 21st Century mastery model live up to the goal of fewer, clearer, and higher?
  • How might current social studies teachers and teaching address Colorado's new essential skills and readiness competencies: problem solving/critical thinking, information management, collaboration, self direction, innovation, as well as inquiry, social studies application and thinking?
  • What direction will social studies and citizenship accountability take in Colorado?

Join us for an exciting day of professional development, networking opportunities, and special connections to our new standards."

Sponsoring Organization
Colorado Council for the Social Studies
Contact email
Location
Denver, CO
Start Date

We the People . . . Mini Institute

Description

The institute is an intensive, professional development program on the U.S. Constitution and Bill of Rights. Participants take part in lectures and discussions on constitutional themes pertinent to the curriculum content, classroom strategies, and performance assessment. An essential component of the institute is teacher preparation and participation in a simulated congressional hearing as a culminating activity. The hearing is a model for student hearings to be held during the school year. Experienced teacher mentors assist participants in discussing the challenges of teaching civic education and preparing for the culminating hearing.

Contact email
Sponsoring Organization
Law Focused Education, Inc.
Phone number
800-204-2222
Target Audience
K-12
Start Date
Cost
$25
Duration
Three days
End Date