Online Professional Development through the Library of Congress

Date Published
Image
Library of Congress screenshot
Article Body

As part of its new home for teachers, the Library of Congress offers self-paced professional development modules online. (Please see this earlier blog post, Bookmark This! Teacher Resources at the Library of Congress.)

The two modules, Introduction to the Library of Congress and Analyzing Primary Sources: Photographs and Prints, don't break new methodological ground, but they do offer an excellent multimedia synthesis of how to use the Library of Congress and how to teach with primary source materials. Many of the examples and definitions work as well in the classroom as they do as professional development tools. Perhaps most helpfully, they may assist teachers in streamlining and consolidating search efforts for classroom resources.

Modules are self-directed, multimedia presentations.

Each self-directed module is divided into chapters, and even experienced teachers may find the orderly progression through definitions and methodology helpful. Chapter Two of the History of the Library of Congress, "What is a Primary Source," for example, includes an interview with a teacher about using the resources of the Library of Congress online—and the advantages of a Library of Congress search over general search engines such as Google. New York teacher Neme Alperstein explains how and why using the Library of Congress collections of primary sources transformed her teaching style.

The professional development modules in conjunction with other sections under Teacher Resources may well serve as one-stop shopping.

The professional development modules integrate seamlessly other materials on the teachers pages—all of which consolidate and group themes and resources of the Library of Congress. Teachers Guides and Analysis Tools offers a series of downloadable work sheets and methodology for utilizing the numerous primary resources categorized under Themed Resources and Primary Source Sets while Collection Connections will take you further into grouped subjects and types of resources.

Watch It Live! President Barack Obama Addresses America's Students on September 8

Date Published
Image
announcement
Article Body

On September 8, 2009 at noon Eastern Time (EDT), President Barack Obama will deliver a national address to the students of America. During this special address, the president will speak directly to the nation’s children and youth about persisting and succeeding in school.

The White House website and C-SPAN will broadcast the speech live. After President Obama's speech concludes, C-SPAN will open its phone lines for students and teachers to comment about what they heard. If you or your students would like to call in and comment, you can use these numbers: (202) 737-0001 for students; (202) 737-0002 for teachers.

The U.S. Department of Education encourages students of all ages, teachers, and administrators to participate in this historic moment. Secretary of Education Arne Duncan sent a message directly to schools about the event and the content of the President's address. He says, "The president will challenge students to work hard, set educational goals, and take responsibility for their learning. He will also call for shared responsibility and commitment on the part of students, parents, and educators to ensure that every child in school receives the best education possible."

What do you think? Create your own video and let people know!

The Department of Education also encourages students to respond to the President’s Back to School challenge by creating videos, up to two minutes in length, describing the steps they will take to improve their education and the role education will play in fulfilling their dreams. Visit I Am What I Learn for further information on September 8.

Students age 13 and older should upload their videos to YouTube by October 8. Submissions can be in the form of video blogs, public service announcements (PSAs), music videos, or documentaries. Have fun and be creative with this project! The public will then vote on their favorites to determine the top 20 finalists. These 20 videos will be reviewed by a panel of judges including U.S. Secretary of Education Arne Duncan. Three winners will receive a $1,000 cash prize!

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)

1. When will the president deliver his address?
President Obama will speak to the students of America at 12:00 p.m., ET on Tuesday, Sept. 8, 2009. (Note that this is a change from the time originally scheduled.)

2. How can I watch the president's address to students?
Viewers may watch the address via the Internet by visiting the White House website, at http://www.whitehouse.gov/live/, where the address will be streamed live.

C-SPAN, the cable public affairs network, will cover the president's speech live on its C-SPAN television channel and provide live streaming video online at C-SPAN.org. The speech also will be aired live on C-SPAN Radio (90.1 FM in Washington, DC, and channel 132 on XM Satellite Radio).

White House television will make the address available via satellite for access by local broadcast outlets and school districts. The satellite feed will be live for testing and calibration beginning at 11am ET on September 8th using the following coordinates:
Galaxy 28/Transponder 17, Slot C (9 MHz); Uplink Frequency 14344.5 Horizontal; Downlink Frequency 12044.5 Vertical.

For updates related to the president's speech, please visit the White House website or the Department of Education.

3. What is the duration of the president’s address?
The president is scheduled to speak for 15–20 minutes. The U.S. Department of Education provides resources for educators who may choose to use the president’s address as a teachable moment. Two menus of classroom activities, one for students in grades PreK–6, and another for students in grades 7–12, may be found as downloadable PDFs on the homepage of the Department of Education.

4. Does the White House website have the capacity to host all of the potential live viewers for this event?
The White House website is equipped with the appropriate amount of bandwidth to accommodate a large viewership.

5. Will the address be available in some form after the original broadcast date and time?
Downloadable video of the speech will be made available at White House Media Resources as well as through the Department of Education. C-SPAN will provide archived and "on-demand" viewing options .

6. Will the address include captioning for deaf and hard-of-hearing viewers?
The live address broadcast on C-SPAN will include captioning.

Teaching without Textbooks?

Date Published
Image
image, new york times
Article Body

In Arizona and California, among other school systems across the globe, open-source materials and digital resources are supplementing or supplanting standard textbooks. Why?

According to In a Digital Future, Textbooks Are History in the August 8 New York Times, today's kids are "digitally nimble. They multitask, transpose and extrapolate. . . .Students don’t engage with textbooks that are finite, linear and rote."

The move is particularly critical in California which, with Texas, dominates the national textbook market.

In California, the move to digital textbooks is spurred, in part, by the expense of textbooks and the current state financial crisis, yet the move is not without consequences. Some school districts are asking whether dependency on digital resources will widen the digital divide between those with access to computers and other electronic equipment and low-income students and school districts for whom technology is still out of reach.

Students come to most historical topics without enough knowledge to question the textbook account
Read More

Here in the Clearinghouse, we're exploring ways to help students think critically about textbooks in our Best Practices section, Teaching with Textbooks. In Questioning Textbook Authority, high school history teacher Robert Bain points out, "Students come to most historical topics without enough knowledge to question the textbook account, and they have long been taught to treat their books with deference." He offers a teaching technique to raise students ability to read critically—and to increase their own sense of intellectual authority.

In Teaching Materials, we answer the question, Do you know of any good online U.S. history textbooks?, pointing to several useful resources.

In his blog, Dan Cohen, Director of the Center for History and New Media, asks Where are the Open Humanities Textbooks? and compares the costs of creating textbooks with the development of free and open source materials. Also available for download: By the Book: Assessing the Place of Textbooks in U.S. Survey Courses, published in the Journal of American History in March 2005. In this article, Cohen examines the role of textbooks in teaching an undergraduate U.S. history survey course.

Bookmark This! Beneath the Surface of Wikipedia

Date Published
Image
wikipedia logo/screenshot
Article Body

Wikipedia, the online, open-source encyclopedia, is no longer a new kid on the research web, but questions about its merits and use in the classroom continue to recycle.

Wikipedia is perhaps the most extensive example of democratic scholarship on the web. Tens of thousands of volunteer contributors have collectively written, revised, and edited nearly 3 million encyclopedia entries in English and other languages. Almost any Google search on topics relevant to teaching and learning history (among other subjects) elicits a Wikipedia entry among the top five search results—and frequently it occupies the number-one slot.

How should teachers respond to the ubiquity and accessibility of Wikipedia?

Students regularly and unquestioningly rely on Wikipedia as a resource for assignments. How, then, should educators respond to its ubiquity and accessibility? Many teachers simply banish it from the classroom. Banished or not, the encyclopedia is unlikely to disappear, and students will continue to be among the millions of inquiring minds who use it daily as a first stop for information-gathering. Teaching students how to evaluate Wikipedia may be a better solution, then, than ignoring its influence.

In fact, a hard look at the value and limitations of Wikipedia offers practical experience to students in critical thinking and analysis of primary and secondary sources in any subject area.

Bookmarks!

Start with this video from North Carolina State University Libraries: Wikipedia: Beneath the Surface (in under 6 minutes). The video gives an overview of Wikipedia and how it works—pros and cons—and situates its use as a tool promoting critical thinking.

In Can History be Open Source? Wikipedia and the Future of the Past, author Roy Rosenzweig, founder of George Mason University's Center for History and New Media, answers "some basic questions about history on Wikipedia. How did it develop? How does it work? How good is the historical writing? What are the potential implications for our practice as scholars, teachers, and purveyors of the past to the general public?" (This article was originally published in The Journal of American History Volume 93, Number 1 [June, 2006]: 117-46)

Carleton College Gould Library offers a faculty guide, Using Wikipedia. The article offers guidelines for using Wikipedia, suggestions about its role in the curriculum, and links to further analytical articles. Guidelines include a caution from Wikipedia founder, Jimmy Wales, that the encyclopedia is not a definitive source. "It's pretty good, but you have to be careful with it." He advises students to use Wikipedia for an overview of a topic, but then, to hit the history books.

Jeremy Boggs, digital historian and creative lead at the Center for History and New Media, authored a detailed lesson plan for undergraduate history classes, Assigning Wikipedia in a US History Survey. Boggs describes the assignment and the process of implementation, but also explains the rationale and benefits of this curriculum module, which he considers one of his most successful assignments. "Most of my students have a difficult time understanding how to make an argument, how to differentiate between fact-based 'reporting' and analysis. By actually being forced to write a 'just the facts' report, they have been able to see the difference between the two." The module is adaptable to high school coursework.

National History Day 2010

Date Published
Image
screenshot, hagley exhibit
Article Body

Kudos to the dedicated staff of the National History Day program for this year's website makeover. The new design facilitates finding information and materials to guide research such as Eight Steps of Historial Research, lists of Teacher Resources including how to guides, and discussions about integrating National History Day into the classroom curriculum.

The topic for the 2010 competition is Innovation in History. As always, local, state, and national historic associations frequently link to their own resources to help students find primary sources and to jump start the resource process.

Here are a few we've found that might be helpful as well.

When you think of the topic Innovation in History perhaps technological progress and scientific invention are the first fields that come to mind. The National Archives, however, encourages students to think more broadly. For 2010, topics and search links include a spectrum of concepts to explore. The Bill of Rights, United Nations Charter, Martha Graham and Modern Dance, and Mathew Brady are among suggested topics that lead students to consider ideological, institutional, political, and culltural innovation—each with links to related archival materials.

When you think of innovation, what's the first thing that comes to mind?

The Lemelson Center of the Smithsonian, however, focuses on the realm of scientific and technological invention and innovation.

The interactive Invention at Play gives hands-on experience with processes that lead to innovative thinking: imagination, trial and error, persistence. Good for elementary students, this online problem-solving experience works for older students and adults as well. Inventors stories give real-life experiences from a variety of inventors who talk about the creative process.

Lemelson Center's online interactives demonstrate the processes of creativity and invention.

And the online interactive Word Play illustrates the benefits of collaboration and teamwork—all concepts students will want to consider as they define analytical categories to apply to whatever historical topic they research.

Hagley Museum and Library in Delaware on the banks of the Brandywine specializes in the story of American enterprise, specifically, in the study of business and technology in America. Their collections include individuals' papers and companies' records ranging from 18th-century merchants to modern telecommunications and illustrate the impact of the business system on society.

Hagley provides The Student Guide for History Day 2010 which includes a list of topics with links to related material in Hagley's online digital archive, a composite digitized resource listing of trade catalogs, and pamphlets useful for History Day.

Online Exhibits include History of Patent Medicines, Universal Design, and an interactive look at the gadgets and machines from World's Fairs: Centuries of Progress: American World's Fairs, 1853-1982.

Browse back issues of the museum's newsletters and you'll also find valuable tips on primary and secondary resources—and perhaps further ideas for topics if students are still looking around.

The Great Depression and Today

Date Published
Image
 Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division Washington, D.C
Article Body

The anniversary of the October stock market crash of 1929 approaches, and many are comparing the current financial crisis to the beginning of the Great Depression. Here are some classroom resources for teaching about economic issues and commentary by historians on similarities and differences between 1929 and now.

Annenberg Media's Learner.org offers teacher resources to guide classroom discussion. Economics U$A looks at critical issues in U.S. economics, with programs including The Banking System, The Federal Reserve, Stabilization Policy, Exchange Rates. The program "Reducing Poverty" looks at policies enacted under FDR during The Great Depression. Inside the Global Economics looks at vivid examples around the world, from hyperinflation in Argentina to petrodollar recycling in the 1970s to "shock therapy" in Poland.

The Economics Classroom: A Workshop for Grade 9-12 Teachers includes programs relevant to the current crisis such as The Government's Hand and The Building Blocks of Macroeconomics.

In The Real Great Depression published in the Chronicle of Higher Education, 19th-century historian Scott Reynolds Nelson explains why the global Depression of 1873 offers a better historic parallel for the current financial crisis than does the crash of 1929.

Rutgers Professor James Livingston writes in The Great Depression and Ours: Part I at the History News Network that the present economic crisis and the Great Depression are comparable "not because they resulted from similar macroeconomic causes but because the severity of the credit freeze in both moments is equally great, and the scope of the financial solution must, then, be equally far-reaching." He discusses causal factors of both.

On The New York Times Video Reports an economic reporter and the Chief Financial Correspondent talk about the roots of the crisis and compare it to the Great Depression. Their conversation, Echoes of a Dismal Past explores whether the government has learned the lessons of the 1930s. Financial Crisis Hits Teens goes to Elisabeth Irwin High School in downtown Manhattan to see how the nation's financial crisis is trickling down to teenagers. The three-and-half minute video offers a good starting point for economics, history, and social studies classroom discussion.

American Civil War Center at Historic Tredegar Launches Education Web Companion

Date Published
Article Body

The American Civil War Center at Historic Tredegar and the Virginia Center for Digital History (VCDH), administered through the University of Virginia, launched the American Civil War Center (ACWC) at Historic Tredegar: Educational Web Companion (Web Companion). This 18-month project is funded by a $198,000 grant from the U.S. Department of Education.

The Web Companion is an interactive teaching tool. While the Companion complements student and teacher experience at the American Civil War Center, the material also creates an online history lab where educators may analyze the Civil War with assistance from leading historians and scholars.

Nationally renowned historians Edward L. Ayers, James M. McPherson, and Gary W. Gallagher are among those featured in video clips on the site. These digital tools are used to reach educators and students nationwide and aid in the discussion of the war's causes, course, and legacies.

Each section contains rich video information concerning the Civil War and questions that may serve as discussion or writing prompts. Exhibits within the Companion include Union to Disunion, Emancipation, The War, Behind the Lines, and Legacies. Media components include: Audio, Videos, Readings, and Perspectives which introduce users to the thoughts and viewpoints of those who witnessed the Civil War firsthand and provide lectures and discussions from noted scholars. Additional components such as Insights and Archives incorporate documents, diaries, letters, and other historical resources which assist with research.

Teaching the Constitution

Date Published
Image
constitution day screenshot
Article Body

Jim Leach, Chairman of the National Endowment for the Humanities, reminds us that the U.S. Constitution has "provided the world the most enlightened model of governance ever created" because of its capacity to accommodate change and to advance individual rights. These qualities, says Leach, deserve celebration and require constant care.

On Constitution Day, September 17, Americans celebrate the signing of this important document in 1787, and educational institutions receiving Federal funds are mandated to conduct an educational program on the Constitution on that day. Teaching resources highlighted in the Clearinghouse blog last year are still valid, and here are a couple of strong recommendations.

Edsitement's updated Constitution Day resources are for families, students, and teachers. Edsitement's reviewed websites and lesson plans are blocked for specific grade levels: K-2, 3-5, 6-8, and 9-12. The Teacher's Bibliography reflects historiographic trends from Bernard Bailyn's 1967 The Ideological Origins of the American Revolution to Carol Berkin's A Brilliant Solution: Inventing the American Constitution.

Take a Virtual Tour of Signers Hall.

The Constitution Center invites you to a virtual field trip. Sing up on September 17 by 8:45am and join a virtual field trip of Signer's Hall. And don't miss the Bill of Rights Game for elementary schoolers and To Sign or Not to Sign: The Ultimate Constitution Day Lesson Plan for middle and high schoolers.

PBS Newshour posted a series of Constitution Day activities for grades 7-12. Lesson plans and materials are designed to stimulate discussion on the Constitution and what it means in everyday life in America.

Learning from Lesson Plans

Article Body

If there is one thing that we have learned from working with Teaching American History (TAH), it is that there is an abundance of information from which teachers can draw to create lesson plans. But, that does not mean that all teachers jump at the chance to craft new units, nor does it mean that such lessons are all equal. In this piece I will discuss the diverse outcomes of these processes through the examination of the work of teachers who will represent "types" that our TAH team has encountered repeatedly. They are (1) the eager, good, young teacher; (2) the engaged, creative, seasoned teacher; (3) the unchallenged veteran who eschews change; (4) the bored veteran who welcomes a challenge, and finally (5) the non-history teacher who uses new history content in impressive interdisciplinary ways.

While there are many teachers who fall outside of these profiles, or who straddle more than one, these categories will allow for a discussion of what you might encounter and how you can see the possibilities of each—and to try to use them to your grant's advantage. But this essay is not just about the content of lesson plans, though we all know that the content is the focus of our grants. This essay will look at the ways that being a successful history teacher also necessarily involves being an engaged teacher, and realizing that in these grants, putting teachers in the role of students can have brilliant consequences when mixed with new content.

There is an abundance of information from which teachers can draw to create lesson plans. But, that does not mean that all teachers jump at the chance.
Starting Strong

Teacher Number One (1) is a fifth-year middle school teacher in an urban fringe school district. He has a bachelor's degree in history and secondary education. He decided to participate in our TAH grant in its second year because he hoped to help his tech-savvy students make a stronger connection between today's technology and the machines of yesteryear. Teacher No. 1 crafted a well-organized, meticulously arranged unit plan that merged in-class work and homework assignments beautifully. He capitalized on sophisticated technology and clearly addressed national standards in both history and historical thinking.

The national standards addressed in the unit cover the factory system, urbanization, economic concepts in global contexts and how technology has changed people's lives. The primary objective of this unit was to compel students to understand the effects that technology and industrialization had on the lives of everyday people in Rhode Island. Ultimately, the teacher hopes that this unit will produce a discussion of how technology affects peoples' lives today.

The student work produced from Unit No. 1 was primarily journal-based and also asked students to fill in pre-made graphic organizers. All of this work was related to the textbook and an impressive PowerPoint presentation, created by Teacher No. 1, on the Industrial Revolution—with a viewer's guide to go along with it. Perhaps the most engaging activity in the unit was a mock town meeting at which students were assigned the roles of people who lived in the area when Samuel Slater was planning his mill in Pawtucket, RI in 1793. These roles included a fisherman, farmers, small mill owners, a local farming family, and a church group. Each group was given extensive background information and was guided through the process with fill-in-the-blank forms. (This works well at the middle school level, but one can see that it could be easily adapted to a high school classroom.) Lastly, the groups were given multiple primary documents to help their cases and prepare them for the unit's culminating activity: a visit to the Slater Mill Historic Site.

A Second Approach

Our second teacher is an 11th grade U.S. history teacher in the same district as our first. Although she has only been teaching for two more years than Teacher No. 1, teaching is a second career for her after receiving a bachelor's degree in public policy and a master's degree in education. While dedicated to her students, her reasoning behind signing up for our TAH course was that she wanted to keep up with the latest historiography and keep her teaching fresh. Even though at first this might appear to be the more selfish of the two responses to the question of why they wanted to learn more, I have come to believe that this is actually the educational equivalent of putting the oxygen mask on yourself first, and then helping others on the plane. She was not being selfish by focusing on her herself; she was recognizing that for the good of the students, she needs to stay up to date in the field.

. . . this is actually the educational equivalent of putting the oxygen mask on yourself first, and then helping others on the plane.

Teacher No. 2's unit plan was exhaustive and written in a wonderful tone that she chose, successfully, to be easily adaptable to other classrooms and other levels. It was well integrated into the overall college prep curriculum and took the students' graduation requirements into account. Moreover, Teacher No. 2 included all of the same technology as Teacher No. 1, as well as incorporating traditional, hands-on projects in engaging and effective ways.

Teacher No. 2's unit plan outlined an original goal to have the students read a monograph, often assigned at the college level, to better grasp the character of America at the beginning of the Industrial Revolution. From the outset, therefore, Teacher No. 2 has engaged the ideas stressed in our institute and readings: that for our students to better relate to history, they should learn not to apply their own standards and ideologies to past actors, but instead learn about the philosophies of prior periods.

The teacher then guided her students through the traditional "Now and Then" essay, but with a twist: students were not asked to see the past in light of the present, but were urged to see each for its own merits, related, but not dichotomous. In a very fluid fashion, the unit covered the evolution of an agrarian society to an industrialized one, focusing on the need for workers in the 19th century, and moving up to related immigration issues today. The teacher used PowerPoint presentations to supplement her lectures, discussions, and activities, while the students used more traditional, yet still dynamic, hand-on processes, like essays, posters, and life-sized painted depictions of peoples from immigrant cultures.

Working Together

Both the units of Teachers Nos. 1 and 2 have much to offer students in the same content area, and represent teaching one time period and topic to diverse grade levels. But, what could these two unit plans gain from each other? And would these lessons be applicable to the other teacher's grade level? After reviewing countless units, I would suggest that even at the middle school level, students could handle more formal writing than is incorporated into the lessons in Unit No. 1. Although the students were producing journals and filling in blanks, the arguments that they crafted for their mock town meeting were done in groups. Individuals could have been asked to write their own arguments independently and start to learn the skill of developing a thesis and proving it in an historical essay.

Teachers have not just high expectations for their classes, but also for themselves. They instilled their own creativity into their lessons, lectures, and unit designs.

Similarly, while the high school students were asked to write both essays and create art-based projects, they could also have been asked to present their cases orally. Especially at the upper level, where writing and test-prep are so often the focus, it is just as important for students to get practice articulating themselves in speech—particularly on such hot topics as immigration. Remember, we are not just trying to prepare our students for tests or more schooling, but for a civic life in which each can feel comfortable participating in public discourse. Both of the aforementioned units have the potential, if used properly, to prepare students for success in both school and their communities.

The Uphill Climb

It is clear that both of the first two teachers have not just high expectations for their classes, but also for themselves. They instilled their own creativity into their lessons, lectures, and unit designs. Often history teachers have to retain their own expectations in the face of school administrations that have little time for the untested social studies, especially history. Our third teacher, who is part of a high-performing history department in an urban-fringe high school, seems to have allowed the lack of state focus on history to lower his own expectations. Quite shockingly, in this teacher's mandatory reflection piece, he admitted that this was the first lesson plan he had been asked to create in 20 years. And, after that statement, he added that he knew that it was not his best effort.

In this unit he borrows, frequently, from previously created materials. Borrowing, of course, is fine—in fact, we encourage taking from the excellent materials that are already out there. But, if you are going to borrow, you should make sure that you get the information correct and that you add to its quality, not detract from it. The unit produced by this educator gave students incorrect information about the slave trade, in particular the Triangular Trade (an important topic, especially in Rhode Island). The student work that said teacher submitted reflected this misinformation. Moreover, the students who produced factually specious (and sometimes outrageous) materials were not graded down for it. Despite feedback sessions with other teachers, opportunities for resubmission, and a chance to try again the next year, Teacher No. 3 decided to opt out of all future participation.

A Success Story

Not every teacher who confronts the difficult situation of realizing that he has produced sub-par materials, however, backs away from the challenge. In point of fact, one of our greatest TAH success stories is a history teacher in a low-performing urban district in which he often finds himself teaching ESL students and those with striking learning differences.

Teacher No. 4, also a veteran teacher, is popular with his students, and in the summer institute was enraptured with the new information he was learning. Yet, in the fall, when he turned in his unit plan, it was, in laymen's terms, a mess. It did not follow standards of any kind and sections were handwritten, not proofread, and did not build to any sort of culminating activity.

When confronted with the work of other teachers in his group, and with my comments as his professor, he seemed shocked and deeply saddened. This began an all-out onslaught to create a better unit and, to paraphrase his own words, to become a better teacher. He consulted with me and the Rhode Island Historical Society's TAH coordinator for materials and teaching strategies. He tried new, online resources. He ended up retooling his unit plan and resubmitting it. It was not perfect, but it was enough to take him from an F to a B. But more importantly than that, it reinvigorated his teaching just to have other people care about his work and expect more of him.

In the next year, the third and final of the grant, Teacher No. 4 was back with even greater energy to learn and perform. Unlike any of the other 40 teachers, he contacted me within a week of the institute to help plan a better unit. He had gotten one of the deepest messages of the TAH grant program: there are countless resources out there waiting to give you help—you just have to ask. No teacher can know everything, so when resources present themselves, grab them and use them.

. . . there are countless resources out there waiting to give you help—you just have to ask.

When Teacher No. 4 turned in his next lesson plan, it was excellent. In fact, he was the only teacher in his district to receive an A for the course. His new approach showed not only in the content, but also in his presentation. His work became a model for other teachers, as did his attitude—one that took sincere joy in the challenge of doing his job better. He expected more of himself and his students, and ultimately, it is his students who will reap the benefits. The difference between Teacher No. 3 and No. 4 is not that one is smarter than the other, but that one was open to the idea of change and that even though he knew a lot, he could know more. He also embraced the idea that if he was ever to have high expectations for his students, he could not avoid them for himself.

Cross Training

We have reviewed the effect of increasing expectations on teacher-created lesson plans for history. As we all know, however, our TAH grants benefit greatly from the participation of non-social studies teachers, as well. Within most of our grants, we have hosted ESL, special education, ELA, and elementary school teachers. Thus, the fifth teacher in this essay is an English/language arts teacher in an urban middle school.

Since history is not her main content area, she was given the leeway to create a unit that she hoped would develop students' reading, writing, thinking, and language skills using the writing of King, Dunbar, Angelou, Hughes, and Walker. The historical content of the unit is clear, and this literature teacher clearly benefited from a week of intensive history training. Her unit elegantly illustrated the fact that texts can be used to help understand history, just as history can be used to help understand a text—and that such work can be used to strengthen what are typically thought of as ELA skills: reading, writing persuasively, and oral argumentation.

I am left, as a historian, however, with many questions: if those are not the skills used by a historian, then what are? What is it that keeps our schools from allowing, even requiring, history teachers to foster these skills in history classes? How can a state create standards for history that do not include persuasive writing?

Lessons Learned

This is a brief essay, and certainly it is one that contains as many questions as answers. I hope, however, that it demonstrates the importance of a willingness for all of us to learn from each other and the wide resources that these grants afford us. Excellent high school and middle school units on the same topics can still learn from each other. Teachers who are finding it hard to get into a groove can succeed it they are willing to ask for help. And history teachers can most certainly learn from other disciplines to make their K–12 history classrooms more like their college counterparts. More than this, however, I hope this essay brings home the point that these institutes and seminars we hold, thanks to TAH funding, inform our teachers' lessons and classroom styles. This has a true, if unquantifiable, effect on our students.

What to Do When You Teach It All

Article Body

Teaching American History (TAH) has been an exciting opportunity for me in several ways. As a participating middle school teacher, I gained access to materials, ideas, and knowledge that enhanced my ability to teach American history. After the TAH experience, students left my classroom with more than the traditional rote memorization of historical facts; they developed a wider outlook on historical events and people. I wanted to share that positive experience, so I now work as the History Content Coach for elementary school teachers in another TAH grant.

Teachers who participate in the Savannah-Chatham County Public School grant are involved in a number of content-rich activities. They read scholarly books, such as The California Gold Rush and the Coming of the Civil War by Leonard L. Richards, and answer reading response questions. For each book or topic, they participate in an all-day symposium where they hear from the author or an authority on the topic in the morning and spend the afternoon focused on teaching the new content.

Teachers receive a binder with additional background information on the content area and teaching resources, such as vocabulary activities, poems and songs from the time period, reading comprehension activities, lesson plans complete with primary sources, Internet links, and rubrics. Participating teachers leave the symposium with materials ready for immediate classroom use.

The Boon of Multi-Disciplinary History

Addressing the needs of elementary teachers has been a different kind of learning experience for me. They are eager for content and resources, but also for ways to present the content that appeal to a myriad of learning styles. Elementary school teachers are responsible for many subject areas and have limited time to devote solely to social studies. Integrating historical content into other academic areas allows them to teach history throughout the day. Connections with reading and language arts work for a range of topics, but history also works with other parts of the curriculum. For example, sources on Lewis and Clark fit into a unit in science on biomes, minerals, plants, and the environment. The possibilities are endless.

Integrating historical content into other academic areas allows [elementary school teachers] to teach history throughout the day.

Our local TAH program provides a Resource Library that supplements limited supplies at individual schools and facilitates this integration. Teachers can check out class sets of biographies, autobiographies, and historical fiction, helping them combine language arts standards with history content. Access to resources has allowed more elementary school teachers to incorporate social studies reading into their classes.

The Resource Library also provides primary and secondary sources, as well as advice on using the sources in the classroom. Photographs and pictures work especially well with younger students. One teacher created a "walk through" gallery of pictures showing daily life in the 19th century. She asked students to explain what the pictures told them about the time period, appealing to both visual and kinesthetic learners. Students are very observant and can learn much about a person, event, or time period by analyzing images.

One teacher created a "walk through" gallery of pictures showing daily life in the 19th century. She asked students to explain what the pictures told them about the time period, appealing to both visual and kinesthetic learners.
Keeping Lessons Concise

Time is always a key factor, especially for elementary school teachers. When finding or developing lesson plans, we try to keep a realistic time frame in mind. A lesson can be very exciting, but if it requires one hour a day for seven consecutive days and focuses on a narrow topic, teachers will not use it. In many schools, social studies is taught at most three days a week for 30 to 45 minutes. Taking that same lesson and pulling out a part that pertains to a grade-specific standard is a good solution—it presents an interesting lesson that fits with the existing schedule. Another strategy for saving time in the classroom, especially for lessons that rely on online resources, is to put reading selections and primary sources together ahead of time on a CD for easy access.

Elementary school teachers who participate in grant activities are excited to learn new content. The challenge is taking what they have learned back to their classrooms and students. One answer is to provide lesson plans that are ready to use, address various learning styles, and can be incorporated into other subjects such as reading and language arts. This is one of my most important "lessons learned." To facilitate this, I focus on the standards each grade teaches—for elementary school, this includes social studies and language arts—and then emphasize strategies for teaching history within the existing framework.

. . . provide lesson plans that are ready to use, address various learning styles, and can be incorporated into other subjects such as reading and language arts.