Blog
10 Tech Tools for Learning
I’m casting my vote for the 2022 top tools for learning list. Here are my tech favorites.
The Power of Food in the Classroom
How sharing food makes students feel more comfortable, helps them get to know each other, and connects us all.
Free U. S. History Discussion Prompts for Higher Ed
Free discussion activities for the U.S. History survey course. Each prompt contains background reading, an image, a primary source, contemporary commentary, and questions to connect it all.
Day Trip from Paris: Giverny
A long-awaited visit to see Monet’s house, gardens, and water lily pond in Giverny, France.
Must-Do Paris: Chantilly
Chantilly, a Paris suburb, is home to an enormous chateau with elaborate stables, a fake hamlet in the expansive gardens, Chantilly lace, and, of course, Chantilly cream.
Best Beach: Brighton, England
A pebble beach and a quirky town. My favorite seaside getaway in England! Grab a deck chair, visit the pier, eat a lobster roll, and hide your donuts from the seagulls.
Must-Do London: Superbloom at the Tower of London
Experience a flowering wonderland in the moat of the Tower of London.
Must-Do London: Borough Market
Foodies: the Borough Market is an artisan food experience in London.
Wales: Llŷn Peninsula
We stopped at six places (five of which were beaches) on this idyllic part of the North Wales coast.
London: Platinum Jubilee
Queen Elizabeth II marked 70 years on the throne and I was in London to celebrate it.
Makerspace: Immigration Artifacts
Laser-cut projects serve as creative expressions for personal history narratives.
Local Narrative: Exemplar Projects
My local personal narrative has become a favorite project. I look forward to what the students will share and how they will present it. Often, it helps them see their own history as important.
Escape Room Installation
A classroom turned escape room to increase content knowledge, optimize group dynamics, and have fun.
Lewis and Clark
When possible, I try to teach American history stories from a non-dominant perspective. I don’t say that Lewis and Clark discovered anything. Explored, maybe, but not discovered.
Traveling as a Historian
My travel posts address my experience of local history, what I learned on each trip, and how I incorporate that new knowledge into how I teach history. Travel along!
Supporting Speakers and Stories
As we expand our knowledge of history and the diversity to history, we want to make sure we are giving a platform to a variety of voices.
Take a (lot of) Breaks
Why short and long breaks are vital to productivity and mental clarity.