While most of my students learn history in a school setting from educators like myself, we cannot emphasize family history enough.
It IS important.
Family history helps students to realize their place within their families as well as how they fit in with historical events. Learning family history can answer questions regarding when relatives first arrived in North America and where they settled. Details regarding everyday life can be internalized, and the effects of certain events can help us connect to events we didn’t live through such as the Great Depression or World War II.
While there are many ways to go about learning family history one of the best ways to go about it is merely to listen……listen to those older members of your family. I don’t mean merely nodding your head at them, smile, and wonder when you can escape them. I mean really listen….and that means to listen with a purpose so that real communication takes place.
StoryCorps provides a fantastic opportunity for generations from the same family to communicate regarding family history. Their main goal is to honor and celebrate one another’s lives through listening.
Find out more about the fantastic work StoryCorps is doing over at my other place…….Georgia on My Mind.
Listen My Children....
Like This Post? Please share!
Subscribe through email and get Free updates
You May Also Like...
Labels
- Abraham Lincoln
- Advertisements
- Alberto Vargas
- American Presidents
- American Revolution
- Andrew Jackson
- Andrew Johnson
- Arts Integration
- Battles
- Black Codes
- Blog Visits
- Blogging
- Boom and Bust
- cemeteries
- Charleston
- Children's Literature
- Christmas
- Cinco de Mayo
- Civil War
- Classroom Management
- colonies
- Confederates
- constitution
- Cotton
- Covert Operations
- Creativity
- Creek Indian War
- Cross Curriculum
- cult of personality
- Current Events
- D-Day
- Dating Systems
- Declaration of Independence
- Donner Party
- Doughface
- Dr. Martin Luther King
- Dream Teaching
- Early Colonization
- Early Flight
- Education Reform
- Eisenhower
- elections
- End of the Year
- Endangered Historic Places
- Exploration
- Explorers
- Family History
- Fashion
- First day of school
- Flag Day
- Flappers
- Founding Fathers
- Fourth of July
- Franklin D. Roosevelt
- Franklin Pierce
- Fundamental Orders
- Geography
- George Washington
- Georgia
- Georgia On My Mind
- Gilded Age
- Glider Pilots
- Government
- Great Awakening
- Great Books
- Gun rights
- Haiti
- handicaps
- Harry Truman
- HIE
- Historic Preservation
- history
- history carnival
- history data
- History Myths
- history quotations
- House Concerts
- Infographic
- Iraq
- James K. Polk
- James Madison
- John Adama
- John F. Kennedy
- Know Nothings
- Korea
- Latin
- Lesson Ideas
- Liberty Bell
- Local History
- Lusitania
- Mamie Eisenhower
- McMinn County War
- Memorial Day
- Mexico
- Millard Fillmore
- mulligan
- Music
- Mystery Lessons
- New England
- New South
- Northwest Passage
- Olympics
- Online Education
- Pacific Northwest
- Pearl Harbor
- Personal
- Photography
- Politics
- Popular Culture
- Prohibition
- Racism
- Railroads
- Razzle Dazzle
- Recognition
- Reconstruction
- Red Oak
- Relationships
- Religion
- Resources
- Reviewing Content
- Richard Nixon
- Richmond
- Riverboats
- Roaring Twenties
- Royal Families
- Samuel Adams
- Sanborn Maps
- Seaside
- September 11th
- Sex
- Silver
- slavery
- Spain
- Spanish American War
- Student Interview
- Symbols
- Teaching
- Teaching Resources
- Teaching Strategies
- terrorism
- Testing
- Textbooks
- The Federalist
- The Shakers
- The West
- Thirteen Colonies
- This and That
- Thomas Jefferson
- Thomas Paine
- Three Branches
- Thursday Thirteen
- Time Reference
- Tools of the Trade
- Travel
- Trenton
- U-Boats
- US Congress
- Veterans Day
- Vietnam War
- Vikings
- vocabulary development
- War of 1812
- Washington D.C.
- Washington Monument
- Watergate
- weather
- White House
- Women
- Woodrow Wilson
- Wordless Wednesday
- World History
- World War I
- World War II
0 comments:
Post a Comment