Just in time for the new school year!
The journal Environmental History has launched Teaching Environmental History: Canada in Context, an open-access series of 8 teaching modules containing resources aimed to help university, college, and high school instructors integrate Canadian environmental history themes and research into their course curriculum. The modules — on themes as diverse as ecological imperialism, environmental justice, and landscape art — each include
- an article from the 2007 Canadian-themed special issue of Environmental History, made freely available by Oxford University Press,
- discussion questions,
- a contextual essay,
- links to primary sources,
- a glossary.
This is a very useful site for those of us who teach Canadian environmental history and a great introduction to our research and field for scholars around the world.
We owe a big thanks to Environmental History editor Lisa Brady for the series’ conception and David Brownstein for its execution. Canada in Context exists thanks to the support of Oxford University Press, the National Film Board of Canada, the American Society of Environmental History, the Forest History Society, and NiCHE.
Alan MacEachern
Latest posts by Alan MacEachern (see all)
- Events – Artificial | Natural: AI & Environmental History - September 10, 2024
- A Parliament of Cats – Second Reading - August 6, 2024
- A Crash Course in Canadian Environmental History - January 18, 2024
- NiCHE @ 20 - November 20, 2023
- Job – Tier 2 Canada Research Chair in Sustainability & the Social, Western University - August 2, 2023
- Online Event – Firebreak: How the Maine-New Brunswick Border Defined the 1825 Miramichi Fire - May 17, 2023
- Storms of a Century: Fiona (2022) & Five (1923) - November 10, 2022
- Climate at the Speed of Weather - October 5, 2021
- Restricted Clientele! Everyday Racism in Canadian National Parks - September 9, 2020
- Material World: Exhibiting the Anthropocene - May 4, 2020