Kentucky Historical Society seeks feedback from teachers on programming, professional development
The Kentucky Historical Society (KHS) is seeking input from active Kentucky teachers who are currently teaching social studies in grades K-12.
The Kentucky Historical Society (KHS) is seeking input from active Kentucky teachers who are currently teaching social studies in grades K-12.
Many different organizations offer on-site professional development programs that provide you both the knowledge and experience about the topic that you can use to enhance your instruction with your students.
Scholarship money is available for middle school and high school teachers in Kentucky to attend a 2024 Montpelier Educator Seminar.
While the museum may be 1,000 miles away, its award-winning education team brings the museum to thousands of students across the country each year and provides invaluable resources to educators that are adaptable to each grade.
The New-York Historical Society has a vast library of free, online curriculum guides full of resources that can help you easily incorporate inquiry-based learning into your social studies classroom.
In classrooms across the country, teachers and students are honoring notable Black Americans who demonstrated resistance and resilience by fighting injustice, breaking the color barrier and achieving greatness.
The Marion County Young Historians Club works to preserve the past by repairing aged cemeteries.
The Frazier History Museum is excited to announce a new and ongoing initiative to create inquiry materials for educators built around the artifacts and stories highlighted at the museum.
Kentucky history teachers are invited to attend Teaching About the Holocaust, an event hosted by the Illinois Holocaust Museum & Education Center in Skokie, Ill.
The Educators’ Professional Implementation Center (EPIC) is hosting professional learning opportunities focused on American documents and speeches with teaching, content and literacy experts.