Education. History. Research. I make things for teachers and help museums and archives: hardhistory.com. "Green chile" is the right answer.

Joined January 2014
391 Photos and videos
Dr. Kate Shuster retweeted
Happy Birthday Frederick Douglass. From Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass, An American Slave (1845) #FrederickDouglass
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Not sure how classroom-safe this resource is, but it's interesting to think about using it to teach about meaning and idioms. untranslatable.co/

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Nice to see this rigorous research.
24 Oct 2023
Participating in policy debate programs in middle & high school is associated with improvements in academic achievement, graduation rates, and college enrollment, according to new research in @EEPAjournal by @BethSchueler & @KateLarned. aera.net/Newsroom/Study-Scho…
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Once again, I am asking you to check out this amazing obituary, as I do every year on Si Moore Day. May your life be as interesting!
Take a few minutes to read this glorious account of a life fully lived. Then maybe your household, like ours, will begin to commemorate Si Moore Day every October 19th.
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So many better options.
An annual reminder to educators: "Making Indian headdresses in school is a terrible way to teach kids about Thanksgiving washingtonpost.com/lifestyle…
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Dr. Kate Shuster retweeted
Thrilled to be part of this public series on Enslavement and Resistance in New England with @drhardesty, the @stolenrelations team @FisherLinford, & many others:  historicbostons.org
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Current situation. #rolltide
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It’s time to take all that gloom from the last year, stuff it into a giant marionette, and burn him. #zozobra #burnhim
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Good stuff from @jaketapper for history teachers thinking about adding some context to their election lessons this year. #sschat
If there’s one thing I know, it’s that the kids on the TikTok like to hear about the history of failed presidential candidates ! Like General John “Blackjack” Pershing!
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Teachers: when your students want to talk about the “Battle of Montgomery,” consider reading this column with them to get them thinking about Montgomery history and the long Black freedom struggle. #sschat #hardhistory
The Montgomery Brawl has gotten plenty of coverage. But editor @lyman_brian thinks one thing has been overlooked: how Montgomery's Black community has fought oppression for centuries, and rewritten history. alabamareflector.com/2023/08… #alpolitics
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Seriously! Teachers, this is going to be good!
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Teaching about #slavery? Teach about the Pueblo Revolt!
Slavery at the Core of the 1680 Revolution It was the most successful Indigenous uprising and one that would ensure survival of Pueblo people. It would also re-script Pueblo-Spanish relations in what is known today as New Mexico. In spite of it being obscured over the years, recent scholarship about the Indigenous uprising that took place in August 1680 has revealed that slavery was one of the primary causes of the revolt, exacerbated by religious animosities, famine & illness, all well documented in the archival record. As Historian Andrés Reséndez argues, "In the course of the 17th c., the silver economy expanded, and it was New Mexico's misfortune to function as a reservoir of coerced labor and a source of cheap products for the silver mines. It did not take the bad behavior of too many Spanish governors, friars, & colonists--compelling Indians to carry salt, robbing their pelts, locking them up in textile sweatshops, & organizing raiding parties to procure Apache slaves-- to bring about widespread animosity, resentment, & ultimately rebellion." Reséndez makes this case based on 3 types of evidence, summarized below: I. Testimonies. In 1681 nine Pueblo men were captured and brought before the governor to ascertain the cause of the revolt. Their depositions were recorded beginning in 1681 and 1682. Eighty-year old Pedro Naranjo of San Felipe declared that in the wake of the revolt, the Indians had finally remained "free from the work demanded by the friars and the other Spaniards which they could no longer bear, and that this was the real reason and legitimate cause that they had to rise up." A 20 year old ladino (Hispanicized) Indian named Joseph also noted, "the causes generally given were the ill treatment and abuses that the Indians received... from Alonso Garcia... Luis de Quintana, & Diego Lopez because they had hit them and taken away what they had and made them working without paying them anything." II. Timing. Reséndez makes the point that the revolt was "long in the making" and that the 30 year period of unrest corresponds with commercial ties between NM and the silver mines of northern Mexico. New Mexican officials responded to these opportunities by seizing Indian products, pressing Natives into work in textile sweatshops & raiding rancherias to procure slaves. While a few sources mention famines and epidemics, particularly in the 1660s, no testimony provided claims famine or pestilence as a cause of the revolt. III. Ethnic/Geographic Scope. While the events are almost always only associated with Puebloan people, the "Great Northern Rebellion" as some scholars have referred to it, was well beyond the geography of NM and included Apaches, Mansos, Conchos, Sumas, Pimas, Janos, Salineros, Tobosos & many other groups. Two primary corridors were included, involving regions of Indigenous inhabitants that had all been subjected to "gravitational pull of the silver economy" and into the "slaving corridors leading to Parral." In the end, these rebellions redefined labor relations in northern Mexico. Indigenous people in New Mexico, Chihuahua, Durango, Sonara & Coahuila according to Reséndez, "challenged slavery and forced important changes in the ways the traffic in humans was conducted in the following century." The NBU Team is working diligently to reveal just how impactful Indigenous slavery was, document by document, story by story.
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We stayed inside a roller coaster, basically, at “Rookburg” in ⁦@Phantasialand⁩. Amazing.
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This is a brilliant take on the Florida standards. Oppression without oppressors. Terrible.
There's been much gaslighting & moderate justifying of the new Florida social studies standards, people stating the "clarifications" were designed to show Black resilience, or were just "facts." So, I thought I'd compare the African-American history standards to the Holocaust's.
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Dr. Kate Shuster retweeted
Sign up for 08/01 (K-8) or 08/02 (9-12) to learn from teachers who are teaching @InfoWantedOrg advertisements in their classrooms. @ZinnEdProject #teachtruth
Be sure to register for our FREE Webinar, in collaboration with #HardHistoryProject, on Using Last Seen Ads in the ELEMENTARY classroom! TOMORROW at 7 PM! us02web.zoom.us/meeting/regi…
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Spent last night in an “aeronaut’s tube watching Back to the Future in German, as one does. @Phantasialand
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See you later, Amsterdam! A lovely time, as always.
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Duty free chocolate repping the Confederacy in ATL? Do better. @ATLairport
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Teachers! Come join us!
Check out our upcoming FREE webinars, in collaboration with the #HardHistoryProject! Registration links: Elementary Educators: us02web.zoom.us/meeting/regi… Secondary Educators: us02web.zoom.us/meeting/regi… #lastseenproject #TeachHistory #K12 #DigitalHistory @NHPRC
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Also.
23 Jul 2023
Replying to @nycsouthpaw
Here’s the deposed secessionist president Jefferson Davis, in his Rise and Fall of the Confederate Government, writing an early draft of DeSantis’s Florida curriculum. perseus.tufts.edu/hopper/tex…
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