Wednesday, February 25, 2009
Monday, February 23, 2009
Katrina from the Journal of American History
The Journal had a special issue devoted to Katrina.
Great media section including great audio slideshows.
A page of further resources. Including a guide of neighborhoods, jazz music, timeline of levee construction and more.
Great media section including great audio slideshows.
A page of further resources. Including a guide of neighborhoods, jazz music, timeline of levee construction and more.
Labels:
civil rights,
Katrina,
primary source,
project ideas,
race,
US History
Monday, February 16, 2009
Thursday, February 5, 2009
Tuesday, February 3, 2009
More Interactive Governance Maps
The World Bank has their own aggregated governance map. It's highly detailed and provides a number of different ways to analyze countries for governance.
Monday, February 2, 2009
Ye, Olde Constitution Center
It's the Constitution Center and it's mostly about the Constitution and related items. Like Bed, Bath, and Beyond. Minus the beyond.
Really, America.gov?
So I feel a little odd about this one, but it's a 2-3 page explanation about the American Government. It's so concise, I'm surprised a government agency put it together.
Sunday, February 1, 2009
Katrina
When I started considering using Katrina as a case study for my government class I wasn't sure if it was too obvious. Then I had students ask who's Katrina.
The NY Times has a whole teaching site about it that incorporates a lot of the paper's multimedia.
Teachers College has taken Spike Lee's documentary under their wings.
Here you can get a 100 pdf helping you use When the Levees Broke to teach students about Katrina, Democratic Dialouge, and Civic Engagement
The NY Times has a whole teaching site about it that incorporates a lot of the paper's multimedia.
Teachers College has taken Spike Lee's documentary under their wings.
Here you can get a 100 pdf helping you use When the Levees Broke to teach students about Katrina, Democratic Dialouge, and Civic Engagement
Labels:
civil rights,
government,
project ideas,
race,
US History
Jim Crow
This is where to start if you want to cover this subject.
American Radio Works also has a great story about the subject.
Don't forget my lynchings postcard post, too.
American Radio Works also has a great story about the subject.
Don't forget my lynchings postcard post, too.
Labels:
audio,
civil rights,
links,
race,
reconstruction,
US History
Women's History Links
Lots of good Women's history links here. A great site about the Triangle shirt company fire too.
USAID, Hire me.
When I didn't pass my oral exam for the foreign service (for the record my score was close ) I thought of working for USAid. I eventually got over it and now I link to them and their governance section.
Their 2008 fact sheet starts with a quote from the former president, but it's something someone wrote for him so it actually makes sense.
Their 2008 fact sheet starts with a quote from the former president, but it's something someone wrote for him so it actually makes sense.
Transparency International
Teachers love transparencies. Transparency International is way more lovable and you don't need a power zone or overhead to make the most of it.
Aussie Version of Good Governance
I had to go to the southern hemisphere for this but it's worth losing a day in travel.
There's a nifty glossary of terms here (and links to the UN's good governance article I already blogged about)
There's a nifty glossary of terms here (and links to the UN's good governance article I already blogged about)
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