Teaching What Really Happened: How to Avoid the Tyranny of Textbooks and Get Students Excited About Doing History

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Teaching What Really Happened: How to Avoid the Tyranny of Textbooks and Get Students Excited About Doing History Page 36

by James W. Loewen


  key topics in, 19–23

  in Mississippi, 3–6, 9–10, 12

  problems of, 19–21, 30–31, 32–33, 80–81, 88, 215 n. 1–2

  racism and, 164

  representative, 215 n. 1, 234–235 n. 1

  selection process, 31–32

  Southern secession and, 183–186

  in studying bad history, 76–80, 117

  “twig” history and, 19–21, 32–33, 66

  in Vermont, 9–10

  Through Indian Eyes (Slapin & Seale), 154

  Through Women’s Eyes (DuBois & Dumenil), 82

  To Be a Slave (Lester), 173

  Todorova, I., ix

  Tougaloo College (Mississippi), 2–6, 8, 11, 45–46, 49–50, 54, 57–58

  Tracking, 60–63, 224 n. 27

  Trevor-Roper, Hugh, 125, 228 n. 7

  Triumph of the American Nation, 71, 81, 184, 185

  Trudeau, Noah Andre, 236 n. 11

  Truman, Harry, 205–206

  Tubman, Harriet, 173

  Turnbull, Colin, 118–119, 227 n. 27, 227 n. 30

  Turner, Adrian, 222 n. 4

  Turnipseed, John, 5–6

  $24 myth, 65, 141–154

  additional considerations, 153–154

  critique of, 141–145

  described, 141

  functions of, 147–150

  more accurate story, 145–147

  racism and, 150–153

  Underground Railroad, 173, 232 n. 23

  United Nations, 205

  U.S. Census Bureau, ix–x, 97–98, 214 n. 12

  U.S. Civil Rights Commission, 56–57

  U.S. Constitution, 20, 181

  First Amendment, 5–6

  Fourteenth Amendment, 178, 193, 195

  Fifteenth Amendment, 75, 178, 193

  U.S. Department of Homeland Security, ix

  U.S. Supreme Court, 3, 74, 90, 178

  University of Connecticut, 7

  University of Illinois, 100

  University of Vermont, 7–10, 58, 149–150

  University of Virginia, 97–98

  Unruh, John, Jr., 221 n. 1

  U.S. News & World Report, 155–159, 160

  U.S.S.R., 14, 205

  Utley, Robert M., 230 n. 11

  Van Lew, Elizabeth, 173

  Vermont, 7–10, 58, 67, 149–150

  Verstehende, 87, 146

  Vietnam War, 20, 25–26, 80, 216 n. 7

  Vikings, 131–132

  Virginia, 23–24, 94, 97–98, 181

  Voices of the Valley, 101

  Voltaire, 125

  Von Däniken, Erich, 225 n. 8

  Vos Savant, Marilyn, 229 n. 24

  Voting rights, 164, 177–178, 193

  Wake Forest Medical School, 112

  Walker, Margaret, 86, 222 n. 9, 237 n. 4

  Walker, Moses Fleetwood, 189–190

  Wallace, Amy, 229–230 n. 7

  Wallace, David Duncan, 180, 188, 234 n. 7

  Wallace, Irving, 229–230 n. 7

  Wallechinsky, David, 139, 229 n. 23, 229–230 n. 7

  Wallenstein, Peter, 102

  Wall of Fame, 99

  War of 1812, 25–26

  Washburn, Wilcomb E., 230 n. 11

  Washington, George, 38, 83, 170–171

  Wealth gap, 158

  Weatherford, Jack, 229 n. 21

  Weinstein, Rhona, 46, 218 n. 15

  Weintraub, Boris, 122, 225 n. 5

  Weisberger, Bernard, 75–76, 221 n. 9

  West Springfield High School (Virginia), 94

  Wheelock, Anne, 220 n. 36

  Whig history, 113, 226–227 n. 21

  Whig Interpretation of History, The (Butterfield), 113

  White, George, 197, 205

  White, John, 146

  White, Lynn Townsend, Jr., 140

  White supremacy, 5, 6, 16–17, 75–76, 150, 182, 193–195, 200–204, 207

  Whitman, Glenn, 102

  Whitman, Walt, 111, 226 n. 18

  Wikis, 88–89, 222 n. 3, 230 n. 10

  Wilder, Laura Ingalls, 12–13

  Wilson, Woodrow, 14, 29, 216 n. 8

  Wineburg, Sam, 41

  Winfrey, Oprah, 157

  Winkfield, Jimmy, 190

  Winkler, Allan, 215 n. 1

  Women’s movement, 95

  Woodrow Wilson, Jr. High School (Decatur, Illinois), 60–61

  Woodward, C. Vann, 208

  World War I, 205

  World War II, 15–16, 75, 205

  Wounded Knee Massacre (South Dakota), 193

  Wright, Frank Lloyd, 161, 162

  Writing papers, 87–101

  field trips and, 94

  final product, 98–99

  getting started, 95–98

  ideas for, 88–89

  interviews and, 95–97

  local history, 93–95, 102

  local sources for, 97–99

  National History Day, 90–91, 98–100

  Parent Academy and, 91–93

  storylines, 89–90, 92, 223 n. 14

  student guides, 89

  using the product, 99–101

  wikis and, 88–89, 222 n. 3, 230 n. 10

  Young, Gordon R., 230 n. 11

  Zepeda, Sally, 46, 218 n. 15

  Zinn, Howard, 31, 82, 216 n. 6

  Zoology, 104

  About the Author

  James W. Loewen taught race relations for twenty years at the University of Vermont. Previously he taught at predominantly black Tougaloo College in Mississippi. He now lives in Washington, DC, continuing his research on how Americans remember their past, and gives workshops for teacher groups around the United States.

  His gripping retelling of American history as it should and could be taught, Lies My Teacher Told Me, has sold more than 1,100,000 copies and continues to inspire K–16 teachers to get students to challenge, rather than memorize, their textbooks. It won the American Book Award and the Oliver Cromwell Cox Award for Distinguished Anti-Racist Scholarship. Lies Across America: What Our Historic Sites Get Wrong came out in 1999. The Gustavus Myers Foundation named his new book, Sundown Towns, a “Distinguished Book of 2005.”

  His other books include Mississippi: Conflict and Change (coauthored), which won the Lillian Smith Award for Best Southern Nonfiction but was rejected for public school text use by the State of Mississippi, leading to the path-breaking First Amendment lawsuit, Loewen et al. v. Turnipseed et al. He also wrote The Mississippi Chinese: Between Black and White, Social Science in the Courtroom, and The Truth About Columbus.

  He has been an expert witness in more than 50 civil rights, voting rights, and employment cases. His awards include the First Annual Spivack Award of the American Sociological Association for “sociological research applied to the field of intergroup relations” and Fulbright and Smithsonian fellowships. He is also Distinguished Lecturer for the Organization of American Historians.

 

 

 


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