Summer
Institute, UC Berkeley Hosted by the UC Berkeley
History-Social Science Project
& the UC Berkeley Dept
of History.
Schedule, Monday, August
6, 2007- Friday, August
17, 2007
Monday
August 6, 2007
Tuesday
August 7, 2007
Wednesday
August 8, 2007
Thursday
August 9, 2007
Friday
August 10, 2007
(8:30-4:30)
Welcome
Introductions
Overview Speaker: Defining Citizenship
Dr. Jennifer Spear
UC Berkeley
(8:30-4:30)
Historical Content Investigations
& Connections Speaker: The Right to
Vote from the Revolution to
the Civil War
Dr. Jennifer Spear
UC Berkeley Listen
to this lecture
(8:30-4:30)
Historical Content Investigations
& Connections Speaker: Civic Culture
in Early Pennsylvania Dr. John Smolenski,
University of California,
Davis Listen
to this lecture
(8:30-4:30)
Historical Content Investigations
& Connections Speaker: The Nineteenth
Century Constitution (13th,
14th, and 15th Amendments)
Dr. Robin Einhorn
UC Berkeley Listen
to this lecture
(8:30-4:30)
Historical Content Investigations
& Connections Speaker: "How Free
is Free?" Dr. Leon Litwack
UC
Berkeley
Overview
of the Institute
History as
a Discipline: Historical Questions
History as
a Discipline: Choosing and
Using Historical Evidence
History as
a Discipline: Continuity and
Change
Demonstration
Lesson
Using Historical
Questions to Guide Content
Understanding
Overview:
Reading and Writing in History
Reading in
History: Passage Level Organization
Reading for
Historical Understanding
Historical
Reading to Writing Connections
Monday
August 13, 2007
Tuesday
August 14, 2007
Wednesday
August 15, 2007
Thursday
August 16, 2007
Friday
August 17, 2007
(8:30-4:30)
Welcome
Introductions
Overview
Speaker: Citizenship
in the 20th Century Dr. Kathlen Frydl
UC Berkeley Listen
to this lecture
(8:30-4:30)
Historical Content Investigations
& Connections
Speaker: Rights, Obligations
& the Gender of Citizenship
Dr. Ellen Hartigan-O'Connor,
University of California,
Davis Listen
to this lecture
(8:30-4:30)
Historical Content Investigations
& Connections
Speaker: War and Citizenship
Dr. Caroline Cox,
College of Pacific Listen
to this lecture
(8:30-4:30)
Historical Content Investigations
& Connections
Speaker: Civil Rights
Movement
Dr. Waldo Martin
UC Berkeley Listen
to this lecture
(8:30-4:30)
Historical Content Investigations
& Connections
Speaker: Fish-Ins &
the Fight for Tribal Sovereignty
Dr. Mark Brilliant
UC Berkeley Listen
to this lecture
Demonstration Lesson
History as a Discipline:
Choosing and Using Primary
Sources
Demonstration Lesson
History as a Discipline:
Recognizing and Understanding
Point of View and Bias
History as a Discipline:
Continuity and Change
Defining Historical Writing
Developing Historical Writing
Prompts
Developing Student's Thesis
Statements and Evaluating
Evidence
Looking at Student Work
Presentations: Historical
Questions
Developing Historical Questions
and Reading Strategies
Developing Historical Writing
Prompts
Developing Thesis and Evaluating
Evidence Practice
Developing Thesis and Evaluating
Evidence Practice
Presenting Reading and Writing
Strategies by Grade Level