ABSTRACT

Current educational reforms have given rise to various types of "educational Taylorism," which encourage the creation of efficiency models in pursuit of a unified way to teach. In history education curricula, this has been introduced through scripted textbook-based programs such as Teacher Curriculum Institute’s History Alive! and completely online curricula. They include the jargon of authentic methods, such as primary sources, cooperative learning, differentiated instruction, and access to technology; yet the craft of teaching is removed, and an experience that should be marked by discovery and reflection is replaced with comparatively empty processes.

This volume provides systematic models and examples of ways that history teachers can compete with and effectively halt this transformation. The alternatives the authors present are based on collaborative models that address the art of teaching for pre-service and practicing secondary history teachers as well as collegiate history educators. Relying on original research, and a maturing body of secondary literature on historical thinking, this book illuminates how collaboration can create real historical learning.

chapter |8 pages

Introduction

part |35 pages

The Current Landscape of History Education

chapter |11 pages

History Alive! Is History Dead

Problems with Textbook-Driven Instruction

chapter |9 pages

The Teaching American History Project

Teachers' Assessments of Its Classroom Connection

chapter |13 pages

Crossing the Educational Rubicon

Collaboration as a Model for Change

part |27 pages

The Argument for Creating the Space to Think and Teach Historically

chapter |11 pages

Developing a Craft Approach to Teaching History

What We Can Learn from the Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History's National History Teachers of the Year

chapter |14 pages

A Collaborative Model for Evaluating Teachers

Why We Need It

part |54 pages

Collaborating to Create Authentic Historical Thinking and Learning

chapter |12 pages

Historiography in the High School Classroom

A Review of the Literature

chapter |10 pages

Lifting the Veil

Teachers and Historiography

chapter |12 pages

Students and Historiography

How Collaboration Improves Learning

chapter |10 pages

Collaboration and Pre-Service Teachers

Using Historiography as Pedagogy

chapter |8 pages

Alternative Education

Historiography and Historical Thinking in the Nontraditional Classroom