Paisley
I'll Lock Up
- Messages
- 5,438
- Location
- Indianapolis
Several Loungers agreed that knowledge of American history and civics is important. But some of us (like me) didn't like social studies or history, don't memorize facts well, have been out of school for awhile, etc.
How to get the knowledge back--or learn it anew?
I think historical novels, education TV, and personal stories make it easy to learn and remember. Even photos help: I knew the era that women got the vote (nationally) by recalling how the suffragettes were dressed.
Along those same lines, I took a military history class a few years ago and learned about the forage caps and spats of the Civil War. The instructor was so enthusiastic that it made me interested, too.
The PBS documentary Liberty! helped me get to know the Revolutionary War. Even my mother, who hated history as much as I did, sat through 4 hours of this program one night.
Any other recommendations?
How to get the knowledge back--or learn it anew?
I think historical novels, education TV, and personal stories make it easy to learn and remember. Even photos help: I knew the era that women got the vote (nationally) by recalling how the suffragettes were dressed.
Along those same lines, I took a military history class a few years ago and learned about the forage caps and spats of the Civil War. The instructor was so enthusiastic that it made me interested, too.
The PBS documentary Liberty! helped me get to know the Revolutionary War. Even my mother, who hated history as much as I did, sat through 4 hours of this program one night.
Any other recommendations?