Library of Congress: Resources for African American History Month: Primary Source Sets. “During the month of February, Teaching with the Library will spotlight different resources that support teaching and learning about the achievements and contributions of African Americans throughout U.S. history. This post highlights several primary source sets that teachers may want to incorporate into […]

https://rbfirehose.com/2026/02/19/library-of-congress-resources-for-african-american-history-month-primary-source-sets/
Library of Congress: Resources for African American History Month: Primary Source Sets

Library of Congress: Resources for African American History Month: Primary Source Sets. “During the month of February, Teaching with the Library will spotlight different resources that suppor…

ResearchBuzz: Firehose

Search Engine Land: Google launches more visible links in AI Overviews and AI Mode. “Google is rolling out new, more visible links within AI Overviews and AI Mode. These new link cards appear in a pop-up window when you hover over them on desktop. They also show more prominent details about the website.”

https://rbfirehose.com/2026/02/18/search-engine-land-google-launches-more-visible-links-in-ai-overviews-and-ai-mode/
Search Engine Land: Google launches more visible links in AI Overviews and AI Mode

Search Engine Land: Google launches more visible links in AI Overviews and AI Mode. “Google is rolling out new, more visible links within AI Overviews and AI Mode. These new link cards appear…

ResearchBuzz: Firehose

you go on and off for years to improve your reading skills of #Kurrent / #Sütterlin, even trying to adopt the latter as your "secret" handwriting and then: first comes #AI and seems to make all of it redundant as #HTR improves incredibly; then you go to an exhibition at #DHMBerlin and discover that to read #OttovonBismarck (or his secretary) it was all useless in the first place as he seems to have written in a nice, simple #Lateinschrift

#archives #primarySources #histodons #HistodonsDE

Lafayette College: Largest known collection of Lafayette/Washington letters now available digitally . “After years of meticulous work, Special Collections & College Archives has completed the digitization of 201 letters written by the Marquis de Lafayette to George Washington between 1777 and 1792, one of the most important quill-pal relationships from early America. The digital collection can […]

https://rbfirehose.com/2026/02/09/lafayette-college-largest-known-collection-of-lafayette-washington-letters-now-available-digitally/

University of Virginia: Gamechanger: Can AI accurately transcribe primary source documents?. “Transcribing primary source documents is time-consuming and requires expertise in deciphering handwriting, recognizing antiquated spelling and abbreviations, and understanding obsolete punctuation, letters, and symbols. Equally important is having a grasp of the historical context of the document being […]

https://rbfirehose.com/2026/02/08/gamechanger-can-ai-accurately-transcribe-primary-source-documents-university-of-virginia/
Gamechanger: Can AI accurately transcribe primary source documents? (University of Virginia)

University of Virginia: Gamechanger: Can AI accurately transcribe primary source documents?. “Transcribing primary source documents is time-consuming and requires expertise in deciphering han…

ResearchBuzz: Firehose

One Source, Multiple Versions, Many Perspectives: Teaching Key Documents in U.S. History – Teaching with the Library

Teaching with the Library Primary Sources & Ideas for Educators

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  • One Source, Multiple Versions, Many Perspectives: Teaching Key Documents in U.S. History
  • In Congress, July 4, 1776. The unanimous declaration of the thirteen United States of America.

    One Source, Multiple Versions, Many Perspectives: Teaching Key Documents in U.S. History

    Posted by: Colleen Smith, January 27, 2026

    This blog post is by Lee Ann Potter, director of Professional Learning and Outreach Initiatives at the Library of Congress. 

    At the recent annual meeting of the American Historical Association (AHA) in Chicago, I presented a K-16 teacher workshop titled “Revolutionary History Teaching.”  As the title suggested, I engaged participants with primary sources and teaching strategies related to the American Revolution.

    To introduce an activity focused on the Declaration of Independence, I asked the participating teachers if they invited their students to read the founding document.  They all said yes, doing so was part of their regular approach in both history and civics classes.

    “Which version?” I asked, to which I received few responses and many quizzical looks.

    I proceeded to divide the teachers into smaller groups and provided each with a facsimile of a different version of the Declaration. The versions I shared included:

    I encouraged the teachers to read their versions, to consider their students’ capabilities and background knowledge, as well as their course objectives, and to discuss within their small groups the associated pros and cons of inviting students to read their version rather than simply the document’s text.

    Then we engaged in a larger group discussion about each version.  The group with The Pennsylvania Evening Post was particularly interested in the advertisements that also ran in the edition and discussed how news was shared and spread in the 1770s; the group with the Dunlap Broadside also discussed the sharing of information and noted that the names of most of the delegates to the Second Continental Congress were missing, but they were present on the Goddard Broadside; the Goddard Broadside also prompted curiosity about Mary Katharine Goddard; those reading the rough draft commented on the value of sharing rough drafts with students and suggested that the section related to slavery, that was not included in the final document, would be of particular interest to their students; and the Journal was described as providing an interesting play-by-play of the document and other events and issues from the perspective of Congress.

    Our conclusion after a rich discussion: Sharing multiple versions of the Declaration with students may encourage knowledge of its contents to transform into curiosity about its context.

    Have you tried a similar approach with other seminal documents?  If so, what have the results been? Please share your experience in the comments!

    Do you enjoy these posts? Subscribe! You’ll receive free teaching ideas and primary sources from the Library of Congress.

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    Continue/Read Original Article Here: One Source, Multiple Versions, Many Perspectives: Teaching Key Documents in U.S. History | Teaching with the Library

    #AmericanHistory #classrooms #democracy #IdeasForEducators #LibraryOfCongress #LibraryOfCongressBlog #ManyPerspectives #MultiplesVersions #OneSource #PrimarySources #Teaching #TeachingWithTheLibrary

    Understanding Primary, Secondary, and Tertiary Sources in Writing

    Understanding primary, secondary, and tertiary sources is essential for writers to enhance credibility and clarity in their work. Primary sources are firsthand accounts, secondary sources provide analysis, and tertiary sources summarize information. Choosing the right type of source ensures accuracy and helps distinguish fact from opinion, ultimately building trust with readers.

    https://dreamspacestudio.net/understanding-primary-secondary-and-tertiary-sources-in-writing/

    Lot of interesting sources on NDL online collections are embedded in scanned US occupation period files. Example: the 日満支 工業年鑑 for 昭和15 is only available as part of evidence for war crimes trials here: https://dl.ndl.go.jp/pid/12922208/1/4 while elsewhere only up to 昭和13 (https://dl.ndl.go.jp/ja/pid/1115528) #japan #primarysources #asianists
    Pros. Doc. No. 2294: J. M. C. Industrial Yearbook 1940 - 国立国会図書館デジタルコレクション

    出版日:1939.12-1946.06

    国立国会図書館デジタルコレクション

    Paleontology, Past and Present: A New Primary Source Set for Educators – Teaching with the Library

    Norman Ross of the division of Paleontology, National Museum, preparing the skeleton of a baby dinosaur some seven or eight million years old for exhibition. 1921.

    Teaching with the Library Primary Sources & Ideas for Educators, ISSN 2691-6916

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  • Paleontology, Past and Present: A New Primary Source Set for Educators
  • Norman Ross of the division of Paleontology, National Museum, preparing the skeleton of a baby dinosaur some seven or eight million years old for exhibition. 1921.

    Paleontology, Past and Present: A New Primary Source Set for Educators

    November 20, 2025, Posted by: Colleen Smith

    This post is by Jessica Fries-Gaither, a 2024-2025 Albert Einstein Distinguished Educator Fellow at the Library of Congress.

    Primary sources are excellent tools for conveying the nature and practices of science. By providing a firsthand look at the types of questions scientists pose as well as the methods and strategies they employ to answer them, primary sources humanize the scientific endeavor in ways that other materials cannot. And there may be no scientific discipline better suited to such an “inside look” than paleontology. The study of fossilized remains and what they can teach us about Earth’s history is rife with uncertainty, incomplete data sets, and an ever-evolving understanding of the subject.

    A new primary source set from the Library of Congress features 18 primary sources that teachers can use to bring forward the nature of science while also addressing science content standards about paleontology, the fossil record, and geologic time. Through close looking and thoughtful analysis of these items, students can learn about significant paleontological discoveries and practice the types of thinking and questioning employed by professional paleontologists.

    The set includes primary sources in diverse formats (photographs, drawings and engravings, newspaper articles, maps, diagrams, and even a piece of congressional legislation) spanning the early years of paleontology to present day. Dig in and discover:

    • newspaper accounts recounting major discoveries, including Tyrannosaurus rex and fossilized dinosaur eggs!
    • engravings of petrified wood and fossil skulls from Robert Hooke’s Micrographia and Charles Darwin’s Voyage on the H.M.S. Beagle.
    • photographs showing how fossil remains are discovered in the field, as well as how skeletons are constructed and displayed.
    • maps sharing the distributions of rocks and fossils from different geologic time periods.
    Toxodon skull, side view. In The Zoology of the Voyage of the H.M.S. Beagle. 1839.

    The Paleontology, Past and Present primary source set also includes background information, teaching suggestions, and links for additional information and primary sources. We hope that you and your students will find it to be a helpful resource!

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    Continue/Read Original Article Here: Paleontology, Past and Present: A New Primary Source Set for Educators | Teaching with the Library

    #colleenSmith #educators #libraryOfCongress #libraryOfCongressBlog #paleontology #past #present #primarySourceSet #primarySources #teachingWithTheLibrary

    The Wire: New Smartphone-Friendly Nehru Archive Goes Live. “…the platform offers an easily searchable and freely downloadable collection initially centred on the 100 published volumes of the Selected Works of [Jawaharlal] Nehru, covering the years 1903 to 1964. The Nehru archive currently hosts more than 75,000 pages and over 3,000 illustrations.”

    https://rbfirehose.com/2025/11/21/the-wire-new-smartphone-friendly-nehru-archive-goes-live/

    The Wire: New Smartphone-Friendly Nehru Archive Goes Live | ResearchBuzz: Firehose

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