Posted on February 23, 2012
Categories: effective instruction

The United States Department of Education’s Teaching American History (TAH) Grant was created to raise student achievement by improving teachers’ knowledge, understanding, and appreciation of American history. TAH grants are intended to encourage collaboration among K–12 teachers, post-secondary faculty, and public historians.

The U.S. Department of Education (USDE) Office of Innovation and Improvement awarded the School District of Philadelphia (SDP) Office of Curriculum and Instruction three years of federal funding to increase teacher history content knowledge and improve history instruction. Using the goals set forth by USDE, SDP designed a PD model that contained activities intended to achieve the overall goals of the program. The grant presents a tremendous opportunity to provide new training programs to support innovative history instruction for underserved students.

This evaluation reflects the first year of implementation of the TAH program. The TAH program was guided by four overarching goals:

  • To recruit and retain the number of program participants;
  • To increase teacher content knowledge of American history;
  • To improve instruction of traditional American history content; and.
  • To sustain the TAH program beyond federal funding. (This goal was not addressed during this evaluation period and was included in the 2012-2013 evaluation report.)

Use the button to download the 29-page report.