Under the Baobab
The Covid-19 pandemic has irrevocably changed teaching and learning and will have a lasting effect on how we practice historical scholarship. What does that mean for you? How have your colleagues responded? What insights, tips, and new questions have emerged in our recent collective experience that can shape world history moving forward? Join your friends and colleagues in the World History Association for a series of online gatherings designed to spark your curiosity, develop debate, and deepen your engagement with the field.
Each session will present new research, practical teaching applications, hands-on engagement, and lively conversation. Members and guests can register below.
- #1 How Can History Help You During a Pandemic?
- #2 Roads and Oceans — The Journal of World History’s 30th Birthday
- #3 Reframing Revolutions: Centering Indigenous, Black, and Women’s Voices in the Age of Revolutions
- #4 Maritime History as World History
- #5 Biography in World History: Sex, Lies, and Secrets
- #6 Comics, World History, and the Classroom
- #7 Rethinking the World History Survey: New Approaches
- #8 Writing for the Public: History and Journalism
- #9 Community College Forum: Dark Clouds & Silver Linings
- #10 A High School Teacher Forum
- #11 Bodies Under Inter-Imperial Duress
- #12 The Thai Monarchy in Global Affairs
- #13 The Dissertation Edition
- #14 Dishing About World History: Food and Feasts
- #15 Teaching and Learning World History in a time of 'Divisive Concepts'
- #16 Engaging with Policy Makers on World History Education Standards & Model Curricula in a Time of "Divisive Concepts”