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Showing 1 to 15 of 56 results Save | Export
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Erika Rendon-Ramos – Multicultural Perspectives, 2023
For most undergraduate students, history prior to college has been dominated by learning through a settler colonialism lens. Settler colonialism embodies the typical United States, master, or traditional narrative. It erases marginalized perspectives, histories, culture, and identity in favor of the white settler perspective. By overlooking the…
Descriptors: Active Learning, Decolonization, Teaching Methods, Undergraduate Students
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Jonatan Nästesjö – Minerva: A Review of Science, Learning and Policy, 2025
This paper investigates how early career academics interpret and respond to institutional demands structured by projectification. Developing a 'frame analytic' approach, it explores projectification as a process constituted at the level of meaning-making. Building on 35 in-depth interviews with fixed-term scholars in political science and history,…
Descriptors: Postdoctoral Education, Graduate Students, Political Science, History Instruction
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Nena Mocnik – Studies in Higher Education, 2025
This paper explores the evolving role of trauma in history education, particularly within the context of the Council of Europe's vision of 'understanding the past as vital for a shared future'. The rise of memory studies and remembrance culture in Europe has shifted the focus from impersonal historical events to more personal microhistories and…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, European History, College Faculty, Trauma Informed Approach
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Martell, Christopher C. – Teacher Development, 2022
This article reports the results of a six-year longitudinal interpretative case study on the development of five elementary teachers' beliefs and practices related to historical inquiry. Using activity theory as the lens, the researcher found: (1) the teachers' conceptual tools remained relatively consistent over time, and they believed inquiry…
Descriptors: Elementary School Teachers, Active Learning, Inquiry, History Instruction
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Richardson, Deborah South; Bledsoe, Robert S.; Manning, Kailea – College Teaching, 2023
The authors' scholarly reflective narrative addresses the rewards and challenges of an immersive experiential active learning pedagogy. They ask, "was it worth it?" for students and for themselves. Although research evidence makes it clear that active learning benefits student learning and engagement, designing a course to incorporate…
Descriptors: Active Learning, Learner Engagement, College Faculty, College Students
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Spalding, Sarah M. – History Teacher, 2021
By using the "Game of Thrones" pop-culture television series, the author has structured courses in a way that seeks to solve problems that plague many history courses serving university requirements. In this article, the author will discuss how gaming the classroom can serve as a solution to the issue of engaging majors and non-majors…
Descriptors: History Instruction, Educational Games, Teaching Methods, Role Playing
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Elena Carrión Candel; Cristina de-la-Peña; Beatriz Chaves Yuste – Education and Information Technologies, 2024
The scientific literature reveals the impact of applying game-based videos and gamification on undergraduates' learning. This work proposes, within an online context, using these educational strategies to make students the active protagonists of their learning. Therefore, this paper aims to analyze the students' perception of the effectiveness of…
Descriptors: Preservice Teachers, Student Attitudes, Active Learning, Teaching Methods
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Lustig, Jason – History Teacher, 2021
The prevailing long-term trend in university history instruction--especially when one considers the rise of the historical seminar in the nineteenth century and the source-method of teaching in the twentieth--has been towards teaching methods of analysis. That is to say, by reading documents and sources, students can learn a way of looking at the…
Descriptors: History Instruction, Higher Education, Jews, Service Learning
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Bylsma, Megan – Papers on Postsecondary Learning and Teaching, 2020
Implementing curriculum that includes all students, that celebrates individual learners' needs, that fosters student responsibility, and that teaches skills that transcend discipline-specific outcomes is possible with a pedagogy that embraces immersion learning. Reacting to the Past is a High Impact Practice (H.I.P.) approach that uses elaborate,…
Descriptors: Learner Engagement, Experiential Learning, Role Playing, Game Based Learning
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Zulfa; Nusi, Ahmad; Ananda, Azwar; Efi, Agusti; Pernantah, Piki Setri – International Journal of Instruction, 2022
This study aims to find a simulation project-based learning model for the Minangkabau Natural Culture subject in higher education. This research method uses the research and development (R and D) development procedure using the Plomp development design that goes through 3 steps, namely: Preliminary Research, Prototyping Phase, and Assessment…
Descriptors: Student Projects, Active Learning, Higher Education, Models
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Tirado-Olivares, Sergio; Cózar-Gutiérrez, Ramón; García-Olivares, Rebeca; González-Calero, José Antonio – Australasian Journal of Educational Technology, 2021
Information and communication technology has produced changes in the demands of modern-day society (e.g., most jobs will require advanced digital skills in the short term). In addition, nowadays, new active methodologies using emerging technologies are being put into practice. However, little research has been conducted with pre-service teachers,…
Descriptors: Active Learning, History Instruction, Higher Education, Preservice Teacher Education
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Bledsoe, Robert S.; Richardson, Deborah S. – International Journal of Teaching and Learning in Higher Education, 2022
Reacting to the Past (Reacting) is an active-learning pedagogy utilizing elaborate historical roleplaying games. This study examined the effect of Reacting on student academic self-efficacy, perspective taking, engagement, and perceived learning, and considered whether these outcomes were impacted by the type of role a student assumed. Students…
Descriptors: Active Learning, Teaching Methods, Role Playing, Instructional Effectiveness
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High, Steven – LEARNing Landscapes, 2018
Oral history as a field of research, teaching, archival collection, community building or engagement, truth and reconciliation, and creative practice, emerged with the diffusion of the tape recorder in the 1960s and 1970s. This was a time of enormous social and political upheaval. As a result, oral history was quickly taken up by feminists,…
Descriptors: Oral History, Interviews, Ethics, Confidentiality
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Çam, Sefika Sümeyye – Participatory Educational Research, 2021
This study aimed to (a) determine how The History of Turkish Education course was taught under the current conditions, (b) identify the current status of the second-year student teachers (hereafter student) of preschool education regarding the technopedagogical education, (c) design history of Turkish education course activities based on…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, History Instruction, Education Courses, Educational History
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Voet, Michiel; De Wever, Bram – Instructional Science: An International Journal of the Learning Sciences, 2018
Professional development on inquiry-based learning (IBL) generally draws heavily on the principle of providing instruction in line with what teachers are expected to do in their classroom. So far, however, relatively little is known about how this impacts teachers' educational beliefs, even though these beliefs ultimately determine their classroom…
Descriptors: Active Learning, Inquiry, Student Teachers, Student Teacher Attitudes
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