Teaching ALL of American History
Michael Streich (Written & Published in 2012)
For teachers of American
History, the task of covering all the material from the period of “discovery of
the new world” to contemporary events is daunting and nearly impossible. In
most cases, the curriculum is dictated by mandated state standards and courses
of study that attempt to touch on key events and concepts detailed in 30 to 35
chapters of text.
The inclination and
temptation to spend more time on favorite eras is checked by performance
evaluations that gauge how well state requirements are addressed and how
standardized test scores validate those requirements. Innovative strategies,
however, might satisfy overall state standards as well as allow a greater
degree of classroom freedom in terms of teaching key material.
Teaching American History using
a Thematic Approach
Thematic treatments can still
be chronological in order to be effective. For example, a semester theme
focusing on expansion can analyze and correlate the following chronological
events:
Colonial expansion up to the
Beginning of the Westward
Movement
Manifest Destiny
Expansionism in Foreign
Affairs – 19th Century
Imperialism
Global expansion through the
World Wars
Cold War military and
economic expansion
Other thematic approaches
might cover the following areas:
The Move toward Democratic
Ideals and Civil Rights
Using Court Cases to Teach
American Innovations,
Industrialism, and the Urban Nation
Mini Sections that Focus on
Mico Historical Events
Another creative and
chronological focus develops key or watershed movements in American History as
a core focus from which ancillary topics are extrapolated. In this approach,
the core focus becomes the center of study as well as the primary learning
outcome.
If the core focus is “British
tax policies after 1763 directly caused the American Independence Movement,”
ancillary proofs can be taken from several actual events, determined by their
ultimate impact on the core focus:
The Stamp Act
The Quartering Act
The Declaratory Act
The Boston Tea Party and
subsequent Coercive Acts
Rather than spending an
inordinate amount of time on the 1763 Proclamation Line, the Townshend Acts,
the Boston Massacre, and the Sons of Liberty, more pivotal events tell the
story quickly without sacrificing content.
Begin American History at
1800
In
Inevitably, however,
significant problems exist:
Juniors have difficulty
recalling curricula details from one semester to the next if interrupted by
long summer breaks
Transfer students from
out-of-state districts may have never been taught the earlier material
Even the best attempts of
honest coverage results in “snap-shot” lesson plans that conform to a detailed
history text.
Teaching American History
from Selected Documents
This approach has many
advantages. Using selected documents still maintains a chronological approach
and it introduces students to primary source documents. Original source
documents take studying and analysis to a higher level of critical thinking.
The singular negative in this
approach rests with a teacher or instructor not fluent enough in the discipline
to provide background information when needed or to make necessary connections
between those documents that highlight similar themes. These points to a
teacher enslaved by a publisher’s wrap-around-teacher edition of the text and
the endless power point presentations that offer slightly more than a generic
treatment of the material.
Worst Case Scenario
The worst case is usually
walking into an American History class in March and finding that the American
Civil War has just ended. Students in such classes never hear about World War I
and never reach
The Call for History
Accountability
Since 2000, American
elections have become more volatile and divisive within society. During the
2008 presidential election, young voters were enticed by Barack Obama’s message
of change and voted in great numbers. Voting, however, correlates to knowledge
of American History that is at the very least passable.
Unless educators develop
innovative ways to teach the full gamut of American History in a meaningful
way, employing strategies to ensure realistic student outcomes, standardization
and “bubble-sheet” exams will continue to demonstrate that many American high
school graduates know very little about their own history.
2021
The above reflections are even more important in the current pandemic crisis, which has all but eliminated in-person instruction and subjected most students to the deadening daily impact of "remote" learning. At the same time, those clamoring to remove statues and other public memorabilia resulting in an erasure of American History will damn an entire generation who may never know the truths of the past, good or bad.
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