Democratizing Student Learning: The "Women and Social Movements in the United States, 1820-1940" Web Project at SUNY Binghamton

Worldwide web technology is a perfect match for teaching about history. The technology boosts teachers capacities because it gives its students access to the documents that reveal the processes of historical change, and it helps students develop better analytic skills by learning to interpret docume...

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Veröffentlicht in:The History teacher (Long Beach, Calif.) Calif.), 2002-02, Vol.35 (2), p.163-173
Hauptverfasser: Dublin, Thomas, Sklar, Kathryn Kish
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container_title The History teacher (Long Beach, Calif.)
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creator Dublin, Thomas
Sklar, Kathryn Kish
description Worldwide web technology is a perfect match for teaching about history. The technology boosts teachers capacities because it gives its students access to the documents that reveal the processes of historical change, and it helps students develop better analytic skills by learning to interpret documents. This amazing conjuncture of new technology and the possibilities of the history classroom has generated enormous potential for improvement in the way one teaches history. But much remains to be done. Teachers need to develop new course content and new teaching formats that use the new technology. In this article, the author describes a web project at State University of New York, Binghamton. The project collaborates with students to produce online resources in U.S. women's history. (Contains 3 figures and 6 notes.)
doi_str_mv 10.2307/3054176
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source Freely Accessible Journals; Jstor Complete Legacy; Education Source
subjects College students
Educational Technology
Females
History instruction
HTML
Influence of Technology
Instructional Design
Instructional Innovation
International expositions
New York
Program Descriptions
Social movements
Teachers
Technology Uses in Education
The Craft of Teaching
United States
United States History
Virtual Classrooms
Web Sites
Websites
Womens history
Womens Studies
World Wide Web
title Democratizing Student Learning: The "Women and Social Movements in the United States, 1820-1940" Web Project at SUNY Binghamton
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