U.S. Department of Education: Promoting Educational Excellence for all Americans - Link to ED.gov Home Page Skip Navigation - jump to topic navigation menu
Students  Parents  Teachers  Administrators   Results Agenda
No Child Left Behind. Learn how this new law offers parents more options.
Related Topics
list bullet Math Achievement - NCLB
list bullet Science Achievement - NCLB
list bullet Helping Your Child
 Get More!
Receive ED newsletters.
Get answers to questions.
Take our online survey.
 Prepare My Child for School
   Readiness for School
   What to Look for in a Pre-School
 Find Schools & After-Care
 Help My Child Read
'My Child's Academic Success' subtopics menu is expandedMy Child's Academic Success
   Help My Child with Academics
   Involvement in My Child's Education
   Summer Learning
   Home Schooling
   Health and Safety
 My Child's Special Needs
 College for My Child
  Advanced Search
 About ED
 • Offices
• Publications
• Budget
• Jobs
• Contacts
 Press Room
 • Press Releases
• Speeches
 Help
 • A-Z Index
• Site Map
• Technical Support
• File Viewers
 Recursos en español
MY CHILD'S ACADEMIC SUCCESS
Helping Your Child Learn History
With activities for children in preschool through grade 5
Downloadable File PDF (2 MB) | MS Word (194 KB)

BIBLIOGRAPHY

In addition to those listed below in the Resources section, the following resources were used in preparing this booklet:

Ballen, J. and Oliver Moles, O. (1994). Strong Families, Strong Schools. Washington, D.C.: U. S. Department of Education.

Bradley Commission on History in Schools. (1991). Historical Literacy: The Case for History in American Schools. New York: Houghton Mifflin.

Cheney, Lynne V. (1987). American Memory: A Report on the Humanities in the Nation's Public Schools. Washington, D.C.: National Endowment for the Humanities.

Gibbon, Peter H. (2002). A Call to Heroism: Renewing America's Vision of Greatness. New York: Grove/Atlantic.

Henderson, A. T. and Berla, N. (eds.) (1994). A New Generation of Evidence: The Family Is Critical to Student Achievement. Washington, D.C.: Center for Law and Education.

Levstik, Linda. S., and Keith R. Barton. (2000). Doing History: Investigating with Children in Elementary and Middle Schools. Mahway, New Jersey: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates.

Vansledright, Bruce. (2002). In Search of America's Past: Learning to Read History in Elementary School. New York: Teachers College Press.

Many of the activities are based on suggestions from the following people and publications:

John Ahern; Claudia J. Hoone; Kathleen Hunter; Peter O'Donnell, Director of Museum Education at Old Sturbridge Village; and Janice Ribar.

Caney, Steve. (1978). Steve Caney's Kids' America. New York: Workman Publishing.

Henry, Edna. (1984). Native American Cookbook. New York: Julian Messner.

Weitzman, David. (1975). My Backyard History Book. Boston: Little, Brown & Co.


   7 | 8 | 9
TOC
Print this page Printable view Send this page Share this page
 FOIA | Privacy | Security | Notices  The White House www.whitehouse.gov  FirstGov Logo FirstGov.gov  E-Gov Logo Federal E-Gov Initiatives