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Innovations in Teaching History: Endorsement

Innovations in Teaching History
Endorsement
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table of contents
  1. Cover
  2. Endorsement
  3. Title
  4. Copyright
  5. Dedication
  6. Contents
  7. List of figures
  8. List of tables
  9. Notes on contributors
  10. Acknowledgements
  11. Introduction
  12. Part I: Digital history
    1. 1. Letting students loose in the archive: reflections on teaching ‘At the Court of King George: Exploring the Royal Archives’ at King’s College London
    2. 2. Introducing Australian students to British history and research methods via digital sources
  13. Part II: History in the classroom
    1. 3. Sensational pedagogy: teaching the sensory eighteenth century
    2. 4. Let’s talk about sex: ‘BAD’ approaches to teaching the histories of gender and sexualities
    3. 5. Engaging students with political history: citizenship in the (very) long eighteenth century
  14. Part III: Material culture and museum collections
    1. 6. Beyond ‘great white men’: teaching histories of science, empire and heritage through collections
    2. 7. Teaching eighteenth-century classical reception through university museum collections
  15. Index

‘The skills imparted by an undergraduate history degree are both timeless and constantly changing. This volume brings together seven innovative examples of how historians of the 18th century are changing pedagogy to meet the challenge of teaching with objects and texts – real, digital and sensational – online and in person. It is essential reading for anyone who thinks seriously about history and how we teach it.’

—Tim Hitchcock, Professor Emeritus of Digital History, University of Sussex, UK

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