African American History to 1950

Description

Participants in this course will examine African American history in the contexts of United States, North Carolina, and world history. They will begin by connecting the experiences of African Americans in early U.S. history to the histories and cultures of the African communities of their ancestors and will follow those cultural connections between Africa and the United States throughout the course.

Course topics include African Americans in the colonies and the early Republic, the Middle Passage, American slavery and the experiences of free African Americans in the antebellum period, the abolition movement, the Civil War and Reconstruction, Jim Crow, the Great Migration, the Harlem Renaissance, and the experiences of African Americans during World War I, the Great Depression, and World War II. Throughout the course, participants will discuss African American activism through churches, political organizations, and communities and discover African American culture through art, music, and other cultural forms.

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

e-Learning for Educators: Integrating Primary Sources into the Social Studies Classroom

Description

Participants in this online course will discover the wealth of web-based primary research and active learning resources available to social studies teachers of all grade levels. They will explore an array of primary and secondary resources including collections of original documents, vast reservoirs of secondary historical information, and online resources designed to support social studies teachers in curriculum development. They will consider effective research strategies and engage in critical analysis of web resources. In addition, they will learn to develop a personal collection of web-based resources for curricular use, as well as create preliminary plans to enhance a curriculum unit.

Sponsoring Organization
Learn NC
Target Audience
K-12
Start Date
Cost
$50
Course Credit
2.0 CEUs
Duration
Seven weeks

American Association for History and Computing Annual Conference

Description

What frontiers in digital history are we only beginning to explore, or have yet to explore? What promising but under-utilized tools, techniques, and ideas exist in digital media that can help us do better history? At this conference, the American Association for History and Computing invites lively discussion about the frontiers in doing history with digital media. This conference will be of interest to anyone charting new territory in digital history—both online and in the academic and public worlds.

Sponsoring Organization
American Association for History and Computing
Contact email
Location
Fairfax, VA
Contact name
Boggs, Jeremy
Start Date
End Date
Submission Deadline

Annual Prize of the Use of Full-text Sources on "Women and Social Movements in the United States, 1600-2000"

Description

"Woman and Social Movements in the United States, 1600-2000" offers an annual $500 prize for the best scholarly or classroom use of the website's full-text sources.

Sponsoring Organization
Women and Social Movements
Eligibility Requirements

Submissions for the 2009 Annual Prize should take one of the following forms: (1) a scholarly article of not more than 10,000 words, (2) a bibliographic essay illuminating the sources, (3) a document project, or (4) a class project.

Application Deadline
Award Amount
$500

Robert E. Lee Symposium on Civil War History

Description

Stratford Hall, the home of the Lees of Virginia and birthplace of Robert E. Lee, hosts its first symposium dedicated to the further study of General Robert E. Lee and various issues relating to the American Civil War. This program includes tours of the nearby Fredericksburg, Wilderness, and Spotsylvania Battlefields, some of the bloodiest combat of the Civil War.

Historians Peter Carmichael, Aaron Sheehan-Dean, and Elizabeth Brown Pryor will lead the group. The focus is on Robert E. Lee as a general, the use of primary documents in uncovering new dimensions to Civil War personalities, and the importance of the Fredericksburg and Overland Campaigns.

Contact name
Lawfer, Laura
Sponsoring Organization
Stratford Hall
Phone number
804-493-8038
Target Audience
K-12
Start Date
Contact Title
Assistant Director of Education
Duration
Three days
End Date

Lincoln and the South

Description

Probably no president has ever been as vilified as Abraham Lincoln was in the South during the Civil War. At this conference, outstanding scholars on the subject will convene to discuss this bitter relationship.

Sponsoring Organization
American Civil War Center
Contact email
Location
Richmond, VA
Phone number
804-780-1865
Start Date
End Date

Brushes with History: Painting Materials, Methods and Artists, 1700-1850

Description

Scholarship on American art of the 18th and 19th centuries has proliferated dramatically in the last decade and yet very little has been written on the materials, methods, and settings of painting. This one-day event will delve into some of the workshops, studios, schoolrooms, and parlors where New Englanders of all kinds used a wide variety of materials, such as pencil and pigments on canvas, silk, glass, wood, and tin to create painted images and decorations for themselves, for sale, and for public display. Participants will learn about the daily lives of New England's diverse artists and artisans and the painted objects—from studio art to school girl art and painted decorative arts—that they produced and distributed between 1700 and 1850.

Sponsoring Organization
Historic Deerfield
Phone number
413-775-7209
Target Audience
K-12
Start Date
Duration
Nine hours

Brewing History: An Interdisciplinary Teacher Workshop on Chocolate in New England

Description

Participants in this workshop will learn about the role of chocolate in colonial America. Topics include cacao and rainforest ecology, world trade, the role of chocolate in the colonial diet, and military uses of chocolate. The day includes a presentation of the new exhibition "Stimulating Beverages: Tea, Coffee, and Chocolate Wares at Historic Deerfield," an open-hearth cooking demonstration, and a tasting of American Heritage Chocolate® Finely Grated Chocolate Drink, which captures the form and flavor of historic chocolate.

Contact name
Carlson, Claire
Registration Deadline
Sponsoring Organization
Historic Deerfield
Phone number
413-775-7217
Target Audience
K-12
Start Date
Cost
Free
Course Credit
Education materials and PDPs awarded.
Duration
Five and a half hours

Brewing History: An Interdisciplinary Teacher Workshop on Tea in New England

Description

Today a common beverage worldwide, tea was once a precious imported commodity. This presentation will introduce the geographic and botanical origins of tea, the role of trade in bringing tea from China to Western consumers, the social and cultural role of tea in 18th-century New England, and the period equipment and furnishings commonly used to prepare and serve tea in a place such as Deerfield, Massachusetts. The day includes a presentation, a tour of the new exhibition "Stimulating Beverages: Tea, Coffee, and Chocolate Wares at Historic Deerfield," a house tour, and a serving of tea.

Contact name
Carlson, Claire
Registration Deadline
Sponsoring Organization
Historic Deerfield
Phone number
413-775-7217
Target Audience
K-12
Start Date
Cost
Free
Course Credit
Education materials and PDPs awarded.
Duration
Five and a half hours

Abraham Lincoln: A Man for His Time and a Man for All Times

Description

This workshop will be structured to enhance teacher knowledge of Abraham Lincoln's significance in American history and will include pedagogical skills. It will include morning lectures by Thomas Krannawitter, of Hillsdale College and author of Vindicating Lincoln, and afternoon sessions, by John Rodahl of the Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History, devoted to strategies for lesson planning, classroom activities, and student engagement.

Sponsoring Organization
Challenge of Freedom Project
Target Audience
K-12
Start Date
Duration
Two days
End Date