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Who are our students, and what and how do they think about history? Analyzing what we do as teachers and why we do it might usefully begin with understanding what our students bring to the history classroom. What do our students imagine when they consider the American past, or the study of history more broadly? And how might we answer those questions as historians, applying to teaching the same sorts of analysis that we bring to our historical scholarship? This section offers three attempts to address those challenges.
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What happens when we make a group other than straight, white, Euro-Americans the primary focus of a survey? What is the result when
we move the distinctive histories of African Americans, Latinos/as, Native Americans,
Asian Americans, and Lesbian/Gay people from margin to center? How does such teaching change our perspective on the relationship of previously underrepresented groups to
our national narratives?
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How do we teach American history? And what do our students learn? In the 2006 "Textbooks and Teaching" section, historians present reports from the field, exploring what happens when historians self-consciously study their classroom practices.
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The 2005"Textbooks and Teaching" section examines how college American history textbooks are written, produced, and used.
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The 2004 "Textbooks and Teaching" section discusses the role of testing in the teaching and learning American history. The editors solicited articles from three prominent scholars of trends in American education,
each with experience bridging the academic and policy-making realms in contemporary
debates over curricular content and pedagogy.
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The 2003 "Textbook and Teaching" essays address
the question of how best to employ digital technology
in the service of teaching college-level American history.
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The 2002 "Textbooks and
Teaching" section examines efforts to expand the teaching
of college-level history courses beyond traditional classroom
formats and boundaries. K-12 social studies classes have
long included excursions to local museums and historical
sites to help make history "come alive" for younger students.
What is happening at colleges and universities to deepen
students' appreciation of, and connection to, the past?
What are the best practices in modes of teaching history
that move us "outside the box"? |
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In 2001, "Textbooks
and Teaching" focuses on the teaching of the American
history survey, the task that probably has the broadest
impact of any professional service regularly performed by
readers of the Journal. The contributing editors
for "Textbooks and Teaching" hosted a "virtual
round table" using e-mail and an electronic listserv
as the modes of communication. Over the course of five weeks,
eleven participants exchanged views on the means and ends
of teaching the survey. |