Special Sculpture Workshop for Teachers

Description

Hands-on lesson plans in art can enrich the teaching of history, mathematics, or language arts. Teachers can create a design for a new coin, a portrait relief, or a figure in the round, and then teach their own students how art plays a part in portraying history, building national pride, and celebrating our heritage. Through firsthand artistic process, teachers and students form a personal connection to concepts, people, and events in history. The workshop will begin with a discussion and an introduction to the sculpture of Augustus Saint-Gaudens and the sculpture process, with an emphasis on the design of coinage. Participants will then proceed to the studio area to begin work. There will be approximately 2 ½ hours of studio time, with an optional viewing of the film, "The Medal Maker: Master Sculptor Laura Gardin Fraser." The film details the complete process of medallic art and can be used in the classroom as a pre- or post-lesson to a class visit to Saint-Gaudens. The workshop will include small group discussions focused on integration of the sculpture process into your current curriculum and the state standards addressed by including sculpture in your lesson plans.

Registration Deadline
Sponsoring Organization
Saint-Gaudens National Historic Site
Phone number
1 603-675-2175
Target Audience
PreK-12
Start Date
Cost
$40
Course Credit
Certificate for 5 contact hours is available as continuing education.
Duration
One day

Parkin Archaeological State Park Teacher Workshop

Description

Parkin State Park interpreters are continually developing new and exciting educational programs for groups who visit Parkin Archeological State Park and nearby Village Creek State Park. Teachers spend the day exploring these two sites by participating in educational programs and activities and earn 6 in-service credit hours. Each teacher will receive information packets on the resources available for teacher and classrooms.

Contact email
Sponsoring Organization
Parkin Archaeological State Park
Phone number
1 870-755-2500
Target Audience
PK-12
Start Date
Cost
TBA
Course Credit
Participants earn 6 in-service credit hours.
Duration
One day

Conference on Illinois History

Description

The Conference is the state's largest meeting devoted to the history of the Prairie State. This is the ninth year of the conference, which is sponsored by the Illinois Historic Preservation Agency. The conference will feature topics that include politics, geography, community studies, Abraham Lincoln, African-American history, and the Civil War. Teachers will benefit from workshops on a variety of topics. All teacher workshop sessions are approved for Continuing Professional Development Units (CPDUs).

Sponsoring Organization
Illinois Historic Preservation Agency
Location
Springfield, IL
Contact name
Lawrence, Donna
Phone number
1 217-785-7933
Start Date
End Date
Registration Deadline

Great Lakes Maritime Education Workshop

Description

Participants will step back in time to a simpler life on uninhabited St. Helena Island. Participants will be immersed in the life and times of Great Lakes lighthouse keepers, including history, culture, and songs. Educators and youth leaders will sleep in the lighthouse bedrooms, cook with each other in the summer kitchen, and keep watch on the lantern deck as lighthouse families did 100 years ago. Activity classes, all based on the Michigan State Standards, offer the participant a means to integrate real world Great Lakes concepts into their classrooms. Some examples of these activities include topographical mapping, lens/prism and sound technology, use of primary reference materials, storytelling, journal entry, and decision making, to name just a few.

Contact email
Sponsoring Organization
Great Lakes Lighthouse Keepers Association
Phone number
1 231-436-5580
Target Audience
K-12
Start Date
Cost
$275
Course Credit
For additional fees, Central Michigan University will offer 2 graduate credit hours and the Eastern UP ISD will offer 2.7 SB-CEUs.
Duration
Five days
End Date

Save Our History Grants

Description

Museums, historic sites, historical societies, preservation organizations, libraries, and archives are invited to partner with a local school or youth group and apply for funding to help preserve the history of their communities. Each year, The History Channel awards grants of up to $10,000 to organizations across the country that partner with schools or youth groups on community preservation projects that engage students in learning about, documenting, and preserving the history of their communities.

Sponsoring Organization
History Channel
Eligibility Requirements

Organization Requirements:

Eligible applicants are required to be nonprofit 501(c)(3) history organizations such as a museum, historical society, preservation organization, historic site, library, archive, or other history organization.

Applicant organizations must be located in one of the 50 states or the District of Columbia.

Other eligible applicants include local government agencies such as a parks and recreation commission, historic commission, department of local history, or other local government agency that owns and/or operates a historic site or property.

Eligible applicants must partner with a local elementary, middle, or high school, or an organization that provides educational programming for children of similar ages. Applicants may partner with multiple schools or educational organizations.

Eligible applicants must submit the application on behalf of their partner school(s) or educational organization(s) as the school(s) or educational organization(s) are not eligible to be the applicant

Organizations that have received a Save Our History grant in the last three years are not eligible to apply.

Criteria:

The Save Our History Grant Review Panel will judge submitted applications based on the following three key criteria:

Proposed projects must focus on exploring and preserving a significant aspect of community history. Projects might focus on the history and/or efforts to help preserve a neighborhood, building, cemetery, historic site, historic collections, or an historic event or tradition that is important to the local community. The project could include primary research, physical preservation or clean-up efforts, historical documentation, archaeological or architectural studies, oral histories, exhibits, efforts to register or advocate for a site for national, state, or local historic landmark status, etc.

Proposed projects must raise awareness among students and community members about the significance of their local heritage and the importance of preserving it.

Proposed projects must include a tangible resource that captures students' effort to learn about and preserve their local history in a unique, creative way.
While applicants can include multiple tangible resources, one resource that creatively captures the project objective is sufficient. Resources can include an exhibit, a notebook, research documentation, a photo or video documentary, a map, pamphlet, walking/driving tour, oral history, historical marker, podcast, etc.

Application Deadline
Award Amount
Up to $10,000

Richard M. Farrell Teacher of Merit Award

Description

The Richard M. Farrell Teacher of Merit Award is awarded annually to an educator who uses the National History Day program as part of the curriculum.

Sponsoring Organization
National History Day
Eligibility Requirements

To be eligible, a teacher must be a participant in the National History Day program and be nominated by the state History Day coordinator. The evaluation criteria are as follows:

Development and use of creative teaching methods that interest students in history and help them make exciting discoveries about the past. Examples could include active learning projects, such as mock debates or oral history projects; innovative use of primary sources; integrated communication technology in history research and classroom learning; teaching methods which link history to students' broader interests (e.g., using interdisciplinary approaches to historical topics by developing projects which link history to current events, debates, and issues); or the use of teaching methods which build a range of skills in students as they study history.

Exemplary commitment to helping students develop their interest in history and recognize their achievements. Examples could include exemplary support and guidance for students working on History Day projects; assistance in helping students showcase their history projects within the community and/or publish their material; overall commitment to the intellectual development of individual students; or encouragement of student to use their understanding of history to become engaged, informed citizens in their community and beyond.

Application Deadline
Award Amount
$1,000
Location
College Park, MD

History Channel Outstanding History Educator Award

Description

The History Channel Outstanding History Educator Award is given annually to an educator who has made an exceptional contribution to history education through the National History Day program.

Sponsoring Organization
History Channel; National History Day
Eligibility Requirements

To be eligible, the nominee must be a participant in the National History Day program and may be a teacher, media specialist, district or state National History Day coordinator, judge or parent. Nominees will be evaluated on the following criteria:

1. Success in involving students in the program at the district, state, and national levels. The committee especially welcomes individuals who work within diverse communities.

2. Service to the History Day program at all levels of the contests. Examples could include: mentoring new History Day teachers, judging, fund raising, publication of History Day materials, or strengthening the History Day community within a state or at the national level.

3. Service to the discipline of history in general. Examples could include: Involvement in community projects that enhance people's understanding and appreciation of history at the local level and beyond; creative teaching in the classroom which helps students develop an appreciation of history; collection of resources for history research in one's community or state; publication of history lesson plans; or publication in professional journals of interest to history teachers and educators generally.

4. Professional development. Examples could include: presentation at workshops, special courses or institutes, or publications.

Application Deadline
Award Amount
$5,000
Location
College Park, MD

Integrating Field Research Activities into Your Classroom Curricula

Description

Integrate field research activities into your classroom curricula with the Schoodic Education Adventure program. Join us for two- and three-day workshops as we investigate opportunities to collect field data, apply it to classroom lessons across the curricula, and connect it to real-world applications in America’s national parks. Workshop activities highlight studies of forest community structure, marine biodiversity, geology, soil development, and New England history.

Contact name
Kate Petrie
Sponsoring Organization
Acadia National Park
Target Audience
4-8
Start Date
Cost
$225
Course Credit
CEUs arranged through the University of Maine
Duration
Two days
End Date

Integrating Field Research Activities into Your Classroom Curricula

Description

Integrate field research activities into your classroom curricula with the Schoodic Education Adventure program. Join us for two- and three-day workshops as we investigate opportunities to collect field data, apply it to classroom lessons across the curricula, and connect it to real-world applications in America’s national parks. Workshop activities highlight studies of forest community structure, marine biodiversity, geology, soil development, and New England history.

Contact name
Kate Petrie
Sponsoring Organization
Acadia National Park
Target Audience
4-8
Start Date
Cost
$225
Course Credit
CEUs arranged through the University of Maine
Duration
Two days
End Date

Integrating Field Research Activities into Your Classroom Curricula

Description

Integrate field research activities into your classroom curricula with the Schoodic Education Adventure program. Join us for two- and three-day workshops as we investigate opportunities to collect field data, apply it to classroom lessons across the curricula, and connect it to real-world applications in America’s national parks. Workshop activities highlight studies of forest community structure, marine biodiversity, geology, soil development, and New England history.

Contact name
Kate Petrie
Sponsoring Organization
Acadia National Park
Target Audience
4-8
Start Date
Cost
$225
Course Credit
CEUs arranged through the University of Maine
Duration
Two days
End Date