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Twenty years after Brown. v Board of Education, Thurgood Marshall lamented a 5-4 decision in a different desegregation case, Milliken v. Bradley. Marshall recognized how Milliken would curtail the…
A Sense of Place: Architecture, Culture and History in the Arkansas Delta is an Alex Foundation six day, two week residential workshop. This new workshop will bring together 60 6-12 grade teachers…
Forever Wild: Americans and Their Land During the Gilded Age and Progressive Era" is a one-week immersion experience in the six-million-acre Adirondack Park where teachers live and learn at SUNY…
Sixty years after 1964's landmark event, Freedom Summer, attendees will travel to Mississippi to learn about this integral Civil Rights struggle. Freedom Summer volunteers traveled from across the…
Reclaiming the Narrative: Learning the Truth about Indian Boarding Schools in Arizona is a weeklong professional learning workshop based at the historic Phoenix Indian School Visitor Center (PISVC…
The Homestead Steel Strike and the Growth of America as an Industrial Power is an NEH Landmarks of American History and Culture workshop for K-12 educators, museum educators, and librarians that…
This first-time workshop for higher education faculty, advanced graduate students, and humanities professionals will examine the historical, cultural, economic, and environmental significance of…
The Space Coast is the starting point for America’s exploration of the universe, but the region also provides visitors with opportunities to investigate the continuing intersections of politics,…
Creative Spaces/Contested Spaces: Reinterpreting Italian American Public Art in New York City is an exploration of Italian American public art that examines how monuments and landmarks are created…
“Grand Coulee: The Intersection of Modernity and Indigenous Cultures” explores how different social groups experience history and memory. The workshops unpack the Grand Coulee Dam as a landmark of…
The St. Louis Blues: Music, Migration, and the Movement examines the relationships between blues music, migration, and race relations in urban environments. St. Louis has been home to several of…
The “Exploring the First Amendment” institutes will consider the development of the First Amendment in Philadelphia, from William Penn’s founding of the Colony of Pennsylvania through the present…
Wide-Open Town explores Kansas City’s "Golden Age" in the 1920s and 1930s. A notorious political machine, vice and organized crime, and racial segregation often overshadowed business leaders’…
Little Tokyo: How History Shapes a Community Across Generations” will examine history through the neighborhood of Little Tokyo in Los Angeles, California. Joined by scholars, educators, curators,…
The educator workshops will examine how more than 120,000 people of Japanese descent were forced from their homes on the West Coast and sent to 10 camps established by the War Relocation Authority…
Colgate University offers a three-week, summer institute from July 7-26, 2024 on Abolitionism and the Underground Railroad (UGRR) in North America from the colonial era through the Civil War. This…
"Shakespeare and Digital Storytelling” is a two-week summer institute for 25 English teachers of grades 9-12. The theme of “translation,” as a means to contextualize Shakespeare’s art and to…
The Religious Worlds of New York summer institute helps K-12 teachers teach creatively and effectively about religious diversity, with an emphasis on everyday faith community life. Participants…
As an abiding feature of adolescence, friendship is of special curricular interest in the high school English classroom. During this innovative, residential institute, teachers examine how…
LGBTQ+ Histories of the United States is a two-week summer institute for middle and high school teachers that introduces participants to the rich body of recent scholarship covering the span of U.…
This institute explores the socio-cultural and economic connections between the Harlem Renaissance and the Great Migration. The first segment of the institute occurs online and provides an…
Folger Shakespeare Library's Teaching Shakespeare Institute - Shakespeare: Othello and The Taming of the Shrew in Conversation will focus on two plays that shape the gender and racial paradigms of…
Twenty-five K-12 educators from across the country will gather in San Diego in July 2024 to learn from a faculty team that have developed extensive curriculum around comics; strategize how to…
The Somos Boricuas Institute uses Puerto Rican migration to the mainland United States as a case study to explore key humanities questions that are at the heart of the American migration/…
Theatre for a New Audience offers Scholarship and Performance: A Combined Approach to Teaching Shakespeare’s Plays, a 2-week Institute for K-12 educators running July 15-26, 2024 in Brooklyn. The…
Employing community-engaged and place-based pedagogies, "Japanese American Post-War Resettlement in Chicago, 1943 - 1950" will host 30 educators from across the U.S. and will be conducted in a…
This 2-week residential workshop for middle and high school teachers will focus on the 1898 Wilmington coup and massacre, the only successful coup d’etat in our nations’ history. In the largest…
This two-week workshop, funded by the National Endowment for the Humanities, will immerse K-12 teachers in the ancient Olympic Games and the local life going on around those games. We'll delve…
American Women, American Citizens: 1920-1948 will engage participants in groundbreaking new scholarship, dialogue with leaders in the field, primary source research, and meaningful curriculum…
Pacific Crossings: Asian American and Pacific Islander Histories, 1870 to the Present will illuminate the long history of resistance by Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders and their allies in…