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teaching history

“Capture the schools”

John Fea   |  August 17, 2022

University of Pennsylvania education historian Jonathan Zimmerman reflects on the wars over history in schools. A taste: Last year, former Trump adviser Stephen K. Bannon likewise called on right-wing Americans to capture the schools. “The path to save the nation is […]

On the value of music in the history classroom

John Fea   |  July 25, 2022

Twenty-two years ago, when I regularly taught the second half of the United States history survey (I’ve never taught it at Messiah University), I used a lot of music in class. I still have a small CD collection from those […]

Why history matters

John Fea   |  May 31, 2022

Over at Inside Higher Ed, historian Steven Mintz reflects on Richard Cohen’s Making History: The Storytellers Who Shaped the Past. The entire piece is definitely worth your time. Here is a taste: In 1879, Albion W. TourgĂ©e anonymously published a […]

The American Historical Association wants to help K-12 history teachers navigate so-called “divisive concepts” laws

John Fea   |  March 29, 2022

Here is more from the American Historical Association website: To date, at least 14 states have passed legislation prohibiting the teaching of concepts associated with race and slavery in the United States. At least another 16 states have similar bills […]

What Florida history students may not learn if Gov. Ron DeSantis gets his way

John Fea   |  February 11, 2022

Here is Gillian Brockell at The Washington Post: The Florida state legislature kicked off Black History Month by advancing bills that would allow parents to sue a school if any instruction caused students “discomfort, guilt or anguish.” The bills have […]

Is there just one American origin story?

John Fea   |  February 11, 2022

Emily Sclafani teaches history at Riverdale Country School in the Bronx. Here is a taste of her piece at the American Historical Association’s Perspectives on History titled “The Danger of a Single Origin Story.” I write this as a secondary […]

How the debate over CRT has led three states to alter their history standards

John Fea   |  January 24, 2022

This is an important study: Education Week reviewed hundreds of standards and thousands of pages of public comment relating to the standards-writing processes in South Dakota, Louisiana, and New Mexico, all of which took up revisions in 2021, and interviewed […]

Meme of the day

John Fea   |  December 28, 2021

Learn more about Ruby Bridges here.

New Hampshire’s “An Act Relative to Teachers’ Loyalty” has little to do with the teaching of American history

John Fea   |  December 7, 2021

Here is Eileen O’Connor of the Concord Monitor: Just one year after New Hampshire legislators first introduced a bill that banned the teaching or discussion of “divisive concepts” like systemic racism, another bill will be debated this legislative session that […]

David Blight: “Trust the teachers!”

John Fea   |  November 23, 2021

The Yale historian and Pulitzer Prize-winner spun his recent tweets into a piece at The Atlantic. Here is a taste: The curriculum, however, is another matter. Trained teachers, curriculum directors, and school principals are responsible for organizing the content and […]

Historian David Blight champions teachers; criticizes Democratic Party’s “endless debates over the right language”

John Fea   |  November 16, 2021

Here is the Pulitzer Prize-winner and Frederick Douglass biographer: Blight is also concerned about the current state of the Democratic Party:

The editors of The Christian Century ask: “Why do we need to teach history?”

John Fea   |  November 3, 2021

The Christian Century tackles a Texas bill that forbids the teaching of critical race theory and the 1619 Project. Here is a taste of its editorial: How should the story of our country be told? It says that schools should […]

Teaching “opposing” views of the Holocaust in a history class is not that far-fetched of an idea. Let me explain.

John Fea   |  October 16, 2021

A Superintendent of a Texas school has apologized for telling his faculty that they had to teach “opposing” views on the Holocaust. Get up to speed here. Here is Mary Papenfuss at Yahoo News: A north Texas school superintendent has apologized for […]

Does Howard Zinn’s “A People’s History of the United States” make students hate America?

John Fea   |  September 25, 2021

As longtime readers of this blog know, I have my issues with Howard Zinn‘s A People’s History of the United States. I stand by what I have written about this book over the last decade or so. We’ve covered him […]

Nataliya Braginsky is the Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History National History Teacher of the Year!

John Fea   |  September 15, 2021

Here is the press release: The Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History is delighted to announce that Nataliya Braginsky, a social studies teacher at Metropolitan Business Academy in New Haven, Connecticut, has been named the 2021 National History Teacher of the Year. Braginsky […]

The “Umbrella Man” is back

John Fea   |  September 13, 2021

Tonight is the first night of content in my “Introduction to History” course. I love using this video to teach historical thinking, especially causality, complexity, and contingency: I discuss how I use this video on page 10-11 in Why Study […]

What happens when an Illinois middle-school history teacher wears a pro-vaccine mask to a “meet and greet” with parents?

John Fea   |  September 4, 2021

I have been working with and training K-12 teachers for nearly two decades and Matt Lakemacher is one of the best middle school history teachers I know. His passion for the study of the past is contagious and his creativity […]

History teachers: The “skills-versus-content” debate rests on a false dichotomy

John Fea   |  August 27, 2021

Over the last few decades, history educators and the scholars who shape the field of history education have stressed the teaching of historical thinking skills as essential to good pedagogy. This emphasis, I would argue, emerged as a response to […]

Tennessee governor calls on schools to teach “unapologetic American exceptionalism”

John Fea   |  August 13, 2021

Here is Yue Stella Yu at the Nashville Tennessean: Tennessee Gov. Bill Lee wants schools to teach “unapologetic American exceptionalism” — an idea that American values are intrinsically different from those of other countries. Touting Tennessee’s education standards, Lee made the comment […]

Josh Hawley, “let’s be clear”: This is a nation of oppressors and liberators.

John Fea   |  August 3, 2021

Missouri Senator Josh Hawley wrote an op-ed in The New York Post last weekend condemning critical race theory and promoting his personal view of what young Americans should learn in history class. Let’s take a look: Hawley writes: Parents know […]

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