Studying ancient world trade networks remains one of my favorite topics to introduce and discuss with students. The constant exchange of cultures, and subsequent syncretism that has occurred to create a whole new world of culture is fascinating to me.
This time lapse video does a great job of encapsulating the journey, and the energy of the world's oldest trade route....
Timelapses from the Silk Road from Chris Northey on Vimeo.
Wednesday, October 7, 2015
Sunday, August 16, 2015
Lets. Do. This. {Back to School Edition}
The. Greatest. Tour. Guide. Ever. at Independence Hall. |

As always, I will try to mix things up this year. Between the content, projects, and essays - I am always looking for something new. For instance, in an effort to inspire more curiosity from new angles - my first semester AP World History class will (hopefully) be completing a class read with a fantastic book The History of the World in Six Glasses. This book attempts to tell " the story of humanity from the Stone Age to the 21st century through the lens of beer, wine, spirits, coffee, tea, and cola." In addition, we may take another opportunity to work with UNC Chapel Hill"s Center for International Understanding program, working with a class of high school students in India - something that inspired us all last year.

But mostly, each year I simply become more fully aware that teaching is my passion. So, I can not wait to get back in the saddle. I am even excited about grading essays....almost.
Let's. Do. This.
Friday, August 7, 2015
The Problem That We All Live With (Should Schools Integrate?)

In teaching American history, my classes spend a lot of time attempting to gain a more complete understanding of a variety of supreme court cases. A few of these cases concern school integration - and I often feel that my educational experience can help shed light on the topic.
As a kid, I grew up in a city (Winston-Salem, NC) that had mandatory busing to integrate the schools. (This was court ordered as a result of the supreme court case Swann v. Charlotte-Mecklenburg School System in 1970). The system looked like this: I attended an elementary school that was in the suburbs, where I lived. African-American kids from the inner city took a 45 minute bus ride out to our school. For middle school, it was me ( and other suburban white kids) who had the long bus ride to the inner city. Then, we all returned to the suburbs for high school. Overall, this system succeeded in integrating our schools. Until my final years in high school, I never knew that many places in America had an educational experience without mandatory busing.
Since the mid nineties, most cities (including Winston-Salem) have abandoned mandatory busing in favor of magnet school programs - simply allowing for family choice in schools (In Winston-Salem, this has essentially resegregated the public schools there - where one elementary school is almost 100% African-American and Latino, with 98% free/reduced lunch - and another is 88% white, with 15% free/reduced lunch). In addition, school systems are trying numerous strategies to combat the massive gap in test scores between minorities and white students.
The NPR podcast This American Life recently took on crucial questions about our school integration experiment of the 1980s, including:
- Was it successful?
- Did mandatory integration of public schools help close the achievement gap between minorities and white kids?
- Is it still necessary to make sure kids of different races attend school together?
Click here to hear the podcast The Problem That We All Live With
Wednesday, June 17, 2015
Kendrick Lamar {comes to your school}
This is rad. Just a public school teacher...doing whatever it takes (via NPR).
Bravo.
Bravo.
Wednesday, May 20, 2015
The City of Brotherly Love {Smells like Teen Spirit}
Making the decision to take our high school kids to different cities throughout the USA easily ranks as one of the top five greatest decisions of my teaching career. I have written (and reflected) about these trip before, but suffice to say that this particular trip to Philadelphia only confirmed my feelings.
These kids rarely see boundaries to their world, and most are just impatient to experience it. So, when we take 74 of them to the fifth largest city in America, it can feel nerve racking. But it is simultaneously exhilarating - and always helps me see these cities with fresh eyes. So, though their impatience can often lead to recklessness - it also leads to greatness, and definitely leads to adventure.
And we all learn so much about ourselves, as well as each other. From walking the Gettysburg battlefield, to riding bikes through downtown Philadelphia, to learning to use selfie sticks - or even carrying the heavy emotional weight of the Holocaust museum - we are all better for it.
I just hope that the kids got as much out of this trip as I did.
Sunday, April 26, 2015
Best Of WNC (NBHS)
Hey guys - If you get a chance, follow the link below and write in North Buncombe High School for "Best School" (It is in the Kids section)
Vote HERE for NBHS!
Wednesday, April 8, 2015
Armenian Genocide {1915}

The government of Turkey says "No."
Everyone else says "Yes."
Listen HERE to a short NPR story on the controversy...
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