
"Democratizing
Student Learning: The 'Women and Social Movements in the United States,
1820-1940' Web Project at SUNY Binghamton"*
Thomas Dublin
and Kathryn Kish Sklar
History
Teacher, 35 (February 2002): 163-73.

We are in the midst of a
revolution in the teaching and research of History, one whose ultimate
impact on the profession is hard to discern. The growing use of electronic
resources--worldwide web sites, online discussion groups, and CD-ROMs,
to name just the ones most commonly employed--has dramatically increased
creative possibilities in high school and college classrooms. History
teachers will surely benefit from a broadening discussion of this new
world. Yet no amount of discussion or array of creative lessons on how
to access materials on the web can change the reality that the educational
possibilities for teachers and students are limited by the kinds of
materials that are published on the worldwide web.
Worldwide web technology
is a perfect match for teaching about history because it permits us
to analyze documents that otherwise would remain inaccessible. The technology
thereby boosts our capacities as teachers because it gives our students
access to the documents that reveal the processes of historical change,
and it helps our students develop better analytic skills by learning
to interpret documents. This amazing conjuncture of new technology and
the possibilities of the history classroom has generated enormous potential
for improvement in the way we teach history. But much remains to be
done. We need to develop new course content and new teaching formats
that use the new technology.
In U.S. women's history,
for example, most available material focuses on "famous" women. On the
web women remain marginal to American history rather than integrated
into its mainstream. Despite its enormous possibilities, the worldwide
web does not reflect the richness of recent scholarship in women's history,
nor does it exploit the field's potential to reinterpret U.S. History
by viewing it through the experiences of women.[1]
In women's history, as in
other fields of U.S. history, the web presents more problems than solutions
to the classroom teacher. By greatly expanding the available information
and the uses to which it can be put, the web complicates the history
classroom in three ways: it makes it necessary for teachers to distinguish
between authoritative and non-authoritative information; it challenges
teachers to generate and use new materials that students can explore
effectively on their own; and it makes it possible for teachers to focus
on history as a process of interpretation.
This more complicated view
of history is more than the study of the past. The web makes it possible
for students to acquire skills that enhance their ability to interpret
social change in the present because they know how to interpret social
change in the past. Yet that potential cannot be realized through technology
alone. It also requires the use of new materials and innovative teaching
formats.
During the past four years
we have tried to develop new materials and new teaching formats in a
project that collaborates with students to produce online resources
in U.S. Women's History. Our classroom strategy is to teach history
by teaching students how to become producers of historical knowledge
for use on the web. Inspired by the idea that their work might be read
on the web as a new contribution to historical knowledge, students are
more willing to learn the nitty gritty features of historical scholarship
that enable them to produce that knowledge. They want to learn how to
locate and evaluate evidence and how to put it into an interpretive
framework.
This new classroom format
has generated editorial projects that form the basis for our website,
"Women and Social Movements
in the United States, 1820-1940." The website has carried us into
a new realm where research and teaching have merged into one creative
activity. This year we have begun a broader collaboration with eleven
faculty across the country, drawing them into the teaching format that
we have developed for the Women and Social Movements website. We hope
this collaboration will further enrich the body of interpretive primary
materials available online for use in American History classrooms.
The Women and Social Movements
website, co-directed by Kathryn Sklar and Thomas Dublin, began operations
in December 1997, aimed at offering web-based primary materials within
an interpretive framework for use in college and high school classrooms.
Now, almost four years later, the site consists of about 30 editorial
projects with 650 documents, 150 graphics, and hundreds of links to
related websites.[2]
Each editorial project poses
a central interpretive question and provides about twenty primary documents
that address the question. To address the question in more detail, each
project also includes an interpretive introduction, individual headnotes
for the documents, a bibliography, and a list of related web links.
The editorial projects provide
a central core for an ever-growing array of resources. In early 2001
we added a Teacher's
Corner to the site and there are now about one hundred lesson ideas
to facilitate the use of the site's primary documents in college and
high school classrooms. We are also beginning to create a database that
will permit users to access primary documents and photographs independently
of the site's editorial projects, thus in effect allowing them to create
their own author- or subject-based groups of documents for teaching
or research.
Work on the "Women and Social
Movements" website has entailed a number of distinct transitions for
the two of us as scholars and teachers. For historians who prior to
1997 had worked primarily with traditional print media and who published
their scholarship almost entirely in the form of books and articles,
it has been quite a change to immerse ourselves in the electronic medium.
While the interpretive concerns of historical scholarship continue to
dominate our thinking, we have become attuned to new issues of organization
and presentation. We are excited by the way the project has grown out
of teaching and has led to an unusual scholarly collaboration between
students and teachers.
The vast majority of editorial
projects we have mounted on the website began as student research projects
in a senior seminar taught at the State University of New York at Binghamton.
In the winter of 1997 Kathryn Sklar began teaching what she conceived
initially as an undergraduate research seminar on Women and Progressive
Reform. She had organized a number of likely research topics for students
based on the extensive microfilm holdings of the university library.
But her expectations for the course changed that January, when she attended
a funding panel at the Library of Congress. Meeting with librarians,
professors, and K-12 teachers to award grants to digitization projects
under a program supported by Ameritech, she learned from high school
teachers that what they most needed from the web were sites where information
was focused in such a way as to permit students to learn something significant
in an hour. Browsing the web might be a way of life, but learning meaningful
history could not be achieved by web browsing. At that meeting she also
found that U.S. Women's History was dramatically underrepresented among
the submitted proposals, symbolizing the growing gender digital divide
in U.S. History on the web. This set her wondering how the need for
meaningful materials in U.S. history could be met by women's history
materials, a strategy that would solve both the general and the gendered
needs of U.S. history teachers. Returning to her seminar classroom in
U.S. women's history, she offered students the alternative of creating
document-based projects for the Worldwide Web. From that unplanned beginning
emerged the website that has taken an important place in our professional
lives ever since.
While students in the first
seminar had not expected to be engaged in work for the worldwide web,
they responded enthusiastically to the prospect. The first two projects
that we mounted on the website in December 1997 came from that course,
focusing respectively on African-American
women and the 1893 Chicago World's Fair and the National
Woman's Party and African-American women's suffrage after the passage
of the Nineteenth Amendment. Since that semester, we have offered
this course three more times and our sophistication in providing training
in historical editing and programming with HTML has increased markedly
over time. While the projects go through a very full process of revision
and reformatting after the undergraduates have finished their work,
the final products clearly reflect the students' contributions and we
credit them as the original editors of the projects.
Work on website projects
proceeds in two distinct steps. First, students in the senior seminar
work with and mount their projects on a course
website that we have created on an instructional server at Binghamton.
This site is separate from the Women and Social Movements website. While
it is accessible to the outside world, we do not advertise it, since
it is the place where students mount their work in process. Typically,
at the end of the term there are 10-12 projects on the course website,
about half of which we are likely to revise for mounting as part of
the Women and Social Movements website at some point in the future.
The revision and mounting of projects occurs as a second step in this
process. Given our emphasis in this article on the classroom dimensions
of this work, we focus here on the original student work and subsequent
teaching applications using the website, and move relatively quickly
over the work we do in the intermediate revision phase.
Mastering these technical
issues and addressing substantive interpretive questions in the selection
and editing of historical documents are challenging tasks for students
in a single semester, but most of them have risen to the occasion and
done quite remarkable work in the short space of three and a half months.
The key to their success is that they become energized by the goal of
putting their project on the web as a learning resource for other students
of U.S. history. Initially students mount their editorial projects on
the course website. They understand that their project will be considered
for inclusion in the Women and Social Movements website, which is accessed
by students and teachers around the world.
Because ours is a course
in U.S. women's history, most of our students are women, and, representing
the gendered construction of web expertise in our culture, most consider
themselves technologically inept. Most do not take the course as a way
of learning HTML (hypertext markup language); in fact most are relieved
when we assure them that they are not required to learn HTML. Nevertheless,
every student who has ever taken the course has mastered HTML through
the tutorials we offer on the course website. Written by Dr. Melissa
Doak, Associate Director of the Center for the Historical Study of Women
and Gender, these tutorials help students use HTML effectively.[3]
Melissa Doak has also co-taught the course, bringing her technological
expertise into our seminar classroom. Partly because our students are
empowered by their new technological skills, the course usually becomes
an important focus for their energy that semester, and they eagerly
absorb the technical, interpretive, and methodological issues that they
encounter in shaping their projects.
At the end of the semester,
we invite university administrators, librarians, and history faculty
to attend the final meeting of the class where students give oral reports
on their work and display the products of their labors with large-screen
projection facilities. This event rewards the extra effort that most
students have put into their course projects. It also reinforces their
identity as producers of historical knowledge.
During the past year we have
tried to make the website a more effective resource for teaching. While
we are impressed with student learning in the senior seminar course
that produces these editorial projects, we are equally convinced that
students of American History more generally can benefit from this work.
With support from Houghton Mifflin we implemented a Teacher's Corner
with numerous lesson ideas for students and teachers using the primary
documents on the site. To gain a clearer sense of the teaching possibilities
of the website we focus the remainder of our discussion here on an editorial
project about a 1938 strike by San Antonio pecan shellers.
This editorial project had
its origins in our concern that the website not focus exclusively on
the northeast and midwest--a common issue in U.S. Women's History. Responding
to a general call in which we asked historians for ideas, Vicki Ruiz
of Arizona State University suggested we try to work up a project on
this important strike. Good secondary literature existed on the strike,
so by combing the footnotes in that literature and contacting Texas
archives we were able to assemble a good array of research materials,
including microfilm of a local English-language newspaper, a Spanish-language
paper, and the Communist Party's Daily Worker, all three of which
gave the strike extensive coverage.[4]
Two Latina students enrolled
in the senior seminar prepared to use their Spanish skills on this project.
The two worked independently and each made real contributions to the
final project that we subsequently published on the website. Rosalyn
Perez did the initial translations of Spanish-language articles, while
Taína DelValle found an effective way to present the original
Spanish sources and their English translations. Their two editorial
projects chose different ways to present the primary documents they
selected from the materials we had assembled. The projects' two titles--
"What Were the Different Media Interpretations of Mexican Womyn's Participation
in the San Antonio Pecan Shellers' Strike of 1938?" and "What Does a
Focus on Women Tell Us About Civil Rights in the Pecan Shellers' Strike
of 1938 in San Antonio, Texas?"--reveal the distinct approaches each
took. One student focused on differing media representations of women's
participation in the strike, while the other explored the suppression
of civil liberties by public authorities. The first project organized
the documents around treatments by each of three newspapers; the second
paid more attention to the chronology of the strike.
As we reworked and combined
the two projects, we added more documents and developed the civil liberties
issues still further. As is evident in the final document
list for the revised project, we employed both English and Spanish
sources and English translations. In the end, the published project
followed one student's emphasis on civil liberties, but we drew on the
other's interest in media representations for the lesson ideas about
the project in the "Teacher's Corner."
We and the staff at the Women
and Social Movements website expanded the project's documentary base
and formatted the new documents to reach a broad audience. For example,
to take advantage of a rich photographic record of the strike, we included
photos and text from an illustrated
pamphlet published by the Texas Civil Liberties Union, which charged
municipal authorities with violations of strikers' civil liberties.
We also had access to oral history interviews of strike leaders and
a former pecan sheller and included excerpts from both transcriptions
and an audio clip in the project. After the project was mounted we learned
about a 16mm film about the industry and the strike deposited in the
Walter Reuther Library at Wayne State University.[5]
We are in the process of preparing a 5-minute video clip for mounting
on the site. With this project we have begun to take full advantage
of the multimedia possibilities of the electronic medium.
With the recent implementation
of the Teacher's Corner, we have enhanced the classroom use of the projects
and their primary documents. In the case of the pecan
shellers' strike, our questions follow the interpretive perspective
of one of the student editors, Taína DelValle, by asking students
to read several newspaper accounts and consider their varying perspectives
on the strike. This project offers teachers the opportunity to employ
Spanish language skills in their classes. We have other bilingual materials
in a project on a 1933 Puerto Rican needleworkers strike. By permitting
students to address issues of historical interpretation and by drawing
on foreign-language skills, the primary documents assembled on the Women
and Social Movements website go beyond most of the classroom resources
available to U.S. history teachers at both the college and high school
levels.
Convinced that we have a
format that teachers and students are finding valuable, we hope to expand
the website dramatically in the coming three years. With support from
the National Endowment for the Humanities, we have enlisted eleven faculty
from colleges and universities across the country to improvise with
the course and website models at their own institutions. In this way
we are drawing on faculty and students throughout the country--from
Brandeis, New York University, and Rutgers, from Swarthmore, Oberlin,
and Grinnell, from the University of Maryland, Baltimore County, Tennessee
Techological University, and St. Louis University, from the University
of Northern Colorado and the University of Arizona. In July 2001 we
held a two-day training workshop in Binghamton to orient these colleagues,
who will teach courses similar to our senior seminar at their home institutions
and help students draw on their institutions' archival and microfilm
resources for new editorial projects. They have designed a variety of
promising research topics and over the next three semesters will in
their own courses help students produce editorial projects for mounting
on the Women and Social Movements website. If we meet our goal of doubling
the number of editorial projects during the next three years, we should
make almost 1,400 documents available on the site. There will be new
projects on Jewish women reformers, on women and the Depression in New
York City, on women and abolitionism, prairie women and reform, women
and Indian reform, and the women's liberation movement of more recent
years. This new chapter in the project's history will dramatically expand
its scope and will launch additional historians into the use of electronic
media in the interpretation of U.S. Women's History. It's not exactly
a thousand flowers blooming, but it’s a lot more than we could ever
tend in our Binghamton home garden.
We see the worldwide web
as offering rich possibilities in the teaching of U.S. Women's History,
both for its own sake and as an integral part of U.S. History. Our research
seminars offer real challenges to undergraduate students and at the
same time promise to disseminate otherwise hard-to-access primary documents
to students and teachers at colleges and high schools far removed from
the nation's leading research universities. In a recent month the website
was accessed more than 10,000 times by users from more than sixty countries.
We can imagine many more users accessing the site three years from now
when the resources we have to offer will be much greater. We invite
you to join us in this revolution in the teaching of history--either
by teaching with the documents on the Women and Social Movements website
or by contacting us about the possibility of working with your students
to create projects like those we and our students have produced. Putting
women's history on the Worldwide Web makes a real contribution to the
democratization of learning that is unfolding around us.

* This article is a revision
of a paper originally presented at the annual meeting of the Organization
of American Historians in Los Angeles, April 27, 2001. We are particularly
grateful for the comments of Nancy Page Fernandez and John McClymer
on that occasion.
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1. For
a discussion of the limits of some early women’s history scholarship,
see Gerda Lerner, “New Approaches to the Study of Women in American
History,” in The Majority Finds Its Past: Placing Women in History
(New York: Oxford University Press, 1979), pp. 3-14. Many of the
concerns she expressed more than twenty years ago continue to apply
with regard to the first women’s history materials appearing on the
world wide web. For a good discussion of the way that recent women’s
history is forcing a revisioning of U.S. History more generally, see
the introduction to Linda K. Kerber, Alice Kessler-Harris, and Kathryn
Kish Sklar, eds., U.S. History as Women's History: New Feminist Essays
(Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1995).
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2. Readers and viewers of
this article should note that most websites are living, growing undertakings.
All numbers describing the site are accurate as of the writing of this
article in the summer of 2001, but they will doubtless be out of date
when the article is published.
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3. We do not use web-pagemaking
software because it introduces its own constraints on our editing, because
HTML is simple and easy to learn, and because our seminar has only 10-15
students and we can tutor them individually.
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4. The most useful secondary
sources included Julia Kirk Blackwelder, Women of the Depression:
Caste and Culture in San Antonio, 1929-1939 (College Station: Texas
A&M University Press, 1984), pp. 130-51; and Vicki L. Ruiz, From
Out of the Shadows: Mexican-American Women in Twentieth-Century America
(New York: Oxford University Press, 1998), pp. 72-98.
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5. Our thanks to Zaragosa
Vargas, of the University of California, Santa Barbara, and author of
"Tejana Radical: Emma Tenayuca and the San Antonio Labor Movement During
the Great Depression," Pacific Historical Review, 66 (1997):
553-80, for letting us know about the pecan shellers' film clip at the
Reuther Library.
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