. . . a unique and imaginative approach to education, taking the student out of the textbook, even out of the classroom, into creative contact with the world outside. Students and teachers will profit immensely from its suggestions.
Howard Zinn, Professor Emeritus, Boston University, Author of A People's History of the United States
. . . smooth, entertaining, witty, and personal—just the right combination of methods, social analysis, and philosophy of history for my secondary certification students.
Susan Starbuck, Professor, Antioch University Seattle, author of Hazel Wolf: Fighting the Establishment
. . . a student-centered, intellectually invigorating, content-open way to engage students in the study of history.
Tarry Lindquist, Author of Seeing the Whole Through Social Studies, Ways That Work, and Social Studies at the Center
In this practical guidebook, Douglas Selwyn and Jan Maher propose a
different way of teaching historystart from today and keep asking
questions. As students investigate possible answers, they make connections
across miles and centuries. Along the way, they experience that essential
insight of the social studies: Point of view has everything to do with how
one perceives the world. To this end, each chapter explores projects
connecting students' concerns with core content and concepts in history,
geography, civics, and economics.
Lessons center on the economics of ordinary objects, understanding current
events in historical context, creating readers¹ theater, photodocumentaries
and more. While students dig deeply into issues of personal relevance, they
also master the content and skills mandated in state and national standards.
Students learn about historyand about themselves.