Clarice Smith National Teacher Institute

Description

In this institute, educators will join colleagues from across the country for a unique opportunity to collaborate with art experts and leading technology professionals. Through gallery talks, lectures, discussion groups, and hands-on activities, they will study the social context of American art. As part of an interdisciplinary team, they will share models for integrating art across the curriculum using technology, such as podcasting and blogs.

The institute is open to educator teams of two to three members, each representing a different subject area (i.e., language arts, social studies, science, math, etc.), from the same school or district. Each team member must be a full-time educator working in grades 4–12 in a public, private, or parochial school.

Registration Deadline
Sponsoring Organization
Smithsonian Museum of American Art
Target Audience
4-12
Start Date
Cost
$200
Duration
Five days
End Date

Developing Cartographic Literacy with Historic Maps

Description

This 3-week seminar led by James Akerman (The Newberry Library) and Gerald Danzer (Emeritus, The University of Illinois at Chicago) is designed to develop cartographic literacy and encourage effective use of map documents in the classroom through study in the history of cartography. A program of seminars based on recent scholarship in the history of cartography and guided individual research will allow teachers to explore the relevance of map study to their own interests and curricular needs. Workshops will serve as forums for refining and applying the skills necessary to read maps as products of science, artistic creations, storytellers, wayfinding tools, and expressions of power; and as representations of worldviews and local landscapes.

Contact name
Frank, Sarah
Contact email
Registration Deadline
Sponsoring Organization
Newberry Library
Phone number
312-255-3659
Target Audience
K-12
Start Date
Cost
Free; $2,600 stipend
Contact Title
Program Assistant
Duration
Nineteen days
End Date

Women's Suffrage on the Western Frontier

Description

This workshop offers academic content about place-based western history and women's suffrage on the western frontier, juxtaposed with myths of the West and contemporary women's issues in the West. It affords opportunities to engage in study and conversation with leading scholars; an introduction to four forms of primary historical sources—the built environment, artifacts, government records, and private papers—all of which have application in all history classrooms; and networking with other social studies, history, English, and other subject matter teachers, librarians, and media specialists, from grades K–12, representing a variety of states.

Contact name
Bricher-Wade, Sheila
Contact email
Registration Deadline
Sponsoring Organization
American Heritage Center; College of Education, University of Wyoming; Wyoming Humanities Council
Phone number
307-721-9246
Target Audience
K-12
Start Date
Cost
Free; $750 stipend
Duration
Six days
End Date

Partisans and Redcoats: The American Revolution in the Southern Backcountry

Description

This one-week workshop provides teachers with fresh perspectives on the complex dynamics of the American Revolution in the Southern backcountry, a place where longstanding hostilities between American settlers erupted into a full-scale civil war between Loyalists and Patriots. This program will make use of the rich historical resources in upstate South Carolina. Participants will visit Walnut Grove Plantation and the living history museum at Historic Brattonsville in order to better understand day-to-day life in the backcountry at the time of the Revolution. Then they will tour the battlefields at Kings Mountain, Cowpens, and Ninety-Six to learn more about the nature of backcountry warfare. They will also explore the ways that art, archaeological evidence, and material culture can help increase student engagement with the subject matter. They will examine the war's impact on the region's white women and on its free and enslaved African Americans. A veteran history teacher will serve as master teacher for the workshop, advising participants on ways they can use the content and resources they gain at the workshop in their own classrooms.

Contact name
Walker, Melissa; Woodfin, Edward
Contact email
Registration Deadline
Sponsoring Organization
Converse College
Phone number
864-596-9104
Target Audience
K-12
Start Date
Cost
Free; $750 stipend
Duration
Six days
End Date

Partisans and Redcoats: The American Revolution in the Southern Backcountry

Description

This one-week workshop provides teachers with fresh perspectives on the complex dynamics of the American Revolution in the Southern backcountry, a place where longstanding hostilities between American settlers erupted into a full-scale civil war between Loyalists and Patriots. This program will make use of the rich historical resources in upstate South Carolina. Participants will visit Walnut Grove Plantation and the living history museum at Historic Brattonsville in order to better understand day-to-day life in the backcountry at the time of the Revolution. Then they will tour the battlefields at Kings Mountain, Cowpens, and Ninety-Six to learn more about the nature of backcountry warfare. They will also explore the ways that art, archaeological evidence, and material culture can help increase student engagement with the subject matter. They will examine the war's impact on the region's white women and on its free and enslaved African Americans. A veteran history teacher will serve as master teacher for the workshop, advising participants on ways they can use the content and resources they gain at the workshop in their own classrooms.

Contact name
Walker, Melissa; Woodfin, Edward
Contact email
Registration Deadline
Sponsoring Organization
Converse College
Phone number
864-596-9104
Target Audience
K-12
Start Date
Cost
Free; $750 stipend
Duration
Six days
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

Hatton W. Sumners Institute

Description

The institute is divided into three levels, as follows:

101: This 40-hour training begins with an in-depth study of the Declaration of Independence. Participants will then be taken through the ancient and European origins of the U.S. Constitution, followed by the American origins. The training will continue with a famous Federalist debating a famous Anti-Federalist over whether a New York State convention should vote to ratify the Constitution in 1788.

Then attending teachers will be taken on a walk through the seven articles of the Constitution. The remainder of the time will be spent studying the First Amendment and famous Supreme Court cases on the First Amendment, including the current term cases.

The agenda is divided into blocks of time spent with scholars, followed by break-out sessions where activities are demonstrated on the curriculum covered in the scholar sessions.

201: Available to those teachers who have completed the 101 session, the advanced session begins with a look at the "Ladder of the Bill of Rights." The remainder of the three-day, 18-hour institute is spent studying Amendments Two through 10, along with Supreme Court cases decided under each of these amendments. Break-out sessions follow each scholar session with activities on the Bill of Rights.

301: The one-day, seven-hour Update Session is available to those teachers who have previously attended both 101 and 201. Participants will spend most of the time discussing Supreme Court cases that have been decided during the past few years with the scholars. They will also receive a new activity guide, which includes lessons on Federalism and writing.

Contact name
Greenwood, Yvonne
Contact email
Sponsoring Organization
Law Focused Education, Inc.
Phone number
800-204-2222
Target Audience
3-12
Start Date
Course Credit
The State Board for Educator Certification approves the institute for continuing education credit for teacher certification, and optional graduate credit is available through the University of St. Thomas in either Political Science or Education.
Contact Title
Coordinator
Duration
Five days
End Date

The Political Theory of Hannah Arendt: The Problem of Evil and the Origins of Totalitarianism

Description

The seminar will explore several key works by the political theorist, Hannah Arendt: Eichmann in Jerusalem, The Origins of Totalitarianism, and The Human Condition. These works shed light on the problem of evil and the use of terror in the contemporary age, and provide a philosophical perspective on current debates about the use of violence to settle political conflicts, about the conditions of democracy, and about the scope and importance of human rights.

Contact name
Arias, Simone
Contact email
Registration Deadline
Sponsoring Organization
San Diego State University
Target Audience
K-12
Start Date
Cost
Free; $4,400 stipend
Duration
Thirty-nine days
End Date

Women's Suffrage on the Western Frontier

Description

This workshop offers academic content about place-based western history and women's suffrage on the western frontier juxtaposed with myths of the West and contemporary women's issues in the West.

It affords opportunities to engage in study and conversation with leading scholars; an introduction to four forms of primary historical sources—the built environment, artifacts, government records, and private papers—all of which have application in all history classrooms; and networking with other social studies, history, English, and other subject matter teachers, librarians, and media specialists, from grades K–12, representing a variety of states.

Contact name
Bricher-Wade, Sheila
Contact email
Registration Deadline
Sponsoring Organization
American Heritage Center; College of Education, University of Wyoming; Wyoming Humanities Council
Phone number
307-721-9246
Target Audience
K-12
Start Date
Cost
Free; $750 stipend
Duration
Six days
End Date