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Gag Gifts, Occasion Gifts - Lies My Teacher Told Me: Everything Your American History Textbook Got Wrong

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List Price: $16.00
Our Price: $10.88
Your Save: $ 5.12 ( 32% )
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Manufacturer: Touchstone
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Average Customer Rating:     

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Binding: Paperback Dewey Decimal Number: 973 EAN: 9780743296281 ISBN: 0743296281 Label: Touchstone Manufacturer: Touchstone Number Of Items: 1 Number Of Pages: 464 Publication Date: 2007-10-16 Publisher: Touchstone Studio: Touchstone
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Editorial Reviews:
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Winner of the American Book Award and the Oliver C. Cox Anti-Racism Award of The American Sociological Association Americans have lost touch with their history, and in Lies My Teacher Told Me Professor James Loewen shows why. After surveying eighteen leading high school American history texts, he has concluded that not one does a decent job of making history interesting or memorable. Marred by an embarrassing combination of blind patriotism, mindless optimism, sheer misinformation, and outright lies, these books omit almost all the ambiguity, passion, conflict, and drama from our past. In this revised edition, packed with updated material, Loewen explores how historical myths continue to be perpetuated in today's climate and adds an eye-opening chapter on the lies surrounding 9/11 and the Iraq War. From the truth about Columbus's historic voyages to an honest evaluation of our national leaders, Loewen revives our history, restoring the vitality and relevance it truly possesses. Thought provoking, nonpartisan, and often shocking, Loewen unveils the real America in this iconoclastic classic beloved by high school teachers, history buffs, and enlightened citizens across the country.
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Spotlight customer reviews:
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Customer Rating:      Summary: Every Teacher Should Read This Book Comment: As a teacher of high school and college history for 43 years I can, based upon that experience, recommend this book to every history teacher in America especially those who rely upon a history textbook for factual information. More properly this book should be titled, "Lies My History Textbook Told Me." Beyond that, everyone who has completed their education and bases his/her knowledge of America's past upon the information they gleaned from a textbook should also read this book, not only to find out what incorrect information they learned from those texts, but also to learn what they should actually have learned. And when you have finished reading this book, follow it up by reading Howard Zinn's "A People's History of the United States. Only then will you begin to have a true picture of America;s past.
Customer Rating:      Summary: More boring than history Comment: The author states that history is taught in a boring way. This book is worse than a boring history book. I like the idea of finding out the complete truth of undisclosed facts, like Helen Keller was a communist, but his constant harrang of school book writers gets old faster than the crusades. Telling obscured history, like the vikings may have lived in the New England area long before columbus, is fine and interesting. But then, page after page of criticism of the "subversive" text book industry makes this book unbearable. 10% of the book is interesting, 90% is whinning.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Simple Facts and Evidence Shows Our Textbooks Need An Overhaul Comment: This book is filled with concrete examples of important details that are left out of history books because they will create controversy and might make students ask questions.
Instead the goal of history has become to bore a student with unrelated and mostly useless facts - that any bored person will do his/her best to avoid. The human brain learns and remembers what is emotionally stimulating. If you tell history as a story with drama then it will tend to stick, "Emotion is the glue that causes history to stick". James W. Loewen
"Study after study shows that students successfully resist learning "facts" like these. Indeed they resist all too well. When two thirds of American seventeen year olds cannot place the Civil War in the right half-century or 22 percent of my students reply that the `Vietnam War was fought between North and South Korea', we must salute young people for more than mere ignorance. This is resistance raised to a high level. Students are simply not learning even those details of American history that educated citizens should know about. Still less do they learn what caused the major development in our past. Therefore, they cannot apply lessons from the past to current issues.
Unfortunately, students are left with no resources to understand, accept, or reject historical referents used in arguments by candidates for offices, sociology professors, or newspaper journalists. If knowledge is power, ignorance cannot be bliss."
IN textbooks the goal seems to be to present history NOT as a human drama of evolving understanding with progress and reversals (one step forward, 2 steps back) - but instead as an ever improving evolution to a better way of life.
Page 172 "Perhaps the most letting critic Frances Fitz Gerald made in her 1979 survery of American history textbooks, America Revised, was that they leave out ideas."
The problems with ideas is that sometimes it can be obvious which ideas are better yet the ones with the right ideas don't always win. It is easier to force memorization of useless facts than the show the students that the world doesn't work as continuous evolving society. The students would ask why. We all know how irritated some adults get when children keep asking why. Especially when they don't know the answer and it is below them to accept that.
His basic message is that our history books are dooming us to repeat our mistakes of the past by forcing us (as a country) to make decisions based on infomercial, or angry racist talk show hosts as we have no background knowledge to make informed decisions. Lack of knowledge means a person can be controlled by using fear of the unknown.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Any kid over the age of 12 will love it Comment: This eye-opening book puts multicultural historical interpretation into language that young kids will absolutely love. Although its themes and topics initially seem removed from the curriculum of junior high, Loewen's iconoclastic, glass-smashing approach to history will rivet young readers, most of whom have learned buckets of skepticism by the time they reach middle school. The book strikes a nerve with younger readers precisely because it's one of the first ones they'll pick up that confesses what they've long suspected: adults know that lots of what teachers are teaching is hokum.
If this book title appeals to you, regardless of whether you agree with Loewen, chances are good that you were one of those kids and that even now you receive the official company line with great skepticism. You knew that your textbooks and your teachers were often chock full of horse hockey, but didn't have the ammunition to prove it. Rather than tearing down the accepted canons of U.S. history, however, this book does something that's much more destructive to approved history textbooks and ultimately much more illuminating. It makes an irrefutable case that what's presented as historical fact is often historical interpretation, that the interpretation depends on who's doing the telling, and that the lessons to be learned from the telling almost always depend on whether the teller ended up atop the winner's heap or under the winner's boot.
The Germans like to say that the victor writes the history, but Loewen puts the lie to such apologists by proving that losers write history, too, they just have a lot harder time getting it printed in a school textbook. No question this is a great read, informative, and filled with the kind of attitude that made "A Series of Unfortunate Events" and "Captain Underpants" runaway winners for rebels of all ages.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Just Say Know Comment: Our education system continues to Dumb Down. Knowing the past is key to not repeating mistakes and growing as a society. Someone should have sent this book to Bush/Cheney. It may not have helped but could not have hurt.
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