Black History Month

Description

This workshop will provide educators with resources and ideas for Heritage Month programming. It will explore works by African-American artists such as Joshua Johnson, Jacob Lawrence, and Sam Gilliam. Each teacher will also receive an African-American Artists: Affirmation Today kit for their classroom.

Contact email
Sponsoring Organization
Smithsonian American Art Museum
Phone number
202-633-7970
Target Audience
K-12
Start Date
Cost
Free
Duration
Three hours

Teacher Workshop for Western States Educators

Description

This two-day workshop will bring up to 25 teachers from many western states schools to the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. Social studies and Language Arts teachers of grades 6-12 with five or fewer years of experience in teaching about the Holocaust are encouraged to apply. Educators from suburban and rural schools in these states are eligible: AK, AZ, CA, CO, HI, ID, MT, NV, NM, OR, UT, WA, WY.

Teachers will use the Museum's exhibitions as their primary classroom as they learn the history of this tragic human event. Museum staff and scholars will then assist participants in exploring questions of rationale, content, and methodology in teaching the Holocaust.

Contact name
Hansen, Sheila
Registration Deadline
Sponsoring Organization
United States Holocaust Memorial Museum
Phone number
605-645-1810
Target Audience
6-12
Start Date
Cost
Free
Contact Title
Regional Museum Educator
Duration
Two days
End Date

United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Teacher Fellowship Program

Description

The Museum Teacher Fellowship is developing a national corps of skilled secondary school educators and community college faculty who serve as leaders in Holocaust education in their schools, their colleges, their communities, and their professional organizations. Beginning in 2009, up to 15 educators in grades 7 through 12 and community college faculty will be designated as Museum Teacher Fellows. These educators must show evidence of extensive knowledge of Holocaust history, successful teaching experience, and participation in community and professional organizations. They will participate in a five-day, all-expense paid summer institute at the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington, DC designed to immerse participants in advanced historical and pedagogical issues. Following the summer institute, Fellows are expected to create and implement an outreach project in their schools, colleges, communities, or professional organizations. In July of the following year, Fellows will attend a follow-up program at the Museum to assess their various efforts and to continue their study of the Holocaust with Museum staff and noted speakers.

Sponsoring Organization
United States Holocaust Memorial Museum
Eligibility Requirements

Community college faculty and middle- and high-school history, social studies, foreign language, English, and journalism teachers, as well as librarians and instructional media specialists, are encouraged to apply for Museum Teacher Fellowships. Other content areas will also be considered. It is expected that applicants will have taught the Holocaust for a minimum of five years. Applicants must teach in United States schools.

Application Deadline
Award Amount
Participation in a five-day, all-expense paid summer institute at the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington, DC.
Location
Washington, DC

Civil War Preservation Trust Annual Conference

Description

This conference takes place on the fields of Gettysburg, offering tours, exhibits, lectures, and other events related to the site's Civil War history.

Sponsoring Organization
Civil War Preservation Trust
Contact email
Location
Gettysburg, PA
Contact name
Repasi, Bonnie
Phone number
800-298-7878
Start Date
End Date

Saturday Seminar: American Colonies

Description

This session features a talk from Pulitzer-Prize-winning historian Alan Taylor and lessons created and demonstrated by three teachers.

Contact name
Garcia, Nichole
Contact email
Sponsoring Organization
California History-Social Science Project
Phone number
1 530-752-4383
Target Audience
4, 5, 8
Start Date
Duration
Three and a half hours

Jacob Riis and Progressive Reform

Description

This workshop addresses the questions "In what ways is Jacob Riis's How the Other Half Lives a document of progressive reform?," "What does How the Other Half Lives tell us about urbanization and immigration?," and "How does Riis use photography in How the Other Half Lives?"

The Center's online resource workshops give high school teachers of U.S. history and American literature a deeper understanding of their subject matter. They introduce teachers to fresh texts and critical perspectives and help teachers integrate them into their lessons. Led by distinguished scholars and running 60 to 90 minutes, they are conducted through lecture and discussion using conferencing software. A resource workshop identifies central themes within a topic and explores ways to teach them through the close analysis of primary texts, including works of art, and the use of discussion questions. Texts are drawn from anthologies in the Center's Toolbox Library. To participate, all that is needed is a computer with an internet connection, a speaker, and a microphone.

Contact name
Schramm, Richard R.
Registration Deadline
Sponsoring Organization
National Humanities Center
Target Audience
High school
Start Date
Cost
$35
Course Credit
The National Humanities Center will supply documentation for certificate renewal credit.
Contact Title
Vice President for Education Programs
Duration
One and a half hours

AHA and NHEC K-12 Teacher Workshop

Description

This workshop, organized by the American Historical Association and the National History Education Clearinghouse, will offer sessions including "Colonial Beginnings to Early Republic," "Teaching with Textbooks," "National History Education Clearinghouse Introduction," "FDR and ER: Using Documents to Tell Their Story," and "Many Movements: Teaching Black Freedom Struggles from WWII to the 1960s." A box lunch will be provided, accompanied by a talk, "Inverting Bloom's Taxonomy: What's Basic When Reading History?" by Sam Wineburg, Stanford University.

Registration Deadline
Sponsoring Organization
American Historical Association; National History Education Clearinghouse
Phone number
202-544-2422
Target Audience
K-12
Start Date
Duration
Eight and a half hours

American Historical Association Annual Meeting

Description

The theme for this conference is Globalizing Historiography. The program includes over 200 sessions, encompassing the varied geographical, chronological, and topical interest of historians today, as well as a special series of sessions on teaching sponsored by the AHA and affiliated societies. A Teaching Workshop for the National History Education Clearinghouse will be held on Jan. 3. This workshop is specifically designed for K–12 teachers and will have a variety of speakers and presentations, as well as lunch provided. Workshop registration must be done in advance.

Sponsoring Organization
American Historical Association
Location
New York, NY
Start Date
End Date
Registration Deadline

There is No Place like Home: Integrating Local History into the 4th-11th Grade Social Studies Program

Description

This conference will cover topics including "Why Study Local History?," "NYS Standards and Local History," "How Can the Lower Hudson Valley Be Used as a Resource?," "Transportation and the Westchester Ecology," "Hudson River Art: Window into the American Culture," "Queen City of the Sound," "Integrating Local History Resources into the Classroom, The Somers Experience," "The Mourning Bell: The Bell President-Elect Lincoln Rung," and "The Queen City and the Classroom."

Sponsoring Organization
Westchester/Lower Hudson Council for the Social Studies; Manhattanville College
Contact email
Location
Purchase, NY
Contact name
Feinman, Peter
Phone number
1 914-933-0440
Start Date

Annual Greater Metropolitan New York Social Studies Conference

Description

The mission of the Association of Teachers of Social Studies/United Federation of Teachers is to provide a network wherein social studies educators and other related professionals can advocate for social studies education and share scholarship, information, strategies, and practices related to those issues that are both important and relevant to social studies instruction. This conference is the organization's annual meeting.

Sponsoring Organization
Association Teachers of Social Studies
Contact email
Location
New York, NY
Contact name
Dytell, Robert (email)
Contact Title
Conference Chairperson
Phone number
212-510-6389
Start Date
Submission Deadline