The Gilded and Gritty: America, 1870-1912

Description

Constructed around an online "toolbox" of texts and documents collected at the National Humanities Center in Research Triangle Park, North Carolina, participants in this seminar will discuss four themes that are central to the Gilded Age: City and Country, focusing on Arcadian mythology, urban realism, and nostalgia; Citizens and Others, especially immigrants, African Americans, and children; Work and Leisure, especially craft, industrialization, and consumerism; and Politics and the State, including party culture, populism, and progressivism. Within each thematic unit, participants will be searching for characteristic sensibilities of the age, as manifest in public life, literature, and/or the arts. Across the discussions, they will try to identify those documents, questions, and exercises that might best enliven their own classrooms.

Contact name
Rooney, Rachel
Sponsoring Organization
Newberry Library
Phone number
312-255-3569
Target Audience
K-12
Start Date
Cost
Free
Course Credit
Participants receive 10 CPDUs credit hours towards their State of Illinois certification renewal.
Contact Title
Director
Duration
Two days
End Date

Problem-Based Learning in the Social Studies

Description

This workshop will use resources from the Buck Institute and others to focus on both the theory and implementation of Problem-Based Learning (PBL).

Who killed the Iceman? What really happened at the Battle of the Little Big Horn? What became of the lost colony of Roanoke? Who was the Man in the Iron Mask? How did Cortez conquer the Aztecs? Teachers can use these and mysteries like them to focus student attention AND meet state standards. This workshop will provide resources, examples, and time to begin constructing a history mystery unit.

Contact name
Pam
Sponsoring Organization
Educational Services and Staff Development Association of Central Kansas (ESSDACK)
Phone number
620-663-9566
Target Audience
5-12
Start Date
Cost
$120 for non-ESSDACK members; $60.00 for members; $90.00 for Associate Members
Duration
Seven hours

The Junior Ranger Experience

Description

In this workshop, teachers will get a chance to watch children participate in educational activities based on Stones River National Battlefield's curriculum-based lesson plans. Educators will also learn about the National Park Service's Junior Ranger and Web Ranger programs so that they can encourage their students to explore and learn from Stones River National Battlefield and other national parks on their own.

Contact name
McKay, John
Sponsoring Organization
Stones River National Battlefield
Phone number
615-893-9501
Target Audience
PreK-6
Start Date
Contact Title
Education Coordinator
Duration
Three hours

One-day Teacher Institute on Abraham Lincoln

Description

This institute invites educators from across the country to learn about Abraham Lincoln through the Library of Congress's primary and web-based materials. Participants will leave with strategies and materials they can use in their schools. The institute uses the Library's exhibition "With Malice Toward None: The Abraham Lincoln Bicentennial Exhibition" as its foundation.

Contact name
Mordan, Susan
Sponsoring Organization
Library of Congress
Phone number
202-707-9203
Target Audience
K-12
Start Date
Duration
Seven hours

One-day Teacher Institute on Abraham Lincoln

Description

This institute invites educators from across the country to learn about Abraham Lincoln through the Library of Congress's primary and web-based materials. Participants will leave with strategies and materials they can use in their schools. The institute uses the Library's exhibition "With Malice Toward None: The Abraham Lincoln Bicentennial Exhibition" as its foundation.

Contact name
Mordan, Susan
Sponsoring Organization
Library of Congress
Phone number
202-707-9203
Target Audience
K-12
Start Date
Duration
Seven hours

One-day Teacher Institute on Abraham Lincoln

Description

This institute invites educators from across the country to learn about Abraham Lincoln through the Library of Congress's primary and web-based materials. Participants will leave with strategies and materials they can use in their schools. The institute uses the Library's exhibition "With Malice Toward None: The Abraham Lincoln Bicentennial Exhibition" as its foundation.

Contact name
Mordan, Susan
Sponsoring Organization
Library of Congress
Phone number
202-707-9203
Target Audience
K-12
Start Date
Contact Title
202-707-9203
Duration
Seven hours

Invest in Teachers Grant

Description

Teachers affect the growth and development of every citizen in the United States. However, North Carolina schools have been asked to return $58 million to the state, and as schools tighten their budgets teacher professional development is often the first item cut. Thanks to a variety of partnerships, the LEARN NC Invest in Teachers Grant will award several grants ranging from $5,000 to $50,000, accompanied by an additional 50 percent match from the winning schools, so teachers will still receive the training and support they need to help their students succeed in the classroom and in life. Grant funds must be used for LEARN NC online professional development.

Sponsoring Organization
Learn NC
Eligibility Requirements

Applications must be accompanied by a letter of support from an authorized school or LEA officer, printed on official letterhead; grant winners are expected to add a 50 percent match to all awarded funds; grant funds must be used for LEARN NC online professional development; preference will be given to schools in the rural low-income school program, as defined by the United States Department of Education for the 2008 fiscal year.

Application Deadline
Award Amount
$5,000-$50,000
Location
NC

School House to White House: The Education of Presidents

Description

Like other citizens, U.S. Presidents attended elementary and secondary schools and then college. They went to classes; did their homework; joined clubs; participated in band, debate, and sports; worked on newspaper staffs; and ran for class office. The Harry S. Truman Library and Museum will host the National Archives traveling exhibit, "School House to White House: The Education of Presidents." Visitors journey back to the schooldays of the 20th-century presidents through photographs, archival materials, and museum objects revealing fascinating detail about the children who would one day grow up to be President of the United States. In conjunction with this exhibit, a teacher workshop will be held. Educators from four Presidential Libraries (Hoover, Truman, Eisenhower, and Clinton) will share information and teaching activities for use in the classroom.

Contact name
Heuertz, Tom
Contact email
Registration Deadline
Sponsoring Organization
Harry S. Truman Library and Museum
Phone number
816-268-8241
Target Audience
K-12
Start Date
Cost
$25
Duration
Six hours

Schoodic Education Adventure Residential Program

Description

Participants in this program join Acadia National Park staff for the Schoodic Education Adventure (SEA). Educators bring their 4th through 8th grade students to this three- or four-day residential program at the Schoodic Education and Research Center in Winter Harbor, Maine.

Curriculum-based classroom activities and hands-on field experience offer an invaluable learning experience in a unique setting. Situated on the rugged coast of Maine, the campus is accessible to shoreline, wetland, and forest ecosystems and provides a rich educational environment for students.

The SEA program is aligned with Maine State Learning Results and integrated across the curriculum. Opportunities for study include math, social studies, language arts, physical education, science, technology, health, and art. The program combines curriculum-based classroom activities
and hands-on field experience taught by both park rangers and teachers.

To attend the Schoodic Education Adventure, teachers can apply as early as the preceding fall, but no later than May in the spring before they plan to come. The program is offered in the fall from mid-September to mid-November.

Contact name
Petrie, Kate
Contact email
Registration Deadline
Sponsoring Organization
Acadia National Park
Phone number
207-288-8808
Target Audience
4-8
Cost
$50 for a three-day program and $75 for four-day program (per participant; some chaperones are free, based on group size).
Contact Title
SEA Director
Duration
Three to four days

American Indians in the United States

Description

Participants in this course will discover American Indian history in the United States from the earliest evidence of human habitation through first contact with Europeans, conflicts in the West, World War II and other key events in 20th-century U.S. history, the American Indian rights movement, and into the present day.

Archaeological finds, traditional stories, the writings of early European explorers, government documents and treaties, oral histories, photographs, the arts, newspaper articles, and more will enrich exploration of key issues in Native American history nationwide.

The course will proceed chronologically. Within each topical module participants will have the opportunity to choose from several different geographically grouped assignments, allowing them to customize their own learning experience based on their interests, the demands of the curriculum, and their own priorities for teaching American Indian history.

For example, in any given unit, they may choose to focus on the Southwest, the Pacific Northwest, the Great Plains, the Northeast, or the Southeast. They may either follow one geographical track throughout the course or mix up their selections to allow for a broader view of American Indian history.

Sponsoring Organization
Learn NC
Target Audience
K-12
Start Date
Cost
$225
Course Credit
3.0 CEUs
Duration
Eight weeks