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Pursuing E-Opportunities in the History Classroom
Mark Tebeau
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Over the last decade, information technology has fundamentally altered the American
social and cultural landscape, including the classrooms in which we teach
American history. Not surprisingly, five of twelve "Textbooks and Teaching"
field reports in a recent issue of the Journal of American History reported utilizing
electronic opportunities (e-opportunities) when "teaching outside the box."
The reports made connections between innovative teaching methods and electronic
resources, but the question remains: Is incorporating electronic resources and
technologically based teaching strategies so revolutionary that the result is an
entirely new mode of history pedagogy?1
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I believe that the promise of e-opportunities
for innovations in teaching American history is directly tied to
the exponential growth of materials made available on the Internet
during the past several years. Most critically, the mushrooming
availability of primary sources in digital format, when combined
with our increasingly easy and fast access to them, represents an
unprecedented opportunity to refocus our efforts as teachers. We
canand shouldthink about how to bring our students more fully
into the production of historical knowledge. I want to focus on
the implications of this bounty for our work as teachers and to
suggest how we can reorient our pedagogy to develop in our students
an ability not just to read but also to do history. |
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A casual glance at Internet Archive's
"Wayback Machine" reveals just how dramatically the quantity and
quality of resources available on the Internet for historians and
their students have expanded in the last five years. In January
1998, the Library of Congress's American Memory site had
a simple design and 43 separate "collections" of digitized documents,
photographs, recorded sound, moving pictures, and text selectively
taken from the Library of Congress's collections of Americana. Five
years later, American Memory boasts more than 110 separate
collections across a much broader range of topics. Likewise, the
libraries at Cornell University and the University of Michigan have
created complementary Making of America Web sites. By mining
their extensive collections of nineteenth-century monographs and
periodicals, these flagship institutions have made available online
over 8,500 books and more than 150,000 journal articles. As a result
of such efforts, including such material in our courses has become
easier than ever and is not tied to the purchase of texts.
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