This article describes an undergraduate history assignment at Susquehanna University, through which students create virtual museum exhibits on the local history of Selinsgrove, Pennsylvania. Students narrate and interpret the Penn’s Creek Massacre of 1755 and the Stump Massacre of 1768. The goal is to tell a cohesive story and offer a clear viewpoint on the events while adhering to the research and design standards used by public history professionals. The historical content of the assignment emphasizes the diversity and violence of the American frontier in the decades before the Revolutionary War. The exhibition format highlights the need to think carefully about audience, voice, and storytelling, three aspects of making history that are o...
Kansas\u27 largest teacher preparation college using original documentaries to aid classroom teacher...
Research in history education suggests disciplinary approaches to teaching and learning about the pa...
In the summer of 2021, Profs. Jennifer Black, Allan Austin, and Mary Kay Kimelewski were awarded a g...
In this work-in-progress session, Susquehanna University faculty, students and staff will explore ho...
When students are given the opportunity to actively engage with the past in a familiar environment, ...
Slavery is quite possibly the most integral issue to understanding the history of the United States....
One of the most pressing issues facing Appalachian historians is how to properly situate the history...
History education researchers in the U.S. have largely focused on students’ capacities to improve th...
In fall 2013 my honors writing students at California University of Pennsylvania collaborated with t...
A few months ago I took a quick jaunt to Carlisle to see the Pennsylvania Civil War Sesquicentennial...
This research took place in a small rural upstate New York school district in an eleventh grade soci...
At the corner of Washington and High Streets in Gettysburg, Pennsylvania stands a modest old house—a...
In this article we utilize three case studies from the US as models for structuring historical inqui...
The students confidently measured the world through what they knew, and what they knew was popular c...
At a time when public education has moved toward standardized testing, and history in grades K-5 has...
Kansas\u27 largest teacher preparation college using original documentaries to aid classroom teacher...
Research in history education suggests disciplinary approaches to teaching and learning about the pa...
In the summer of 2021, Profs. Jennifer Black, Allan Austin, and Mary Kay Kimelewski were awarded a g...
In this work-in-progress session, Susquehanna University faculty, students and staff will explore ho...
When students are given the opportunity to actively engage with the past in a familiar environment, ...
Slavery is quite possibly the most integral issue to understanding the history of the United States....
One of the most pressing issues facing Appalachian historians is how to properly situate the history...
History education researchers in the U.S. have largely focused on students’ capacities to improve th...
In fall 2013 my honors writing students at California University of Pennsylvania collaborated with t...
A few months ago I took a quick jaunt to Carlisle to see the Pennsylvania Civil War Sesquicentennial...
This research took place in a small rural upstate New York school district in an eleventh grade soci...
At the corner of Washington and High Streets in Gettysburg, Pennsylvania stands a modest old house—a...
In this article we utilize three case studies from the US as models for structuring historical inqui...
The students confidently measured the world through what they knew, and what they knew was popular c...
At a time when public education has moved toward standardized testing, and history in grades K-5 has...
Kansas\u27 largest teacher preparation college using original documentaries to aid classroom teacher...
Research in history education suggests disciplinary approaches to teaching and learning about the pa...
In the summer of 2021, Profs. Jennifer Black, Allan Austin, and Mary Kay Kimelewski were awarded a g...