DownloadThe Portobello Bookshop Gift Guide 2024

Teaching History to Adolescents

A Quest for Relevance

John A Beineke author Joseph L DeVitis editor Linda Irwin-DeVitis editor

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Peter Lang Publishing Inc

Published:16th Mar '11

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

This hardback is available in another edition too:

Teaching History to Adolescents cover

This book has received the AESA (American Educational Studies Association) Critics Choice Award 2012.
Teaching History to Adolescents: A Quest for Relevance is an exploration of research, ideas, trends, and practices for educators who teach American history to adolescents from the middle grades through high school. Higher education faculty in history and professional education will also find the book germane to their work. Topics within the field of teaching history to adolescents include the use and misuse of history textbooks, implementing primary sources into lessons, subject matter selection, professional development, technology, and the issues of diversity and assessment as directly related to history. The book includes «The World of Practice» sections – contributions from practitioners on topics such as teaching history with comic books, student engagement with public history, using young adult non-fiction books, and the role of controversial topics in the history classroom.

«John A. Beineke’s work brings the broad spectrum of history education and methodology into the light of relevance. His research, comprehensive and current, offers questions and answers to the issues of conveying history with meaning to the next generation. Every teacher reaches a point of self-examination, a plateau, and this work presents the teacher with the evidence to reach for a more effective level of instruction in the all too important work of preparing adolescents to make sense of history in their daily lives.» (Rich Wetmore, U.S. History Teacher, Marina Village Middle School, El Dorado Hills, California)
«John A. Beineke’s book, while geared toward middle school history teachers, is a tour de force of the changing nature of the discipline of history as a whole. His practical advice is far-ranging and provides a treasure trove of ideas. Teachers from elementary to college classrooms will learn techniques to make the best use of historical sources, from political cartoons and comic books to utilizing public history venues. Beineke’s book captures the theory behind the innovations and provides multiple examples to engage students.» (Linda K. Pritchard, Professor of History and Department Head, Women’s and Gender Studies, Eastern Michigan University, Ypsilanti, Michigan)
«If adolescents could turn the tables on their history teachers and assign texts for their teachers to read, John A. Beineke’s superb text would anchor the syllabus. This is a book about teaching history in ways that engage young people in meaningful and purposeful thinking about the past and their own lives. It is a book by a true teacher and a scholar of history teaching that contends with both the essential concepts at the core of the field while providing pragmatic and indispensable tools for the classroom – from using primary source documents to integrating media technology. It is book to be read, studied, discussed, and then thumbed through again and again and again.» (Sam M. Intrator, Professor of Education and Child Study and Urban Studies, Smith College, Northampton, Massachusetts)
«John A. Beineke’s work brings the broad spectrum of history education and methodology into the light of relevance. His research, comprehensive and current, offers questions and answers to the issues of conveying history with meaning to the next generation. Every teacher reaches a point of self-examination, a plateau, and this work presents the teacher with the evidence to reach for a more effective level of instruction in the all too important work of preparing adolescents to make sense of history in their daily lives.» (Rich Wetmore, U.S. History Teacher, Marina Village Middle School, El Dorado Hills, California)
«John A. Beineke’s book, while geared toward middle school history teachers, is a tour de force of the changing nature of the discipline of history as a whole. His practical advice is far-ranging and provides a treasure trove of ideas. Teachers from elementary to college classrooms will learn techniques to make the best use of historical sources, from political cartoons and comic books to utilizing public history venues. Beineke’s book captures the theory behind the innovations and provides multiple examples to engage students.» (Linda K. Pritchard, Professor of History and Department Head, Women’s and Gender Studies, Eastern Michigan University, Ypsilanti, Michigan)
«If adolescents could turn the tables on their history teachers and assign texts for their teachers to read, John A. Beineke’s superb text would anchor the syllabus. This is a book about teaching history in ways that engage young people in meaningful and purposeful thinking about the past and their own lives. It is a book by a true teacher and a scholar of history teaching that contends with both the essential concepts at the core of the field while providing pragmatic and indispensable tools for the classroom – from using primary source documents to integrating media technology. It is book to be read, studied, discussed, and then thumbed through again and again and again.» (Sam M. Intrator, Professor of Education and Child Study and Urban Studies, Smith College, Northampton, Massachusetts)

ISBN: 9781433110962

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: 510g

266 pages

New edition