September 25, 2024 Library Announces Grant Awards to Enhance Teaching with Primary Sources

Press Contact: Elaina Finkelstein, efinkelstein@loc.gov

The Library of Congress Professional Learning and Outreach Initiatives Office, under the Center for Learning Literacy and Engagement, has awarded Teaching with Primary Sources grants to 23 first-time and 19 continuing grantee organizations located in the U.S. and Puerto Rico.

The current grants awarded in September provide one year of funding, with the possibility of two additional one-year grants, contingent upon successful delivery of Teaching with Primary Sources educational projects based on Library of Congress digitized materials.

New grantees represent a diversity of organizational types, geographic locations and project emphases. They will use Library of Congress primary sources to deliver educational projects focused on civics, economics, disability history, law, writing, local and place-based history, media literacy, data visualization, state archives holdings, Congressional centers activities and supporting student inquiry.

The learners they will serve include rural educators, English language learners, film and journalism students, African American students, Native American teachers and students, very young students, and those with learning and other disabilities.

Organizations receiving their first Teaching with Primary Sources grants are:

C3 Teachers, North Carolina Building Blocks for Inquiry Project
DC History Center, District of Columbia Empowering Historical Explorations: Enhancing D.C.'s National History Day
Digital Inquiry Group, California Reading Like a Historian for All
Grand Valley State University, Michigan Teaching Critical Data Literacy through the Slow Reveal Method and Primary Source Data Visualization
Harding University, Arkansas – How Teaching with Primary Sources Facilitates Rural and Underserved School Retention
History UnErased, Massachusetts The Past is Always Present, dramatizing the hidden histories of LGBTQ Americans
Keene State College, New Hampshire Teaching Disability History in Rural Communities: Primary Source Investigations by all learners
Maine Department of Education, Maine Celebrating Rural Maine: Community Civics and Place-Based Inquiry
Mississippi Department of Archives and History, Mississippi Expanding Primary Source Education in Mississippi
Montana State University, Montana Constitutional Commitments & Demographic Dilemmas: Advancing Indian Education for All and Historical Thinking in Montana’s Rural Schools
New Visions for Public Schools, New York Teaching Literacy Through U.S. History
Northwest Missouri State University, Missouri Amplifying Rural Histories through Inquiry and Primary Sources
Old Dominion University, Virginia Empowering Teacher Educators with Primary Sources: Bridging the Gap in Understanding and Teaching Rural School Desegregation
Red Clay Consolidated School District, Delaware Empowering Young Delaware Citizens: Inquiry-Based Explorations with the Library of Congress
Retro Report, New York Unlocking Potential: Addressing Learning Differences Through Film and Primary Sources
San Francisco State University – California, Collaborative Local History and Action Civics with Library of Congress Documents
State University of New York Geneseo, New York Examining Primary Sources to Inform Pre-service and In-service Teachers to Understand Teaching Local History
Temple University, Pennsylvania – Exploring Histories of Black Civic Organizations: Curriculum Leadership in K-12 Social Studies
Uniondale Union Free School District, New York Enhancing teachers’ ability to integrate digitized primary sources from the Library of Congress into instruction.
University of Kansas Center for Research on Learning, Kansas Citizen Journalism for All Students: Making Journalism in Action’s Library of Congress resources more accessible and relevant for students with disabilities
University of Puerto Rico, Humacao Campus, Puerto RicoLeveraging Educators' Access to Primary Sources: Integrating Library of Congress' Online Collections for the Development of ESL Competencies and Researching Skills in Puerto Rico’s Secondary Schools
University of Tennessee, Tennessee Teaching with Film and Media as Primary Sources
U.S. Capitol Historical Society, District of Columbia Capitol Civics Workshops: Congressional Primary Sources for Teachers

 
With these competitive awards, the grantees become members of the Teaching with Primary Sources Consortium, a group of institutional partners that assist the Library in strengthening efforts to connect with all learners. They will join a cohort of 19 organizations that competed to receive a fourth year of funding to continue the Teaching with Primary Sources projects they began in 2022.

These continuing grantees will be instrumental in maintaining 18 years of Teaching with Primary Sources Consortium practices and traditions.

American Writers Museum
Bard College
ESSDACK, Kansas
Georgia Council on Economic Education
Hunter College, City University of New York (CUNY)
Local Learning: The National Network for Folk Arts in Education
Massachusetts Council for the Social Studies
National Center of Education and the Economy (Educurious)
North Carolina State University
National Council for the Social Studies
National Council of Teachers of English
National History Day
Philadelphia Writing Project, Graduate School of Education, the University of Pennsylvania
Right Question Institute
Street Law, Inc.
University of Delaware
University of Mississippi, Center for Mathematics and Science Education
University of South Florida
Vancouver Public Schools

Since 2006, Congress has appropriated funds to the Teaching with Primary Sources program to establish and fund a consortium of organizations working to incorporate “the digital collections of the Library of Congress into educational curricula.

The Library of Congress is the world’s largest library, offering access to the creative record of the United States — and extensive materials from around the world — both on-site and online. It is the main research arm of the U.S. Congress and the home of the U.S. Copyright Office. Explore collections, reference services and other programs and plan a visit at loc.gov; access the official site for U.S. federal legislative information at congress.gov; and register creative works of authorship at copyright.gov.

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PR 24-084
2024-09-26
ISSN 0731-3527