Teaching Online
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Opening Doors
Perspectives Daily
Brett Bagur | May 4, 2022
An online program might be appealing to students looking for flexibility in their graduate studies. -
Repair and Reconnection
From the Teaching Division
Shannon Bontrager, Alexandra Hui, Katharina Matro, and Laura McEnaney | Aug 18, 2021
After the pandemic upended so many of our classroom routines, what will "back to school" mean? -
Our Learning Curve Was Steep
Perspectives Daily
Stefan Djordjevic, Kristin Hoganson, and Dana Rabin | May 10, 2021
Research on teaching in pandemic conditions conducted by the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign assessed emergency practices to advance teaching and learning. -
Absence and Presence
From the President
Jacqueline Jones | Apr 13, 2021
Although historians have produced remarkable work while working remotely, AHA president Jacqueline Jones argues that it is dangerous to conclude...
Most Recent
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Teaching South African Stories Online
Jacob Ivey | Mar 2, 2021
Well-managed digital archives provide students with a focused set of research materials that help build a foundational point of historical inquiry. -
Writing Histories of Witchcraft in a Pandemic
Richard Tomczak | Mar 1, 2021
Students at Stony Brook University used a digital humanities project about times of crisis to connect their work on the... -
Professional Skills, Historical Thinking
Shannon Bontrager | Dec 1, 2020
One historian explains how using Microsoft Teams reduced his grading load and improved student learning. -
Remote Reflections: Twice the Work and Half the Fun
Walter L. Buenger | Sep 14, 2020
For faculty teaching online for the first time, spring 2020 could be a frustrating learning experience. -
Remote Reflections: Being a Graduate Teaching Assistant during the Pandemic
Victoria Funk | Aug 28, 2020
Graduate teaching assistants, not quite students and not yet faculty, face unique challenges during COVID-19.
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