The American Skyscraper: Transforming Chicago and the Nation

Description

No details provided.

Contact name
Linsner, Jean
Registration Deadline
Sponsoring Organization
Chicago Architecture Foundation
Phone number
312-922-3432
Target Audience
K-12
Start Date
Cost
Free; $750 stipend
Contact Title
Project Director
Duration
One week
End Date

Happy Days Are Here Again: The Great Depression and Recovery in North Carolina

Description

From the North Carolina Museum of History website:

"The stock market rises and falls. A shaky economy means job losses, business closings, changed lives. Is it 1929 or 2009? Lessons from the past can help us cope with hard times today. How do government and businesses stimulate growth? How do people reshape their lives as they hope for returning prosperity? Topics include work, social programs, home life, food, entertainment, and recreation.

Join fellow educators for an engaging four-day program in Raleigh as we explore the Great Depression and the New Deal, the effect on North Carolina, and its comparison to the economic crisis of today. Take a variety of resources, including primary source material from this relevant period, back to your classroom. Interact with speakers, participate in discussions, and try new hands-on activities."

Registration Deadline
Sponsoring Organization
North Carolina Museum of History
Phone number
919-807-7995
Target Audience
"For all grade levels; particularly relevant to middle grades social studies and high school United States history"
Start Date
Cost
$40
Course Credit
"Participants who complete the institute will receive a certificate for thirty (30) contact hours. Please check with your school district to verify eligibility."
Duration
Four days
End Date

National Teach-in on Veteran's History

Description

From the History Channel website:

"Educators and students nationwide can tune-in and view this LIVE webcast online at www.veterans.com. The webcast will be broadcast live from the Library of Congress in Washington, D.C.

A panel of scholars and veterans will answer questions from students via video, email, and a live audience. The teach-in will focus on the histories and stories of World War II veterans, and will provide information on how communities nationwide can contribute to the Library of Congress' Veterans History Project. This event is part of the Take A Veteran to School Day initiative. For additional information, teacher resources, and tips for conducting oral histories with veterans, visit the Teacher Resources section at www.veterans.com. Stay tuned for more information about this event!"

Contact email
Sponsoring Organization
History Channel, Library of Congress
Target Audience
K-12
Start Date
Cost
Free

Powerful and Authentic Social Studies (PASS): A Teacher Training Institute

Description

From the National Council for the Social Studies website:

"Powerful and Authentic Social Studies (PASS) is a professional development program that trains social studies teachers in curriculum design, assessment, and instruction in a standards-based environment. This institute will provide participants with the materials and expertise necessary to lead their own PASS training workshops in their schools and school districts. Participants will learn about PASS criteria and standards for curriculum design, assessment construction, and effective instruction. In small learning communities, participants will examine videotaped K-12 vignettes of teaching and create examples of curriculum units and assessment tasks to share with their learning community.'"

Contact name
Joseph A. Braun, Jr.
Contact email
Registration Deadline
Sponsoring Organization
National Council for the Social Studies
Phone number
831-869-9865
Target Audience
K-12
Start Date
Cost
$675
Course Credit
Cost includes continuing education credit.
Duration
Four days
End Date

Alabama History Education Initiative Curriculum Development Project

Description

From the Alabama History Education Initiative flyer:

"In the first year, [the Alabama Department of Archives and History] will assemble a committee of twenty master teachers from around the state to develop new curriculum packages. The committee members will receive travel and per diem at the rate set for reimbursement by the state of Alabama for its employees. Also, the committee members will receive a laptop computer upon completion of the project. The committee will meet June 22-26, 2009 at the Alabama Department of Archives and History in Montgomery beginning with a day of immersive classes in Alabama history taught by leading scholars in the field. With data and cooperation from the State Department of Education, a university faculty consultant will lead a review of the State Course of Study, state testing requirements, and existing test performance data to identify the areas of greatest need. Key data sets will include scores from the 2008 administration of the Alabama High School Graduation Exam and student assessments developed as part of several Teaching American History (TAH) grants that are currently underway in the state.

The committee will then begin a collaborative process of designing approximately fifty curricular units based on primary sources identified by ADAH education and archival staff. Units will include reproductions of primary
sources, suggested instructional strategies, correlations to the Alabama Course of Study: Social Studies and National Standards for History, student-oriented learning activities, and assessment tools. Two university faculty
reviewers will evaluate the units, verify their correct alignment to standards, and make suggestions for improvement. Committee members will conduct trial implementations of the units in their own classrooms, noting
areas that merit revision during the second year of development.

The second year of the project will replicate the first, with a new class of twenty teachers receiving orientation and developing another fifty curriculum units. In addition, the first year’s committee members will begin providing multiple professional development sessions in each of the state’s in-service centers, a process that will put the committee-developed resources in the hands of as many as one thousand classroom teachers across the state. The university consultant, reviewers, and ADAH education staff will make site visits to classrooms in order to observe the use of the curricular materials and evaluate their effectiveness. University faculty will also begin incorporating the curricular materials in pre-teacher training. ADAH will post the curricular resources on its Web site and distribute them upon request on compact disc, making it possible for every history teacher in the state to reproduce the materials and implement them in the classroom."

Contact name
DuBose, Susan R.
Registration Deadline
Sponsoring Organization
Alabama Department of Archives and History
Phone number
334-242-4364
Target Audience
K-12
Start Date
Cost
Free; $750 stipend
Course Credit
Professional development credit will be awarded.
Contact Title
Education Specialist
Duration
Five days
End Date

Digital Storytelling for Educators Workshop

Description

From the Center for Digital Storytelling website:

"The three-day Educator Workshop is designed specifically for K-12 classroom teachers. First, each participant develops a digital story not more than 150 words in length. The creation of these shorter pieces provides hands on experience with the entire digital storytelling process, including a story circle, script writing and recording, and the production process, using digital technology.

As they finish their digital stories, participants move into the second component of the workshop in which they touch on implementation issues. Strategies for managing the creation of digital stories in the classrooms are presented, and opportunities for participants to practice their technology teaching skills are offered.

Each participant receives a DVD set of K-12 digital storytelling teaching resources, including software tutorial guides and diagrams to support the operation of commonly used digital storytelling hardware."

Contact name
Spagat, Andrea
Contact email
Sponsoring Organization
Center for Digital Storytelling
Target Audience
K-12
Start Date
Cost
$495
Course Credit
"Continuing Education Credits available through Dominican University of California (two CEUs) or University of Colorado."
Contact Title
Northern California/Pacific Northwest Region Director
Duration
Three days
End Date

Digital Storytelling for Educators Workshop

Description

From the Center for Digital Storytelling website:

"The three-day Educator Workshop is designed specifically for K-12 classroom teachers. First, each participant develops a digital story not more than 150 words in length. The creation of these shorter pieces provides hands on experience with the entire digital storytelling process, including a story circle, script writing and recording, and the production process, using digital technology.

As they finish their digital stories, participants move into the second component of the workshop in which they touch on implementation issues. Strategies for managing the creation of digital stories in the classrooms are presented, and opportunities for participants to practice their technology teaching skills are offered.

Each participant receives a DVD set of K-12 digital storytelling teaching resources, including software tutorial guides and diagrams to support the operation of commonly used digital storytelling hardware."

Contact name
Spagat, Andrea
Contact email
Sponsoring Organization
Center for Digital Storytelling
Target Audience
K-12
Start Date
Cost
$495
Course Credit
"Continuing Education Credits available through Dominican University of California (two CEUs) or University of Colorado."
Contact Title
Northern California/Pacific Northwest Region Director
Duration
Three days
End Date

Digital Storytelling for Educators Workshop

Description

From the Virginia Center for Digital History flyer:

"The Digital Storytelling Workshop for Educators is designed specifically for K-12 Classroom teachers. The workshop has two components. First, educators develop their own short digital story based on first-person personal narrative. We take participants through group story development, teach them the basics of image and video editing tools and assist them in completing their digital story. Teachers will then move into the second component of the workshop in which they will be introduced to strategies for managing the creation of digital stories in their classrooms and given the opportunity to practice their technology teaching skills."

Contact name
Sese, Stefani
Contact email
Sponsoring Organization
Center for Digital Storytelling
Phone number
202-577-8248
Target Audience
K-12
Start Date
Cost
$495
Course Credit
"Continuing Education Credits available through Dominican University of California (two CEUs) or University of Colorado."
Duration
Three days
End Date

The President at Work: Historical Perspectives from the Kennedy Years and Contemporary Views

Description

This institute will examine several key roles of the presidency including chief executive, chief diplomat, manager of the economy, and national leader. It will first look back at President Kennedy's approach to these roles and then explore how President Obama is approaching them to meet today's challenges.

Contact name
Tisch, Nina
Contact email
Sponsoring Organization
John F. Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum
Target Audience
K-12
Start Date
Cost
Free for Boston Public School teachers; $100 for other educators.
Course Credit
Teachers may earn 20 PDPs.
Duration
Four days
End Date

The Great Migration; or Leaving My Troubles in Dixie

Description

This seminar will focus on the factors that both pushed and pulled African Americans from the South after the Civil War. It will analyze the images of the North that prevailed among Southern blacks, the forces that shaped those images, and the prominent themes that the Great Migration brought to African American literature. How were the realities African Americans encountered in "the Promised Land" of the North comparable to experiences they had undergone in the South? What roles did individuals, agencies, family, and business play in the movement north? And how does an examination of westward migration and migration from rural to urban areas within the South broaden understandings of the Great Migration?

Led by distinguished scholars, each seminar will consist of three sessions. The first two, featuring lecture and discussion, will focus on the close analysis of images and primary documents. The third will concentrate on the integration of seminar ideas and material into lesson plans using the Center's Seminar-to-Classroom Guide.

Registration Deadline
Sponsoring Organization
National Humanities Center
Target Audience
K-12
Start Date
Cost
$75
Course Credit
The National Humanities Center does not award recertification credit. However, it will provide documentation of participation that teachers can present to their local certifying agencies.
Duration
Four and a half hours