Teachinghistory.org

Teachinghistory.org logo
Founded 2008
Founder Center for History and New Media
Type Educational
Focus Best practices, K-12 education, History of the United States
Location
Slogan "A single destination for K-12 American history content, teaching methods, and current research."
Website Official website

Teachinghistory.org, also known as the National History Education Clearinghouse (NHEC), is a website that provides educational resources for the study of U.S. history.

Organizational background

In the past decade and a half, three major developments have reshaped the landscape for K-12 history education and have created the conditions for significant advances in history teaching and learning. First, the emergence of the Internet and the World Wide Web has brought unprecedented resources and possibilities to the computers of the nation’s history teachers. Second, a body of serious scholarly research in history education – and the learning sciences more generally – has begun to illuminate how students actually learn history. Finally, the Department of Education's Teaching American History (TAH) program has invested more than $900 million in history education – the largest federal infusion of resources ever devoted to improving the teaching and learning of history.[1]

Due to these advancements, the United States Department of Education announced a call for proposals in 2007 to address the building, populating, and maintaining of a central website for K-12 American history educators, funded under the Teaching American History Grant program (TAH). George Mason University's Center for History and New Media was awarded the grant for the website creation the same year.[2][3] The TAH program is funded under Title II-C, Subpart 4 of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965, as amended by the No Child Left Behind Act of 2001. According to the TAH program website, the goal of the program is to "raise student achievement by improving teachers’ knowledge, understanding, and appreciation of American history.[4]"

Organizational goals

One goal is to bring together K-12 American history resources to help educators find and use them. Another goal is to create materials that detail strategies for teaching and learning history to help educators improve classroom teaching. A third goal is to disseminate lessons learned by more than 900 Teaching American History (TAH) grants designed to raise student achievement by improving teachers' knowledge and understanding of traditional U.S. history.

Teachinghistory.org is updated regularly and is organized around six sections: History Content, Best Practices, Teaching Materials, Issues and Research, Teaching American History (TAH) Projects, and Digital Classroom. In addition, the website offers a weekly history quiz, a blog, and features that allow users to submit history content, history teaching, and digital history questions to experts in the field.

Partners

With funding from the U.S. Department of Education under the Office of Innovation and Improvement, Teachinghistory.org, also known as the National History Education Clearinghouse, was developed through a collaboration between the Roy Rosenzweig Center for History and New Media (CHNM) at George Mason University and the Stanford History Education Group at Stanford University.

CHNM and the Stanford History Education Group have worked on other projects together, including Historical Thinking Matters, a website focused on key topics in U.S. history that is designed to teach students how to critically read primary sources and how to critique and construct historical narratives.[5]

Founded by Roy Rosenzweig, CHNM is an internationally recognized digital humanities center located in Fairfax, Virginia.[6] Created by Sam Wineburg, the Stanford History Education Group in Stanford, California, engages in projects at the forefront of how students learn history, from elementary school to college.

Additional Teachinghistory.org partners include the American Historical Association, a professional organization for historians founded in 1884, and the National History Center, which promotes research, teaching, and learning in all fields of history.

Resources

Scholarship

Teachinghistory.org provides a clearinghouse for resources, as well as approaches informed by research on the teaching and learning of history. Special attention is devoted to strategies for incorporating historical thinking skills into classroom teaching.[8] Historical thinking skills are a set of reasoning skills, including close reading, corroboration, and contextualization, that help students think critically about the past.[9] These skills require a style of teaching that goes beyond lectures and rote memorization.[10] Teachinghistory.org is based on and adds to new research in history education.

References

  1. Melendez, Margarita L. Teaching American History Article. The Society for History in the Federal Government newsletter, The Federalist, Fall 2008, Number 19, accessed May 31, 2011.
  2. George Mason University Receives $7.5 Million to Create a National History Education Clearinghouse, History News Network, October 3, 2007, accessed May 31, 2011.
  3. Gardner, Walt. "Ignorance of History Permeates All Levels", Education Week, June 22, 2011, accessed August 15, 2011
  4. United States Department of Education, Teaching American History, accessed May 31, 2011.
  5. Historical Thinking Matters, accessed May 31, 2011.
  6. Center for History and New Media. HASTAC, accessed May 31, 2011.
  7. Schrum, Kelly, and Schrum, Lynn. "Exploring the Past with 21st-Century Tools", National Council for the Social Studies, accessed August 15, 2011
  8. National History Education Clearinghouse is Launched Online, Stanford Report, May 14, 2008, accessed May 31, 2001
  9. American Historical Association. Benchmarks for Professional Development in Teaching of History as a Discipline. July 7, 2008, accessed May 31, 2011.
  10. Ash, Kate. "Schools Now Have Direct Access to Thousands of Primary Sources," Education Week, accessed August 15, 2010

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Friday, February 14, 2014. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.