Race and Membership Workshop

Description

This workshop, using the Facing History and Ourselves resource books Race and Membership and the Cleveland Museum of Natural History's exhibit "Race: Are We So Different?," will examine questions of race and identity and their impact on American history. Participants will view the exhibit in addition to examining themes and classroom applications.

Contact email
Sponsoring Organization
Facing History and Ourselves
Target Audience
K-12
Start Date
Duration
One day
Choices in Little Rock Two-Day Workshop Anonymous (not verified) Fri, 08/29/2008 - 19:33
Description

This workshops will explore the Facing History and Ourselves resource, Choices in Little Rock, about the desegregation of Central High School in Little Rock, Arkansas, in 1957. This resource can be used to teach civics and enrich a study of history and literature. Scholarships are available for Boston Public School (BPS) eighth-grade social studies teachers, though the workshop is open to all educators. BPS educators must register with Facing History and at mylearningplan.com.

Sponsoring Organization
Facing History and Ourselves
Target Audience
K-12
Start Date
Cost
$250
Duration
Two days
End Date

Immigration Workshop

Description

This workshop will explore the history of immigration, race, and citizenship in the United States through the use of Facing History and Ourselves's resources and pedagogical framework. What does it mean to become an American? How have immigrants fought for rights and claimed ownership of their own American identities? The workshop will focus on specific events in U.S. and world history that shaped U.S. immigration policies and affected the lives of immigrants.

Contact email
Sponsoring Organization
Facing History and Ourselves
Target Audience
K-12
Start Date
Duration
One day
Choices in Little Rock Orientation Anonymous (not verified) Fri, 08/29/2008 - 19:15
Description

This half-day workshop will be an introduction to Facing History and Ourselves and our Chicago Public Schools, Choices in Little Rock Initiative. Teachers will be given materials and resources to prepare for the later three-day workshop. The workshop will also answer questions about participating in the Initiative. Pilot teachers will be available to share experiences and answer questions.

Contact email
Sponsoring Organization
Facing History and Ourselves
Target Audience
8
Start Date
Duration
Three days

Facing American History through the Lens of Race and Membership

Description

This two-day workshop will explore how beliefs about race have shaped—and challenged—American's identity as a land of "freedom and opportunity." It will look at significant events and movements in American history—slavery, immigration, the eugenics movement, the Civil Rights Movement—and will consider legacies of each in American society today. Ultimately, this journey will bring participants back to the present. Examining American history through the lens of race and membership empowers teachers and their students to value how their choices shape contemporary America. Participants will receive a resource book and membership in the Facing History and Ourselves Teacher Network.

Contact email
Sponsoring Organization
Facing History and Ourselves
Target Audience
K-12
Start Date
Duration
Two days
End Date

The Civil Rights Movement: A Workshop for Boston Public Schools 10th-grade U.S. History Teachers

Description

This is a two-day workshop for Boston Public Schools teachers who will be teaching the Civil Rights Movement in their 10th-grade U.S. History courses. The seminar will focus on three units: "The murder of Emmett Till," "Voting Rights: From Selma to Montgomery," and "Desegregation of Boston Schools." All BPS Teachers must also register with the Boston Public Schools at www.mylearningplan.com.

Sponsoring Organization
Facing History and Ourselves
Target Audience
10
Start Date
Cost
None
Duration
Two days
End Date
Choices in Little Rock, for 8th-grade Chicago Public Schools Social Studies and Language Arts Teachers Anonymous (not verified) Fri, 08/29/2008 - 16:50
Description

This seminar explores the Facing History and Ourselves resource book, Choices in Little Rock—a collection of teaching suggestions, activities, and primary sources that focus on the desegregation of Central High School in Little Rock, Arkansas, in 1957. These efforts led to a crisis that historian Taylor Branch once described as "the most severe test of the Constitution since the Civil War." These resources explore a range of civic choices—the decisions people make as citizens in a democracy. Those decisions, both then and now, reveal that democracy is not a product but a work in progress, a work that is shaped in every generation by the choices that people make about themselves and others. This workshop will consider ways to engage students in the issues raised by this history and its civic implications for their lives today. Choices in Little Rock can be used not only to teach history but also to deepen and enrich a study of civics, government, and literature.

Contact email
Sponsoring Organization
Facing History and Ourselves
Target Audience
8
Start Date
Duration
Three days
End Date
Choices in Little Rock, for 8th-grade Chicago Public Schools Social Studies and Language Arts Teachers Anonymous (not verified) Fri, 08/29/2008 - 16:47
Description

This seminar explores the Facing History and Ourselves resource book, Choices in Little Rock—a collection of teaching suggestions, activities, and primary sources that focus on the desegregation of Central High School in Little Rock, Arkansas, in 1957. These efforts led to a crisis that historian Taylor Branch once described as "the most severe test of the Constitution since the Civil War." These resources explore a range of civic choices—the decisions people make as citizens in a democracy. Those decisions, both then and now, reveal that democracy is not a product but a work in progress, a work that is shaped in every generation by the choices that people make about themselves and others. This workshop will consider ways to engage students in the issues raised by this history and its civic implications for their lives today. Choices in Little Rock can be used not only to teach history but also to deepen and enrich a study of civics, government, and literature.

Contact email
Sponsoring Organization
Facing History and Ourselves
Target Audience
8
Start Date
Duration
Three days
End Date
Online Seminar: Choices in Little Rock Anonymous (not verified) Fri, 08/29/2008 - 16:42
Description

This seminar explores the Facing History and Ourselves resource book, Choices in Little Rock—a collection of teaching suggestions, activities, and primary sources that focus on the desegregation of Central High School in Little Rock, Arkansas, in 1957. These efforts led to a crisis that historian Taylor Branch once described as "the most severe test of the Constitution since the Civil War." These resources explore a range of civic choices—the decisions people make as citizens in a democracy. Those decisions, both then and now, reveal that democracy is not a product but a work in progress, a work that is shaped in every generation by the choices that people make about themselves and others. This workshop will consider ways to engage students in the issues raised by this history and its civic implications for their lives today. Choices in Little Rock can be used not only to teach history but also to deepen and enrich a study of civics, government, and literature.

Sponsoring Organization
Facing History and Ourselves
Target Audience
K-12
Start Date
Cost
$325
Duration
Seven weeks
End Date

Fallen Timbers Battlefield [OH]

Description

Near the site of the battle of Fallen Timbers, this small park contains a monument honoring Major General Anthony Wayne as well as smaller monuments to the soldiers and Native Americans who died in the battle. The battle of Fallen Timbers on 20 August 1794, was decisive in bringing the Indians of the Northwest Territory to sign the Treaty of Greene Ville. By this treaty the Indians ceded southern and eastern Ohio to settlers. This brief battle, an overwhelming victory for Wayne's forces, was fought in an area recently ravaged by a windstorm, hence the name Fallen Timbers.

A second website for the battlefield can be found here.

No interpretive services are currently noted as available at this site. However, it looks like there is a push for developing some. Check back later. Also, check for duplicates in unpublished sites.