History Bug for Teachers

A place for teachers to find History and Social Studies resources

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Author: Cyndy

I am an elementary teacher who loves history and I want to share this love of history with other teachers by providing easy access to primary sources, artifacts, and video clips that can be used in classrooms. The goal of History Bug is to help both teachers and students powerfully and authentically grasp how important it is to experience the knowledge, understanding, and the differing perspectives of the past, in order to be well informed and thoughtful human beings. My name is Cyndy Tatum and I am the Admin of this page. I am a Teacher and Learning Coach (TLC) at the elementary level in a school in Colorado. I have been in education for 19 yrs. as a substitute teacher, interventionist, 5th grade teacher, and currently as a TLC, grades K-5. During these years I have seen the need for teachers to have easy access to history and social studies resources and ideas that can be implemented, not only into History and Social Studies, but also into all other content areas. I sincerely hope that you catch the history bug and are able to pass the love of history on to your students! History and Social Studies lessons do not need to be boring and dry but can be hands-on and engaging with our students. I do hope that History Bug for Teachers will help you bring alive the historical stories of people and events of the famous and not so famous in your classrooms.
August 18, 2019

Yay for school supplies!

Here’s some miscellaneous school supplies, teacher office supplies, and early classes through the years. Recognize anything from your early school days? #firstdayofschool#nostalgicforlisafrank#inkwellsquillschalkboards

August 18, 2019

Back to School(house)

Many teachers and students are returning to school in the next few weeks. Here are some images that show what life used to be…

August 10, 2019

From College Professor to War Hero: Joshua Chamberlain

In 1852, Joshua Chamberlain (1828-1914) graduated from Bowdoin College in Brunswick, Maine. Three years later he married Fanny Adams and accepted a position as…

August 8, 2019

My flour sack dress is prettier than yours!

During the Depression (1929-1939) few people could afford to buy new clothes, so they did what any penny pincher would do—they used whatever material…

August 7, 2019

Fords are hard to beat

Henry Ford (1863-1947) stands with the first Ford car and the ten millionth car on June 4th, 1924, in Detroit. https://www.loc.gov/pictures/item/2016816959/

August 6, 2019

‘Halfway to Hell’ Club on Golden Gate Bridge

In January of 1933 construction began on San Francisco‘s Golden Gate Bridge. It was opened to the public for the first time for “Pedestrian…

August 4, 2019

Remarkable Eleanor

Eleanor Roosevelt (1884-1962), wife of Franklin Roosevelt and niece of Teddy Roosevelt, was a political activist, diplomat, and the longest serving First Lady. She…

August 3, 2019

Resiliency during the Great Depression

Herbert Hoover (1874-1964), America’s 31st president, took office in 1929, the year the U.S. economy plummeted into the Great Depression. As the Depression deepened,…

August 2, 2019

Put on your big girl panties, er…bloomers

On August 5, 1858, Julia Archibald Holmes (February 15, 1838 – January 19, 1887) who was a Canadian-American suffragist, abolitionist, mountaineer, and journalist became…

August 1, 2019

Opera at its’ finest

The Metropolitan Opera House (the Met) in New York City, then located on Broadway at 39th Street in New York City, opened on October…

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Recent Posts

  • Yay for school supplies!
  • Back to School(house)
  • From College Professor to War Hero: Joshua Chamberlain
  • My flour sack dress is prettier than yours!
  • Fords are hard to beat

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