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Where Historians Work:

Where Historians Work:. CLAC Infuses the U.S. History Classroom Dr. Suronda Gonzalez, Binghamton University Dr. Barbara Reeves Ellington, Siena College Cultures + Languages Across the Curriculum, 2008 October 15-17, 2008 University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill . Where Historians Work.

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Where Historians Work:

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  1. Where Historians Work: CLAC Infuses the U.S. History Classroom Dr. Suronda Gonzalez, Binghamton University Dr. Barbara Reeves Ellington, Siena College Cultures + Languages Across the Curriculum, 2008 October 15-17, 2008 University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

  2. Where Historians Work Part I: Background CLAC Infuses the U.S. History Classroom

  3. Where Historians Work • A word on our title • Where Faculty Live: Internationalizing the Disciplines, ACE, 2006. • American Historical Association • American Political Science Association • American Psychological Association • Association of American Geographers

  4. Where Historians Work 2000: La Pietra Report Project on Internationalizing the Study of American History • Comprehensive recommendations for the field • Spurred scholarship on U.S. embedded in context of global change • “hour glass” phenomenon

  5. 2002 The History Teacher Series 2005 2006 2007 2002-2004 Historians’ Work

  6. Where Historians Work Not so much a matter of if internationalization is happening, but rather on the practicalities of how it is happening.

  7. 2004

  8. Languages Across the Curriculum (LAC) • Georgetown University, LAC (Linked) • Binghamton University, LxC • St. Olaf, FLAC (linked, single instructor, & reading enhanced) Thomas Adams, “Beyond Language & Literature Departments” (2007)

  9. Exercise latent language skills for meaningful academic use. Engage in historical analysis. Strengthen research skills and critical thinking abilities. Broaden conceptual frameworks of U.S. history Interrogate inherent cultural components of U.S. history narrative (ex: the usual divide at 1877) Situate local & national in transnational context recognize the global forces shaping national history. CLAC Reinforces USE of “Foreign Language” Materials to

  10. Where Historians Work Historians underestimate the far-reaching consequences CLAC strategies can have on their students and the field of U.S. history.

  11. Democratizes learning by creating a collaborative learning environment for all (including the instructor). Underscores the need for revamping graduate education & professional training. Faculty and TA exchanges Connects faculty research agenda (often international) into their undergraduate courses. University of Iowa study Fosters continued language study & use. Emphasizes study abroad as an part of of the larger academic endeavor. Additional Outcomes of CLAC strategies

  12. Where Historians Work • How do CLAC ideas work in practice? What are students saying? • How does CLAC serve the learning outcomes of the U.S. history classroom? • How can CLAC strategies provide structure to student assignments to internationalize U.S. History?

  13. Where Historians Work: CLAC Infuses the U.S. History Classroom Part II: How can CLAC strategies provide structure to student assignments to internationalize U.S. History?

  14. CLAC Support at Siena • No college-wide language requirement • Globalization Studies • two semesters language • study abroad required • History • two semesters language • study abroad encouraged

  15. CLAC Builds Student Skills in History • Build an incremental, multi-level program to improve student skills in awareness, research, analysis, language • Focus on the C of CLAC: Few students have the skills to work with foreign-language sources • Begin with international history to encourage students to gain transnational perspective

  16. Level Two: American Immigration Transnational Perspectives on U.S. History Improve information literacy skills to locate non-American primary sources Incorporate non-American sources in research paper Gain confidence evaluating transnational perspectives Objective: Nuanced Consideration

  17. Student/Faculty Assessment • Highly motivated, above-average students • Appreciated multiple viewpoints • Uncomfortable using research databases • Frustrated by search failures • Failed to recognize appropriate “non-American” sources • Lacked confidence assessing located sources

  18. CLAC Solution • Develop partnership with Information Literacy Specialists to create “scenario approaches”

  19. Level Three: U.S. Foreign RelationsMultilingual Scholarship • Objectives • Engage with evidence from foreign-language sources • Assess new interpretations of U.S. History • Use foreign-language sources in research paper • Challenges

  20. Future CLAC Initiatives at Siena • Interdisciplinary programs in History • Area Studies • Linked Courses • Globalization Workshop • Modern languages • Information literacy

  21. Where Historians Work: CLAC Infuses the U.S. History Classroom Dr. Suronda Gonzalez, Binghamton University Dr. Barbara Reeves Ellington, Siena College Cultures + Languages Across the Curriculum, 2008 October 15-17, 2008 University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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