Teaching “New” Political History

In a recent New York Times article, Frederick Logevall and Kenneth Osgood bemoan the decline of political history. Arguing that universities have essentially stopped hiring political historians and offering courses in the subject, Logevall and Osgood suggest that the broader shift toward social and cultural history in the past 40 years has limited students’ knowledge…

Letting Go of Content

Much to my two survey classes’ delight, I have now, in week three, mastered their names.  I have only tripped over the podium twice and have only one chalk incident to report.  It is the beginning of a banner year! I spent some of time on the blog last year puzzling how to ensure my…

Turn-It-Inward: Copyright in Theory and Practice

This post is the first in a series at TUSH this year on the relationship between research and the classroom. You can look out for several pieces from regular and guest contributors on a wide range of subjects in the coming months. It’s hard to convey the precise look of horror that spreads across students’ faces…

Run for the Fund

Welcome back to the new school year! Here at Michigan State, we’re making our way into the third week of the term and I’m trying to learn the names of my students. It promises to be a good semester, but there is also a sad absence. Regular readers of the blog might remember my post…

Why We’re Here

The start of a new semester may not be the best time for deep existential questions, but I like to ask them anyway. Why are we here? I’m not asking metaphysically, however, but rather in the more immediate sense. I return to the question every time I start a new set of classes, largely because…

Imagining and Narrating Space

I had the recent opportunity of facilitating a GIS teaching session for the Digital Humanities Bootcamp at the University of Nebraska Lincoln in April of this year. The Digital Humanities Bootcamp is put on by UNL’s Center for Digital Research in the Humanities and explores technologies and recurrent tools in the DH world in an…

Applying a Fresh Coat of Paint

It’s a new day, yes it is. Summer has come and gone, and whether I or my students are ready, a new semester is upon us. On one hand, this is always an exciting time. Whether it’s the same U.S. survey course I’ve taught dozens of times or a class that everyone forgot was on…

Dani Vaughn-Tucker

End of Semester Reflections

I look at my syllabus, it shows the wear and tear of the semester: dates are crossed out, notes are scribbled across the tops of pages, the corners are dogeared and chewed. It looks like I feel. Our semester ended a little over three weeks ago, and I’m just now starting to feel like I can…