Conflict Resolution andUnited States History
This comprehensive supplement for U.S. history teachers provides a motivating methodology for teaching American history. Students use conflict resolution and problem-solving skills to role-play historical figures and, in the process, gain important life skills and a rich understanding of history.The curriculum includes:
•The latest scholarship from more than 25 leading historians.
•Role-playing activities involving 20 conflicts in American history.
•Practical lessons and materials on teaching conflict resolution skills.
•A CD with reproducible primary source documents, overheads/student handouts, mapsand illustrations.
• A DVD showing middle and high school students engaged in role-playing historical figures using conflict resolution skills.
Each case study provides a detailed historical background, short biographies of key historical figures, an examination of the issues, multiple perspectives, and an analysis of the consequences, along with questions for discussion and a list of additional resources.
This Ford Foundation-funded project isa collaboration by John W. Chambers, II, Distinguished Professor of History, and Arlene L. Gardner, Esq., Executive Director, New JerseyCenter for Civic and Law-Related Education, both at RutgersUniversity.
Professor Gary Nash, Director of the NationalCenterfor History in the Schools at UCLA, callsConflictResolution and United States History:
“an innovative approach to teaching history thathelps students to become historicallyliterateandengaged citizens.”
The curriculum package includes twenty
case studies:
Volume One: The Colonial Period
through Reconstruction
- Overview, Conflict Resolution Skills and
Tips for Teachers
- Native Americans and European Colonists: contrasting the Puritans and Quakers
- Could the American Revolution have been avoided?
- Slavery and the Constitutional Convention
- Cherokee Indian Removal
- The War between Mexico and the United States
- The Compromise of 1850
- Women’s Rights in the 19th Century
- Post-Civil War Reconstruction
Volume Two:The Gilded Age through
the Twentieth Century
- Overview, Conflict Resolution Skills and
Tips for Teachers
- Labor Relations during the Industrial Era: The Pullman Strike of 1894; The Paterson Silk Strike of 1913
- Imperialism, Insurrection and Intervention
in 1898
- U.S. Entry into World War I
- Immigration Restrictions and the National Origins Act of 1924
- Rosie the Riveter vs. G.I. Joe
- The Montgomery Bus Boycott
- The Cuban Missile Crisis
- The U.S. and the War in Vietnam
- The 1992 Los Angeles Riots
What teachers say aboutthe materials:
Teachers and students using the Conflict Resolution and United States History curriculum materials report the following advantages over traditional lecture-style history classes:
Increased student motivation
Greater mastery of history
Richer understanding of historical developments
Improved critical thinking and problem solving skills
Improved conflict resolution skills
Better classroom management skills for teachers.
ForU.S. historyteachersgrades 5-12,including AP.
YOU DON’T NEED ONE PER STUDENT,
ONLY ONE PER TEACHER!
For additional information contact:
NJ Center for Civic Education
848-445-3413
A sample lesson is available at