World History Association 1
Jesse A. Spohnholz, Washington State University
Urmi Engineer Willoughby, Pitzer College
Session Abstract
As faculty work to integrate such recommendations in their classrooms, they often lack meaningful evidence-based models. As the AHA’s survey of 800+ history faculty in 2021 demonstrates, instructors overwhelmingly want increased opportunities to workshop course design and resources and communities of colleagues to help them achieve these goals (Claire Vanderwood and Julia Brookins, “Introductory History Courses in 2001: A Snapshot in Time and the Midterm View,” in Designing Introductory History Courses, p. 42–43).
This 2-part workshop offers just that. It will involve colleagues supporting colleagues using evidence-based practical solutions to the challenges of teaching introductory history courses. It’s is led by leaders of the History for the 21st Century project, a faculty-led, non-profit project that produces inquiry-based, active-learning teaching materials for use in introductory world history courses that are peer reviewed, classroom-tested, and designed using evidence to support student engagement and the learning of historical thinking skills, while also being free and easy-to-use by faculty teaching outside of their areas of expertise.
Part 1 of this workshop series will provide practical examples of course materials (for lessons on Africans and the African Diaspora in World War I and Atlantic Piracy in Global Perspective, which have been used in large introductory world history classrooms at a variety of postsecondary institutions to support student learning and engagement. Participants will get an opportunity to practice using these materials, as well as to experiment with various ways they could implement these or similar types of materials in their classrooms. It will also introduce faculty to the evidence of outcomes of such approaches done in studies thus far using these materials.
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