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Reading Like A Historian: Free Stanford Curriculum


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I was reading this month's Stanford alumni magazine, and they profiled a successful middle school and high school history curriculum. It is called Reading Like A Historian, and uses primary source material. It is a free US and world history curriculum, and I thought I would share it with the hive in case anyone is interested. Here is a link to an article about the curriculum, as well as a link to the curriculum itself.

 

http://alumni.stanford.edu/get/page/magazine/article/?article_id=61541

 

http://sheg.stanford.edu/rlh

 

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I was reading this month's Stanford alumni magazine, and they profiled a successful middle school and high school history curriculum. It is called Reading Like A Historian, and uses primary source material. It is a free US and world history curriculum, and I thought I would share it with the hive in case anyone is interested. Here is a link to an article about the curriculum, as well as a link to the curriculum itself.

 

http://alumni.stanfo...rticle_id=61541

 

http://sheg.stanford.edu/rlh

 

 

I'm a few years from needing this, but I just want to say THANK YOU!!! :hurray: As a former history teacher, this is fabulous stuff.

 

I'm trying to decide if I need to go ahead and download all of this since it might not be there when I need it. :gnorsi:

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They should be free to download. They are being used by public school teachers all over the country. No Stanford degree required. I haven't tried to download, as I am mobile.

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They should be free to download. They are being used by public school teachers all over the country. No Stanford degree required. I haven't tried to download, as I am mobile.

 

They are. You have to make an account to get them, but they are free. Some of the lessons use Discovery Streaming as an enhancement but as we found out yesterday, that part is easily skipped and the lesson still works.

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You may also want to note for future use that there is a version of Howard Zinn's A People's History of the United States written for school-age kids. I am not sure exactly what age it targets, but maybe starting with the middle school/logic age kids? I haven't looked deeply into it myself yet, as my kids are also still young. There are 3 volumes titled A Young People's History of the United States.

 

I've always thought it'd be really fun to teach high school history by having kids read a standard history text book and also something like Zinn's book and comparing them.

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I was reading this month's Stanford alumni magazine, and they profiled a successful middle school and high school history curriculum. It is called Reading Like A Historian, and uses primary source material. It is a free US and world history curriculum, and I thought I would share it with the hive in case anyone is interested. Here is a link to an article about the curriculum, as well as a link to the curriculum itself.

 

http://alumni.stanford.edu/get/page/magazine/article/?article_id=61541

 

http://sheg.stanford.edu/rlh

 

 

What a great resource---thank you very much! We will be studying US History next year, and this will be a nice addition to the primary text (The American Odyssey), Zinn's book, Lies My Teacher Told Me, past AP US History free response questions and document-based questions, and field trips to historical sites :)

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