The U.S. Constitution and American History

Description

This professional development opportunity will bring Texas teachers together with leading scholars to explore important constitutional issues in our nation's history. The program offers teachers the opportunity to work with leading scholars of U.S. history, political science, and law and share strategies for teaching with primary sources.

Contact name
Barger, Liz Bohman
Registration Deadline
Sponsoring Organization
Humanities Texas
Phone number
512-440-1991
Target Audience
K-12
Start Date
Cost
Free; $300 stipend
Course Credit
Offers continuing professional development credit. GT credit is also available.
Duration
Four days
End Date

Genocide and Human Rights Summer Institute

Description

This multi-date residential institute introduces teachers to the intertwined issues of genocide and human rights. In the late spring participants will be sent a series of extensive text, article, and resource readings. Participants will begin the residential sessions by defining the terms and learning about the philosophical and historical antecedents and common characteristics of genocides and human rights violations. The seminar will then turn toward exploring the historical, political, sociological/anthropological, and contemporary dimensions of genocide and human rights by focusing on the causes, courses, and consequences of the events. The case studies include: Armenia, the Holocaust, Ukrainian famine-genocide, Cambodian, Cyprus, El Salvador, Iraq, Bosnia, Rwanda, and Sudan genocidal episodes. Other examples that will be integrated and considered include the Irish famine, the indigenous peoples of the Americas, and the current status of human rights throughout the world.

The institute will also include a series of sessions on how to approach these subjects in the classroom, from the elementary to the high school level. Significant attention will be devoted to the complex methodological issues underlying the presentation of genocide in the classroom including the selection of teaching materials (secondary readings, primary sources, and documentary and entertainment films). Then participants will undertake the sharing of lesson plans developed as a part of the institute's program before concluding with a series of final sessions and considerations on the future prevention of genocide and an activist engagement with the subject.

As an ongoing part of the Institute and its mission, past participants and faculty will continue to function as a cohort after the institute is over by sharing completed lesson plans, developing additional curricular materials, and undertaking educational and public outreach programming.

Contact name
Bowers, J.D.
Contact email
Registration Deadline
Sponsoring Organization
Northern Illinois University
Phone number
815-753-6655
Target Audience
K-12
Start Date
Cost
$1,550 ($1,650 after 20 Apr 2009)
Course Credit
Participants are able to register for academic or professional development credit. The program is offered as an undergraduate and graduate course or as a continuing professional development institute, which will be certified to the Illinois State Board of Education.
Duration
Thirteen days
End Date

Middle East Politics and American Foreign Policy

Description

The Middle East has been a central focus of American foreign policy since the end of World War II. This seminar will examine the strategic significance of the region, its internal dynamics, and the basic outlines of American foreign policy over the past few decades. While the first half of the seminar will concentrate on the historical context of the region, the second half will turn to the future. Participants will look at the various challenges facing the new President̬such as Iran, Iraq, the Israeli-Palestinian conflict—and the various options open to him.

Contact name
Austin, Brodie
Contact email
Sponsoring Organization
Newberry Library
Phone number
312-255-3672
Target Audience
High school
Start Date
Cost
$125 (must have a Newberry Teachers' Consortium membership).
Course Credit
Participants earn 3 CPDU credits for attending a NTC seminar.
Contact Title
Coordinator
Duration
Three hours

Recent Trends in Civil War History

Description

In this seminar, participants will read three pieces that either take new approaches to Civil War history, or reflect critically on the ways that historians are addressing the period. Participants will be interested in exploring the innovative methodologies or theoretical approaches used by scholars to ask and answer new questions. Of particular concern for these readings will be issues of gender, memory-construction, and the persistent interest of scholars in the event.

Contact name
Austin, Brodie
Contact email
Sponsoring Organization
Newberry Library
Phone number
312-255-3672
Target Audience
High school
Start Date
Cost
$125 (must have a Newberry Teachers' Consortium membership).
Course Credit
Participants earn 3 CPDU credits for attending a NTC seminar.
Contact Title
Coordinator
Duration
Three 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

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

Traveling the Freedom Road: From Slavery and the Civil War Through Reconstruction

Description

Linda B. Osborne discusses her book for young people, Traveling the Freedom Road: From Slavery and the Civil War Through Reconstruction, which draws on the Library of Congress collections of former slave interviews to convey the aspirations, sorrows, courage, and hopes of ordinary people living through this period. Osborne mined the Federal Writers' Project slave narratives and materials in the Library's Manuscript, Prints and Photographs, Rare Book and Special Collections, and Geography and Map divisions for this work that focuses on the experiences of African American children. More than 80 archival images complement the text. Major events covered include the rise of the domestic slave trade, the Emancipation Proclamation, and the Republican Congress' Reconstruction policies. From Charles Cowley, an enslaved child who had no shoes with which to walk through the snow, to Richard Slaughter, who enlisted in the Union Army at 17, this book reveals the personal hardships and courageous endurance of black youth in 19th-century America.

Sponsoring Organization
Library of Congress
Target Audience
K-12
Start Date
Cost
Free