Podstock

Description

Podstock is a new conference designed to bring podcast creators and those who see the real value of podcasting as creators and consumers together. The conference will include breakout sessions on podcasting for beginners, as well as sessions for and by seasoned pros. It will explore podcasting as well as many other Web 2.0 tools that can enhance learning and communication.

Sponsoring Organization
Educational Services and Staff Development Association of Central Kansas
Location
Wichita, KS
Start Date
End Date

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

Signature Conference: America on the Eve of the Civil War

Description

This conference will bring together nationally-recognized Civil War historians for an open dialogue about the state of the country in 1859. What was happening two years before the firing of the first shots in the nation's deadliest conflict? What did people know and what were they thinking? Could they possibly have imagined the horror that was to come?

"America on the Eve of the Civil War" brings a fresh perspective on enduring issues. The program will be conducted in an interactive format with speakers from varied perspectives. Akin to news programs like "Face the Nation" and "Meet the Press," speakers will discuss events of 1859 and their effect, limiting themselves only to what would have been known at that time.

The focus of the conference will be the situation in the United States in what turned out to be the eve of the Civil War, including central events and changes of the late antebellum era.

Sponsoring Organization
Virginia Sesquicentennial of the American Civil War Commission
Location
Richmond, VA
Phone number
804-786-3591
Start Date

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

The Civil Rights Movement in Context

Description

Too often, students view Civil Rights in isolation—they do not understand the rich historical background of African American history or the legacies of the movement in the more recent past. They often know some of the major civil rights figures like Martin Luther King, Jr. or Rosa Parks, but they do not grasp the complexities of civil rights leadership, or the experience of the movement's foot soldiers—the students in SNCC, the freedom riders, or the everyday people who marched, boycotted, protested, and volunteered to make the movement happen. This course will try to explore the movement from all of these perspectives using, where possible, firsthand accounts from the people who lived this important history.

The instructor will assume that the main historical outlines of the movement are familiar to K–12 teachers—instead of recounting that basic history, participants will spend much of the time delving into lesser-studied events of the movement and the primary sources that will allow them to explore their own ideas about the movement and its meanings in detail.

This course will allow for the opportunity for deep historical analysis and interpretation using primary sources. The best way to learn history is by doing history. Participants will tackle documents, images, newspaper accounts, artistic expressions, film, and other sources. By doing so, they will develop their own arguments and ideas about the movement, and help future students do the same. Many of the resources participants will use have been recently added to the internet and they should be exciting additions to the course, and to historical scholarship more broadly. As participants mine these sources, they will hopefully enjoy the historical process and also get some great ideas for classroom activities for their students.

The instructor has selected websites and multimedia resources that will give participating teachers access to literally thousands of documents including newspaper accounts, oral history interviews, government documents, photographs, works of art, film clips, and more. Participants will have the opportunity to analyze these sources through engaging activities to create a lesson plan for classroom use; to receive individualized, constructive feedback and answers to content-oriented questions from a well-versed instructor; and to join other teachers from across the state in lively online discussions throughout the course.

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

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

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

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