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Sunday-Friday
June 22-27, 2008 OR
July 27-Aug. 1, 2008

CONTACT
Brian Silver
PH 651-772-4257
MINNESOTA
HUMANITIES CENTER
987 Ivy Avenue East
St. Paul, MN 55106
PH 651-774-0105
TOLL FREE 866-268-7293
FAX 651-774-0205
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The history
of Minnesota's Iron Range, its contributions, and its people is
rarely, if ever, told. It is absent from general treatments of American
history, absent from examinations of industrial America, and absent
from studies of the U.S. military build-ups in the first and second
world wars; the Iron Range appears as only a footnote in historical
treatments of the American steel industry.
The history
of the people who came to work these mines is the history of America;
it is the story of immigrants, of conflict and assimilation, of
people creating lives for themselves, their families, and for others.
Minnesota's
Iron Range is the historic region or main "landmark" central
to the Minnesota Humanities Center's
National Endowment for the Humanities Landmarks of American History
and Culture Workshop, "Building America: Minnesota's Iron Range,
U.S. Industrialization, and the Creation of a World Power."
Offered in Summer
2008, the workshop will focus on the history and activities that
took place on the Vermilion and the Mesabi Iron Ranges. Participants
will be provided with resources and new content knowledge for introducing
the history of Minnesota's Iron Range region, its contributions,
and its people into their current American history curriculum. In
order to make this easier, the workshops will be based on national
history standards and the national social studies standards and
will be organized around three central themes that align with those
standards. These three themes are: 1) Natural History of the Landmark:
Geography and Geology; 2) The Mines and their Contributions to American
History; 3) and the People and the Mines (indigenous peoples, ethnicity,
and immigration).
REGISTRATION
AND EXPENSES
Thanks to a generous donation from the National Endowment for the
Humanities (NEH), there is no registration fee for this program.
Funding from the NEH will cover travel, lodging, and meal expenses
for educators from around the nation to attend.
NOTE:
Registration for this workshop is FULL;
no additional applications will be accepted. Pending
grant approval, the Humanities Center will offer another Landmarks
workshop in Summer 2009. Check our website
this fall for more information.
ABOUT THE
LANDMARKS PROGRAM
Landmarks of American History and Culture Workshops for Schoolteachers
are part of the National Endowment for the Humanities' We the People
program. These workshops provide the opportunity for K-12 educators
from throughout the U.S. to engage in intensive study and discussion
of important topics in American history. The one-week academies
will give participants direct experiences in the interpretation
of significant historical sites and the use of archival and other
primary historical evidence. Landmarks workshops present the best
scholarship on a specific landmark or related cluster of landmarks,
enabling participants to gain a sense of the importance of historical
places, to make connections between what they learn in the workshop
and what they teach, and to develop enhanced teaching materials
for their classrooms.
ABOUT THE
MINNESOTA HUMANITIES CENTER
Through
its emphasis on the humanities, the Minnesota
Humanities Center works to build a literate and thoughtful society.
A Minnesota-based national center and clearing house for the best
in the humanities, the Humanities Center:
QUESTIONS?
Contact Brian Silver, 651-772-4257, or brian@minnesotahumanities.org.
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