Reading Like a Historian
Douban
Teaching Literacy in Middle and High School History Classrooms
Sam Wineburg / Daisy Martin …
Übersicht
Reaching beyond textbooks, this is a guide to teaching ''historical reading'' with middle and high school students. This practical resource shows you how to apply Sam Wineburg's highly acclaimed approach to teaching, Reading Like a Historian, in your classroom to increase academic literacy and spark students' curiosity. Each chapter begins with an introductory essay that sets the stage of a key moment in American history--beginning with exploration and colonization and the events at Jamestown and ending with the Cuban Missile Crisis. Following each essay are all the materials you'll need to teach this topic--primary documents, charts, graphic organizers, visual images, and political cartoons--as well as suggestions for where to find additional resources on the Internet and guidance for assessing students' understanding of core historical ideas. Reading Like a Historian will help you use your textbook creatively and give you ideas for how historical instruction can enhance students' skills in reading comprehension. Get started today and watch the excitement unfold in your classroom!
contents
1. Did Pocahontas Rescue John Smith?
2. ''Standing Tall'' or Fleeing the Scene?
3. Lincoln in Context
4. Columbus Day: 1892, Not 1492
5. Electricity and Women's Work: Who Really Benefited? And When?
6. ''Dust to Eat, and Dust to Breathe, and Dust to Drink''
7. Rosa Parks and the Montgomery Bus Boycott
8. To Blink or Not to Blink: The Cuban Missile Crisis