Teaching and Learning the Difficult Past
Comparative Perspectives
Herausgeber: Gross, Magdalena H.; Terra, Luke
Teaching and Learning the Difficult Past
Comparative Perspectives
Herausgeber: Gross, Magdalena H.; Terra, Luke
- Broschiertes Buch
- Merkliste
- Auf die Merkliste
- Bewerten Bewerten
- Teilen
- Produkt teilen
- Produkterinnerung
- Produkterinnerung
Building upon the theoretical foundations for the teaching and learning of difficult histories in social studies classrooms, this edited collection offers diverse perspectives on school practices, curriculum development, and experiences of teaching about traumatic events. Considering the relationship between memory, history, and education, this volume advances the discussion of classroom-based practices for teaching and learning difficult histories and investigates the role that history education plays in creating and sustaining national and collective identities.
Andere Kunden interessierten sich auch für
Gerrard MugfordAddressing Difficult Situations in Foreign-Language Learning54,99 €
Francis J. GardellaIntroducing Difficult Mathematics Topics in the Elementary Classroom53,99 €
Jeremy StoddardTeaching Difficult History through Film57,99 €
Paul BlumSurviving and Succeeding in Difficult Classrooms44,99 €
Claire N. RubmanThis May Be Difficult to Read31,99 €
Foster Barham ZinckeSome Thoughts About the School of the Future: A Sketch of the Solution Which Time Appears to Be Preparing for the Difficult Educational Questions of t20,99 €
Nanci MonacoCovid Kids: Joy's Story of Coping in a Difficult Time9,49 €-
-
-
Building upon the theoretical foundations for the teaching and learning of difficult histories in social studies classrooms, this edited collection offers diverse perspectives on school practices, curriculum development, and experiences of teaching about traumatic events. Considering the relationship between memory, history, and education, this volume advances the discussion of classroom-based practices for teaching and learning difficult histories and investigates the role that history education plays in creating and sustaining national and collective identities.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Routledge
- Seitenzahl: 318
- Erscheinungstermin: 30. Juni 2020
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 17mm
- Gewicht: 463g
- ISBN-13: 9780367582678
- ISBN-10: 0367582678
- Artikelnr.: 69890062
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
- Verlag: Routledge
- Seitenzahl: 318
- Erscheinungstermin: 30. Juni 2020
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 17mm
- Gewicht: 463g
- ISBN-13: 9780367582678
- ISBN-10: 0367582678
- Artikelnr.: 69890062
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
Magdalena H. Gross is a Senior Research Associate at the Center to Support Excellence in Teaching (CSET) at Stanford University, USA. Luke Terra is Director of Community Engaged Learning and Research at Stanford University, USA.
Foreword
Simone Schweber
Introduction
Magdalena H. Gross and Luke Terra
Part I Theorizing the teaching and learning of difficult histories
1. Teaching difficult histories: The need for a dynamic research
tradition
Keith Barton
2. Contextual Gatekeeping: Teacher decision-making in multiple and
overlapping milieus
Thomas Misco
3. Sublime Understanding: Cultivating the Emotional Past
Cam Scribner
Part II Teaching difficult histories
4. An Inquiry-Based Curriculum Design for Difficult History
Bradley Fogo and Joel Breakstone
1. Ethical Judgments about the Difficult Past: Observations from the
Classroom
Lindsay Gibson
1. When Past and Present Collide: Dilemmas in Teaching the History of
the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict
Sivan Zakai
2. Warts, Polyps, Blisters and All? Problems in Learning to Teach a
Provocative Past in a Troubling Way
Bruce VanSledright and Sebastian Burkholdt
3. Güeras, Indigenas, y Negros: A Framework for Teaching Mexican
American Racial/Ethnic Histories
Maribel Santiago
4. Betrayal, Conversion, and Complicity in the Middle East Classroom
Taymiya R. Zaman
Part III Learning difficult histories
5. Soft or Hard Biculturalism and Beyond: How New Zealand Adolescents
Construct Contemporary Significance of the Nation's Founding Document
Terrie Epstein and Michael Harcourt
6. History Education, National Identity, and the Road to Brexit
Eleni Karayianni and Stuart Foster
7. "I need to hear a good ending":How students cope with historical
violence.
Jeremy Jimenez
8. The Myth of "Black Confederates": Beliefs of Students and
Implications for History Educators
Gabriel A. Reich and Amy Corning
9. "We've Been Screwed": French Québecers and Their Past
Jocelyn Létourneau
10. Student Motivation to Confront Difficult Local History
Rob Lucas
11. Learning History Through Culture: The Krakow Jewish Festival
Ari Y. Kelman
12. "Still Racist, Just Less Outward About It:" Secondary Students
Narrate Connections Between Slavery and Racism
Justine Lee
13. Sweetening the Past: Selling Heritage at Knott's Berry Farm
Harper Keenan
Afterword
Sam Wineburg
Appendices
Simone Schweber
Introduction
Magdalena H. Gross and Luke Terra
Part I Theorizing the teaching and learning of difficult histories
1. Teaching difficult histories: The need for a dynamic research
tradition
Keith Barton
2. Contextual Gatekeeping: Teacher decision-making in multiple and
overlapping milieus
Thomas Misco
3. Sublime Understanding: Cultivating the Emotional Past
Cam Scribner
Part II Teaching difficult histories
4. An Inquiry-Based Curriculum Design for Difficult History
Bradley Fogo and Joel Breakstone
1. Ethical Judgments about the Difficult Past: Observations from the
Classroom
Lindsay Gibson
1. When Past and Present Collide: Dilemmas in Teaching the History of
the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict
Sivan Zakai
2. Warts, Polyps, Blisters and All? Problems in Learning to Teach a
Provocative Past in a Troubling Way
Bruce VanSledright and Sebastian Burkholdt
3. Güeras, Indigenas, y Negros: A Framework for Teaching Mexican
American Racial/Ethnic Histories
Maribel Santiago
4. Betrayal, Conversion, and Complicity in the Middle East Classroom
Taymiya R. Zaman
Part III Learning difficult histories
5. Soft or Hard Biculturalism and Beyond: How New Zealand Adolescents
Construct Contemporary Significance of the Nation's Founding Document
Terrie Epstein and Michael Harcourt
6. History Education, National Identity, and the Road to Brexit
Eleni Karayianni and Stuart Foster
7. "I need to hear a good ending":How students cope with historical
violence.
Jeremy Jimenez
8. The Myth of "Black Confederates": Beliefs of Students and
Implications for History Educators
Gabriel A. Reich and Amy Corning
9. "We've Been Screwed": French Québecers and Their Past
Jocelyn Létourneau
10. Student Motivation to Confront Difficult Local History
Rob Lucas
11. Learning History Through Culture: The Krakow Jewish Festival
Ari Y. Kelman
12. "Still Racist, Just Less Outward About It:" Secondary Students
Narrate Connections Between Slavery and Racism
Justine Lee
13. Sweetening the Past: Selling Heritage at Knott's Berry Farm
Harper Keenan
Afterword
Sam Wineburg
Appendices
Foreword
Simone Schweber
Introduction
Magdalena H. Gross and Luke Terra
Part I Theorizing the teaching and learning of difficult histories
1. Teaching difficult histories: The need for a dynamic research
tradition
Keith Barton
2. Contextual Gatekeeping: Teacher decision-making in multiple and
overlapping milieus
Thomas Misco
3. Sublime Understanding: Cultivating the Emotional Past
Cam Scribner
Part II Teaching difficult histories
4. An Inquiry-Based Curriculum Design for Difficult History
Bradley Fogo and Joel Breakstone
1. Ethical Judgments about the Difficult Past: Observations from the
Classroom
Lindsay Gibson
1. When Past and Present Collide: Dilemmas in Teaching the History of
the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict
Sivan Zakai
2. Warts, Polyps, Blisters and All? Problems in Learning to Teach a
Provocative Past in a Troubling Way
Bruce VanSledright and Sebastian Burkholdt
3. Güeras, Indigenas, y Negros: A Framework for Teaching Mexican
American Racial/Ethnic Histories
Maribel Santiago
4. Betrayal, Conversion, and Complicity in the Middle East Classroom
Taymiya R. Zaman
Part III Learning difficult histories
5. Soft or Hard Biculturalism and Beyond: How New Zealand Adolescents
Construct Contemporary Significance of the Nation's Founding Document
Terrie Epstein and Michael Harcourt
6. History Education, National Identity, and the Road to Brexit
Eleni Karayianni and Stuart Foster
7. "I need to hear a good ending":How students cope with historical
violence.
Jeremy Jimenez
8. The Myth of "Black Confederates": Beliefs of Students and
Implications for History Educators
Gabriel A. Reich and Amy Corning
9. "We've Been Screwed": French Québecers and Their Past
Jocelyn Létourneau
10. Student Motivation to Confront Difficult Local History
Rob Lucas
11. Learning History Through Culture: The Krakow Jewish Festival
Ari Y. Kelman
12. "Still Racist, Just Less Outward About It:" Secondary Students
Narrate Connections Between Slavery and Racism
Justine Lee
13. Sweetening the Past: Selling Heritage at Knott's Berry Farm
Harper Keenan
Afterword
Sam Wineburg
Appendices
Simone Schweber
Introduction
Magdalena H. Gross and Luke Terra
Part I Theorizing the teaching and learning of difficult histories
1. Teaching difficult histories: The need for a dynamic research
tradition
Keith Barton
2. Contextual Gatekeeping: Teacher decision-making in multiple and
overlapping milieus
Thomas Misco
3. Sublime Understanding: Cultivating the Emotional Past
Cam Scribner
Part II Teaching difficult histories
4. An Inquiry-Based Curriculum Design for Difficult History
Bradley Fogo and Joel Breakstone
1. Ethical Judgments about the Difficult Past: Observations from the
Classroom
Lindsay Gibson
1. When Past and Present Collide: Dilemmas in Teaching the History of
the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict
Sivan Zakai
2. Warts, Polyps, Blisters and All? Problems in Learning to Teach a
Provocative Past in a Troubling Way
Bruce VanSledright and Sebastian Burkholdt
3. Güeras, Indigenas, y Negros: A Framework for Teaching Mexican
American Racial/Ethnic Histories
Maribel Santiago
4. Betrayal, Conversion, and Complicity in the Middle East Classroom
Taymiya R. Zaman
Part III Learning difficult histories
5. Soft or Hard Biculturalism and Beyond: How New Zealand Adolescents
Construct Contemporary Significance of the Nation's Founding Document
Terrie Epstein and Michael Harcourt
6. History Education, National Identity, and the Road to Brexit
Eleni Karayianni and Stuart Foster
7. "I need to hear a good ending":How students cope with historical
violence.
Jeremy Jimenez
8. The Myth of "Black Confederates": Beliefs of Students and
Implications for History Educators
Gabriel A. Reich and Amy Corning
9. "We've Been Screwed": French Québecers and Their Past
Jocelyn Létourneau
10. Student Motivation to Confront Difficult Local History
Rob Lucas
11. Learning History Through Culture: The Krakow Jewish Festival
Ari Y. Kelman
12. "Still Racist, Just Less Outward About It:" Secondary Students
Narrate Connections Between Slavery and Racism
Justine Lee
13. Sweetening the Past: Selling Heritage at Knott's Berry Farm
Harper Keenan
Afterword
Sam Wineburg
Appendices







