Why Did Europeans Enslave Africans? Great Video Overview
Get link
Facebook
X
Pinterest
Email
Other Apps
Here's an excellent overview of the origins of the slave trade from Danielle Bainbridge, for The Origin of Everything, a YouTube series from PBS Digital Studios.
Studying the silver trade between 1450 and 1750. Here are four terrific resources. Three podcasts about silver and an awesome multimedia site about the Manila Galleon. 15 Minute History, a podcast from the University of Texas at Austin, discusses the trans-Pacific slave trade. Kristie Flannery, a doctoral candidate at the University of Texas, describes Manila in the 16th century as the 12th largest city in the world serving the Spanish as a source of wealth through tax of natives, as an ideal location for trade with China, and Manila was a great location for the Spanish to convert natives to Christianity. In another 15 Minute History Episode , Kristie Flannery discusses the Trans-Pacific silver trade and argues that it marks the beginning of globalization. Footnoting History Podcast has a great episode on the Potosi silver mine in the Andes mountains of modern-day Bolivia. The China Ship, from the South China Morning Post, is an awesome multimedia site all about ...
Here are two resources for excellent lesson plans for both Wolrd History and AP World History. Eric Beckman , an AP World History teacher in Minnesota, has a terrific blog with links to lessons that he has developed over the years, some of which he presented to world history conferences. I love his lesson on the Swahili Coast and plan to use his lesson on The Haitian Revolution next week. Beckman has more lesson plans on this website called Uncovering World History. All his lessons include resources and links. For example, his lesson on the Haitian Revolution includes four primary sources for a reading jigsaw-- Letter by Tobias Lear to James Madison, Letter by the French Minister of the Marine to the Fort de Joux Commandant (1802), Toussaint letter to Napol�on from Fort de Joux (1802),and Toussaint L�Ouverture in An Historical Account of the Black Empire of Hayti. Another fantastic teacher with great resources is Bram Hubbell who has a blog called Paperless History. ...
My school will go one to one in 2019. I'm on the school technology committee and our principal wants us to design professional development to help teachers migrate from Blackboard to Google Classroom and to think about ways to help teachers infuse technology into some of their lessons. The SAMR model and TPACK are two terms about which I hear a lot. I had to look them both up to understand them. Here's a brief overview of what they are and how they can help you engage students more effectively. SAMR is an acronym for the following. S-Substitution A-Augmentation M-Modification R-Redfinition Simply moving a written assignment to a digital assignment is substitution while sharing a digital assignment with a partner is augmentation. Modifying or redesigning the assignment is called modification. For example, let's say you substituted a written timeline for an online timeline and modified it to include images and videos, and quizzes using an online p...
Comments
Post a Comment