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50 Years of ERIC
50 Years of ERIC
The Education Resources Information Center (ERIC) is celebrating its 50th Birthday! First opened on May 15th, 1964 ERIC continues the long tradition of ongoing innovation and enhancement.

Learn more about the history of ERIC here. PDF icon

Showing 1 to 15 of 27 results
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Duffield, Stacy; Wageman, Justin; Hodge, Angela – Journal of Social Studies Research, 2013
A causal-comparative, mixed methods design was used to study a partnership between a university and school district formed with the goal of improving history teachers' United States history content knowledge to raise student engagement and achievement. Data were collected from middle and high school history teachers including teacher interviews,…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Learner Engagement, Teaching Methods, United States History
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Schul, James E. – Journal of Social Studies Research, 2012
The increased popularity of desktop documentary making among both teachers and students in history classrooms warrants an examination of its integration into classroom instruction. This multiple case study focused on two secondary students in an AP European History course during a unit that featured desktop documentary making. Employing Cultural…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Documentaries, Teacher Educators, European History
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Epstein, Terrie; Mayorga, Edwin; Nelson, Joseph – Journal of Social Studies Research, 2011
The authors examined the effects of a culturally responsive teacher's pedagogy on urban low-income African American and Latino high school students' interpretations of racial diversity, racism, and individual and collective agency in U. S. history. The authors found that students incorporated instruction about the diversity and agency of people of…
Descriptors: Race, History Instruction, Urban Areas, Culturally Relevant Education
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Kohlmeier, Jada; Saye, John; Mitchell, Linda; Brush, Thomas – Journal of Social Studies Research, 2011
Inquiry-based history instruction is rare in most school settings, but particularly in classes of students who are perceived to be "low achieving." Students with low reading abilities or test scores typically receive instruction focused on rote recall of historical information. Teachers and students face great obstacles in inquiry based learning,…
Descriptors: Communities of Practice, Mentors, Low Achievement, Active Learning
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DiCamillo, Lorrei – Journal of Social Studies Research, 2010
This case study examines a U.S. History class where a veteran teacher uses challenging primary source documents and a debate to encourage his students to think critically about history. The teacher is knowledgeable about the subject matter and articulates a clear purpose for teaching. Surprisingly, the author finds that the teacher's methods,…
Descriptors: History Instruction, Case Studies, United States History, Critical Thinking
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Lee, John K.; Probert, Jeffrey – Journal of Social Studies Research, 2010
This study examined an 11th grade high school class as they played the game Civilization III. Over nine class sessions students played the game in support of other activities related to several predetermined and emergent topics in U. S. history. Gameplay was whole-class oriented and involved students taking turns at the computer controlling…
Descriptors: History Instruction, United States History, High Schools, Social Studies
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Gradwell, Jill M. – Journal of Social Studies Research, 2010
The teacher who is the focus of this interpretive case study, uses primary sources regularly with her students in ambitious ways but does so less from the current reform efforts, recent history education scholarship, or the climate of accountability and more from her individual goals for history education, most significantly, to prepare her…
Descriptors: Primary Sources, United States History, History Instruction, Middle School Teachers
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Lindquist, David H. – Journal of Social Studies Research, 2010
Confronting the Holocaust in a classroom setting involves a complex undertaking that demands careful planning as educators develop and present curricula on the subject to their students. This article explores another problematic factor involved in teaching the Shoah, that is, several issues that exist outside the content/pedagogical framework but…
Descriptors: World History, History Instruction, Controversial Issues (Course Content), Death
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Brooks, Sarah – Journal of Social Studies Research, 2009
In the field of history education, researchers and practitioners frequently demonstrate a keen interest in historical empathy. However, very little consensus exists concerning the meaning of the term. In an effort to make sense of the continuing debate, this article explores the competing conceptualizations of historical empathy found in the…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Empathy, History Instruction, Teaching Methods
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Shiveley, James M.; VanFossen, Phillip J. – Journal of Social Studies Research, 2009
Despite the widely-held acknowledgment of the great potential of the Internet for improving social studies instruction, the available research tells us that most social studies teachers who use the Internet in their classroom do so without changing much in their traditional approach to teaching. This article suggests using the NCSS Position…
Descriptors: Internet, Social Studies, Teaching Methods, Computer Uses in Education
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Misco, Thomas; Patterson, Nancy C. – Journal of Social Studies Research, 2009
This article revisits and explores the promises and challenges of reverse chronology history instruction within the social studies. In response to student disinterest in social studies, changes in our educational culture that often value content knowledge exclusively, and marginalization of instructional time stemming from testing burdens, reverse…
Descriptors: Curriculum Design, Social Studies, History Instruction, Futures (of Society)
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Camicia, Steven P. – Journal of Social Studies Research, 2009
This article examines a case of curriculum conflict in order to understand how the social studies curriculum is changed by such conflicts. In the case, a small group of activists challenged a local sixth grade history curriculum, which claimed that the WWII internment of Japanese Americans was a mistake. Activists claimed that the internment was…
Descriptors: Secondary School Curriculum, Grade 6, Conflict, Social Studies
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Russell, William Benedict, III; Pellegrino, Anthony – Journal of Social Studies Research, 2008
Through an examination of one undergraduate American history course at a large university in the southeastern United States via interview, observation and content analysis, we attempted to discern if the pedagogical methodology was relating to the students in such a way as to foster students' ability to construct meaning beyond simply…
Descriptors: United States History, Prior Learning, Content Analysis, Lecture Method
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Lindquist, David H. – Journal of Social Studies Research, 2008
Determining how to teach about rescue during the Holocaust presents many dilemmas to teachers as they plan Holocaust curricula. Rescue is often overemphasized, and faulty perspectives about rescuers and their actions may cause students to develop distorted views about this aspect of Holocaust history. This article explores several factors that…
Descriptors: Safety, Teaching Methods, Death, History Instruction
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Joumell, Wayne – Journal of Social Studies Research, 2008
This study seeks to understand the ways nine states represent African Americans within their standards for U.S. History. Previous research on the effects of high-stakes assessment on social studies educators suggests teachers align their instruction with information found in state standards. Therefore, an understanding of the way African Americans…
Descriptors: African Americans, United States History, State Standards, African American History
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