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The Library of Congress’s Slave Narratives Collection present students with an opportunity to expand their understanding of slavery in America while grappling with questions about interpretations of the past.
Type: Journal article
Studying local history stimulates student interest and can provide an entrée into studying larger national narratives.
Type: Journal article
This inquiry, which explores the current debate on what should be done with Confederate monuments, engages students in historical, geographic and civic skills.
Type: Journal article
Students can learn a great deal about the economic, social, or strategic importance of a place when they examine maps, such as the featured 1910 Sanborn map of South San Francisco.
Type: Journal article
The featured primary source in support of Native American tribes who were victims of the Indian Removal Act in 1830 can be used to spark a classroom lesson on this disturbing period in American history.
Type: Journal article
The U.S. Constitution codifies a complex system of governmental checks and balances. But for all its innovation, our founding document fails to address the question of how to prosecute wrongdoing by personnel in the executive branch, including the president of the United States.
Type: Journal article
In this unit, students examine the reasons various groups traveled westward during the second half of the nineteenth century.
Type: Journal article
The right combination of primary and secondary sources will create an inquiry bridge between disciplinary reading and analytical writing
Type: Journal article
Playwright Lillian Hellman's featured letter to the House Un-American Activities Committee as it investigated Hollywood during the Cold War can launch an interesting lesson on the protections of the Fifth Amendment.
Type: Journal article