2019 Conference
Exercising Power: Individuals and Institutions in History
Washington, DC
March 14-16, 2019
Breakout Sessions
Friday 8:30 AM
Ann Canning, TPS Eastern Region
Sue Wise, Wanesburg University
PowerPoint / Resource / Resource
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“If We Live in the Present, Why Should We Care About the Past?” Connecting Past and Present Struggles for Power
Jessica Ellison, Minnesota Historical Society
PowerPoint
Exercising Power: The Struggle for Citizenship through Historical Sites
Rachel Yaden, Lincoln County School District
Resources
Susan B. Anthony and the Suffrage Movement: Speaking Truth to Power
Gennie Westbrook, Bill of Rights Institute
PowerPoint / Resources
Before Brown v. The Board of Education: The Power of Individuals and Institutions in the Struggle for Equality in Education
Jessica Maul, New York State Archives Partnership Trust
Kristi Fragnoli, The College of Saint Rose
Julie Daniels, New York State Office of Cultural Education
Resources / Resources
Hollywood or History?
Charles Elfer, Clayton State University
Scott L. Roberts, Central Michigan University
PowerPoint / Resources / Resources / Resources
Friday 10:00 AM
The Power of Agent Women and SOURCES
Tammara Purdin, Florida Council for History Education
PowerPoint / Resources / Resources / Resources
A Civil Rights Investigation: Mississippi Burning
Mallory Lineberger, LBJ Presidential Library
Resources
The Worst Misuse of Executive Power in U.S. History:
President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s Signing of Executive Order 9066, Forcing the Removal of 120,000 Japanese, Mostly U.S. Citizens, into Prisons
Sam Mihara, University of California
Resources
How Can Place Based Education Inform Children of Their Historical Roots
Ted Green and Thomas Zinselmeyer, Webster University
PowerPoint
Friday 2:00 PM
Studying the World’s Most Famous Address: Using the White House as a Lens for Viewing Executive Power in History
Whitney Hayne, White House Historical Association
PowerPoint
Primary Documents for All Learners
Grace Leatherman and Mike Kuethe, Maryland Humanities
Resources
Freedom ‘Riters: John Dolan’s Story
Spiro Bolos: New Trier High School
Handout / Handout / Handout / Handout
The Fight for Women’s Voting Rights in the Records of the National Archives
Katie Munn, Martha Grove, and Corinne Porter, National Archives
PowerPoint / Resources
Civil Rights and the Cold War:
Using Primary Sources to Explore How Texts, Images, and Messaging from the Soviet Union Helped Spur Racial Justice in the United States in the 1960s
Jason Butler, DeKalb County School District
PowerPoint
Primary Sources in the Elementary School
Tom Bober, Clayton School District
PowerPoint
Friday 3:30 PM
The Egyptian Women’s Movement: The Vision of Huda Shaarawi
Joan Brodsky Schur, Curriculum Developer
PowerPoint
Independent Institutions: Understanding Institutional History with Primary Sources
Eva Johnston and Genevieve Podleski, Rederal Reserve Bank of St. Louis
PowerPoint / Handout
The Poetry of Decolonization: Pan-Africanism through Poetry
Mark Johnson, University of Notre Dame
PowerPoint / Handout / Handout / Handout
Who Tells Your Story? Shaping (and Reshaping) Historical Narratives
Tally Botzer, American Civil War Museum
Mark Summers, Jamestown Rediscovery
PowerPoint
Remembering War through the Eyes of the Civil War Cameraman
Andrew Dangel, Old Mill Middle North, IB World School
Handout / Handout
Saturday 8:30 AM
Diane Haleas, Saint Ignatius College Prep
PowerPoint
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Black Citizenship in the Age of Jim Crow
Lee Boomer, New-York Historical Society
PowerPoint
Saturday 10:00 AM
George Washington’s Lesson in Leadership
Alissa Oginsky and Sadie Troy, George Washington’s Mount Vernon
PowerPoint
Using Theatre to Teach Historical Thinking
Jake Flack and Alexandria Wood, Ford’s Theatre Society
Angelo Parodi, John Eaton Elementary School
PowerPoint / Handout / Handout
Saturday 2:00 PM
The Soldier’s Tale Online: Veterans’ Oral History in the Digital-Age Classroom
Mark Franklin, Department of Defense, Vietnam War Commemoration
Monica Mohindra, Library of Congress, Veterans History Project
Emily Carlet, Witness to War
PowerPoint / Handout
Civil Liberties in Times of Crisis
Rylan Sekiguchi, SPICE, Stanford University
Norman Y. Mineta, U.S. Department of Commerce and U.S. Department of Transportation
PowerPoint
Saturday 3:10 PM
Four Corners: Sourcing and Analyzing Primary Sources for DBQ Success
Rebecca Gomez, Uncommon School
PowerPoint / Handout
Wielding Digital Tools at the Intersection of Civics and American History
Carrie Ray-Hill, Taylor Davis, and Amber Coleman-Mortley, iCivics
PowerPoint
Poster Sessions
You Can’t Teach What You Don’t Know
Ruth Busby, Troy University
PowerPoint
Thinking Like a Historian
Tomacine M. Crouch, Blue Ridge Juvenile Detention Center
Handout
First Ladies Exercising Power on Capitol Hill: An Analysis of First Ladies Working with Congress on Promoting Causes and Programs
Jess Gagliardi, Adams State University
Poster
The American Memory is Our Memory
David Hales, Wayne Regional Educational Service Agency
Handout
Forming School/University Partnerships to Learn & Teach with Primary Sources
Anthony Pellegrino and Autumn Magliocca, University of Tennessee
Poster