非常抱歉,
你要访问的页面不存在,
非常抱歉,
你要访问的页面不存在,
非常抱歉,
你要访问的页面不存在,
验证码:
职称:Associate Professor, School of Education; Associate Professor, Department of History, College of Literature, Science, and the Arts
所属学校:University of Michigan-Ann Arbor
所属院系:Secondary Teacher Education
所属专业:Secondary Education and Teaching
联系方式:734.615.0585
In his earlier career as a high school teacher, Bob Bain was a seven-time award winner for excellence in teaching. Now, he focuses on improving the preparation of future high school teachers and on ways to use museums as tools for understanding the past. For example, he has worked with The Henry Ford (formerly The Henry Ford Museum & Greenfield Village) to enhance students' understanding of museum artifacts. He earned his PhD from Case Western University with a special concentration in the history of policy toward youth. Before coming to the University of Michigan in 1998, Bain taught high school history and social studies for 26 years in the Cleveland, Ohio area. As a historian, history teacher, and teacher-educator, his research investigates the relationships among history as a disciplinary way of knowing, learning and teaching. Current research projects include an investigation of history-specific pre-service and professional development; a history of the preparation of history teachers; the design and use of history-specific technology for students engaged in historical inquiry; and a study of teaching and learning history in museums and with museum resources. Bain has worked on history and social science education projects at the national level (e.g., for the American Historical Association, National History Center, College Board, National Assessment Governing Board), the state level (e.g., chair of Michigan’s Social Studies Content Expectations Committee) and the local level (e.g., Long Beach Unified Schools, Flint Schools, Cleveland Public Schools). Recent publications include: “‘They Thought the World Was Flat?’ Principles in Teaching High School History” in How Students Learn: History, Math and Science in the Classroom (Washington: National Academy Press, 2005), and “Rounding Up Unusual Suspects: Facing Authority Hidden in the History Classroom” in Teachers College Record (2006). He is coediting a book funded through the National History Center on history education policy. In 2000, the Carnegie Foundation selected him as a Carnegie Scholar in the Carnegie Academy of Teaching and Learning and, recently, the Organization of American Historians chose him as one of its Distinguished Lecturers. Bain has received awards for teaching at both the high school and university levels, including the College Educator of the Year Award from the Michigan Council of Social Studies in both 2008 and 2011.
In his earlier career as a high school teacher, Bob Bain was a seven-time award winner for excellence in teaching. Now, he focuses on improving the preparation of future high school teachers and on ways to use museums as tools for understanding the past. For example, he has worked with The Henry Ford (formerly The Henry Ford Museum & Greenfield Village) to enhance students' understanding of museum artifacts. He earned his PhD from Case Western University with a special concentration in the history of policy toward youth. Before coming to the University of Michigan in 1998, Bain taught high school history and social studies for 26 years in the Cleveland, Ohio area. As a historian, history teacher, and teacher-educator, his research investigates the relationships among history as a disciplinary way of knowing, learning and teaching. Current research projects include an investigation of history-specific pre-service and professional development; a history of the preparation of history teachers; the design and use of history-specific technology for students engaged in historical inquiry; and a study of teaching and learning history in museums and with museum resources. Bain has worked on history and social science education projects at the national level (e.g., for the American Historical Association, National History Center, College Board, National Assessment Governing Board), the state level (e.g., chair of Michigan’s Social Studies Content Expectations Committee) and the local level (e.g., Long Beach Unified Schools, Flint Schools, Cleveland Public Schools). Recent publications include: “‘They Thought the World Was Flat?’ Principles in Teaching High School History” in How Students Learn: History, Math and Science in the Classroom (Washington: National Academy Press, 2005), and “Rounding Up Unusual Suspects: Facing Authority Hidden in the History Classroom” in Teachers College Record (2006). He is coediting a book funded through the National History Center on history education policy. In 2000, the Carnegie Foundation selected him as a Carnegie Scholar in the Carnegie Academy of Teaching and Learning and, recently, the Organization of American Historians chose him as one of its Distinguished Lecturers. Bain has received awards for teaching at both the high school and university levels, including the College Educator of the Year Award from the Michigan Council of Social Studies in both 2008 and 2011.