Today’s What We’re Reading features five endangered civil rights sites, source code as art, a chart of student technology preferences, and much more!
History in the News
Best Interests of the Child—Genocide and the Transfer of Children
The Journal of Human Rights features a special section including work by Keith David Watenpaugh on the transfer of Armenian children, 1915–22; Diane Wolf on hidden Jewish children in postwar Netherlands; Andrea Dooley on transferred Rwandan children; and Michael Lazzara on Argentina’s kidnapped children.
Five Endangered Civil Rights Sites: Commemorating the March on Washington
From the National Trust, a list of historically significant sites that may be lost.
Challenges of Studying, and Teaching, Atlantic World History
At the venerable Common-Place, secondary history faculty member Darcy R. Fryer on the trouble with teaching Atlantic world history.
Art in New Forms
The Smithsonian Just Added a Chunk of Code to Its Permanent Collection
From Gizmodo: “The Smithsonian’s Cooper-Hewitt design museum in New York just acquired the source code to an iPad app called Planetary from its now-defunct developer. Code is officially art now.”
Carving Culture: Sculptural Masterpieces Made from Old Books
Brain Pickings gets a little excited about sculptures made out of old books.
Teaching and Learning
Choosing Real-World Impact over Impact Factor
Historian Sam Wineburg in the Chronicle argues that academics are ignoring the needs of “rank and file” teachers in favor of publishing in academic journals, thereby limiting their real-world impact.
Your multitasking is not working, so you might as well just read this and stop trying to answer that e-mail at the same time.
Students to Profs: Less Smartphones, More Playback
The Chronicle put up an interesting chart of student technology preferences in the classroom, with surprising results.
This post first appeared on AHA Today.
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