ISBN 0-923805-18-4

The American History CD-ROM

Overview and Motion Picture Narration by Charles Kuralt

The American History CD-ROM is a vast library of pictures, film clips, sound recordings and maps, with accompanying captions and narrated Overviews, organized in a unique, flexible format which makes it easy to explore U.S. history from ancient times into the 1990s. It offers two kinds of learning experiences: independent study, and the ability to create presentations. Here are some of its features:

Select one of the following topics:

————— Description —————

Votes in the Kennedy-Nixon election, 1960.

The Image Library. The CD-ROM contains an extraordinarily rich library of 2512 images, each with its own (often quite lengthy) caption, placing it in its historical context. The images include historical events, important persons, more than 200 paintings and other works of art, political cartoons, and 115 historical maps, all selected to be compatible with leading textbooks.

Overviews. Charles Kuralt narrates a full-screen, sound-and-image Overview for each of ten periods in American history, covering the themes of that era.

Video Sequences. There are 68 motion picture sequences, from the inauguration of Theodore Roosevelt to President Clinton with Speaker Gingrich. Each can be viewed on the computer screen and selected for inclusion in any presentation you create.

Juan de Oflate enters New Mexico, 1598.

Sound bytes. There are dozens of brief sound bytes embedded in the captions. As you view Amelia Earhart's picture and read the caption about her, for example, you can hear her talk about flying. You can hear the voices of presidents, or listen to people who were born as slaves talk about their experiences under slavery.

Quiz. You can choose to be questioned on what you've learned from the pictures and captions. You can ask for questions at the Basic, Intermediate or Advanced level. After you answer a question, you can go immediately to the caption from which the question was drawn, for review of the material. The Quiz keeps a running score.

The Historipix Game allows you to test what you've read and what you’ve seen. It challenges students’ recollections of both the key concepts in the captions and the information conveyed by the images themselves.

"The coverage includes pre-history through the 1990’s.... Teachers and students can readily create lessons, lesson plans and presentations with these materials.... Designed to be used alone or with a companion videodisc, this extensive compilation of more than 2,500 visuals offers an excellent visual resource for the enterprising student and teacher."

Review from the American Library Association Booklist
February 1997

You can create a presentation for playback on the computer screen, or, using the videodisc, on the classroom TV screen (or on both screens at the same time, if you wish). With 2512 images and captions, the possibilities are endless. Tools to assemble a presentation include the following:

"Breezing Up (A Fair Wind)," by Winslow Homer.

The Electronic Index is used to locate items you want by name, but it also contains extensive subject headings which can be used to prepare presentations on many different subjects, such as the development of transportation, or Hispanic-American history.

Related Items. This unique feature allows you to see a list of the categories into which a particular image falls. An engraving of eighteenth-century poet Phyllis Wheatley, for example, is related to Literature, Slavery, Women, and African Americans. In addition to being a powerful research tool, this feature helps students to think in categories, classifying an item by its relationship to others.

Cowboys at a line camp, 1908.

Importing your own images into a presentation. You can add your own digitized pictures (or pictures from other sources), write captions for them, and sort them with your selections from the CD-ROM’s image library. You can thus create your own unique presentation, for display on your computer screen.

Printing out a lecture script. You can revise the captions you have selected, and then put them in any desired order. You can then print them out as a lecture script, in large type. The script can include a barcode for each item, to call its videodisc image to your classroom TV screen.

This CD-ROM is compatible with the First Edition of the American History Videodisc, but it contains 22 new images, plus the Charles Kuralt Overview and film clip narration, which are not in the First Edition. For best results, we recommend the purchase of the Second Edition of the disc.



————— Table of Contents —————


Section A - Prehistory to 1680
  • Indigenous Peoples Before European Contact
  • European Exploration and the Rediscovery of America
  • Spanish and Portuguese Explorers After Columbus
  • Later European Exploration and Settlement to 1688
  • The English Settlement of New England
Section B - Mature Colonial Life, 1680-1765
  • The Glorious Revolution and the Wars for Empire
  • Peace and Colonial Expansion: England
  • Peace and Colonial Expansion: Spain and France
  • English Colonial Developments of the Mid-18th Century
  • The Second Phase of the Anglo-French War for Empire, 1739-1763
Section C - The American Revolution and the Early Republic, 1765-1820
  • The Background for the American Revolution, 1765-1774
  • The Beginnings of Colonial Resistance, 1774-1776
  • The Decision for Independence
  • The War for Independence
  • The NewNation Under the Articles of Confederation
  • The Federal Era, 1789-1800
  • The Jeffersonian Era
  • The War of 1812
  • Postwar Nationalism and Expansion
  • African Americans in the New Nation
  • Women in the Early Republic
Section D - Expansion, Development, Sectionalism and Division, 1820-1860:
  • Westward Expansion, Transportation Improvements and Urban Growth
  • The Political Consequences of Growth
  • Texas: Settlement by Americans and the Fight for Independence
  • Slavery and the Southern Economy and Society
  • Industrialization and Economic Change in the North
  • Intellectual, Religious, and Reform Ferment at Mid-Century
  • Early California and the Pacific Northwest
  • The Mexican War and the California Gold Rush
  • The Growing Sectional Crisis
Section E - The Civil War and Reconstruction, 1860-1877:
  • Final Political Crisis and the Beginning of the War
  • Civil War Campaigns, the First Two Years
  • The End of the War, 1863-1865
  • Life in the Civil War
  • Wartime Politics in the North
  • The Assassination of Abraham Lincoln
  • Reconstruction, 1865-1876
  • The Impeachment of Andrew Johnson
  • Politics Under Grant, and the "Redemption" of the South
Section F - Post-Civil War Expansion and Change, 1865-1900:
  • The Postwar Western Frontiers
  • Invention and Technological Frontiers
  • The Emergence of a National Labor Movement
  • Immigration in the Late 19th Century
  • The New South
  • The End of the Western Frontier
  • Politics in the Gilded Age
  • American Expansion Abroad
  • An Urban Society and Culture
Section G - The Progressive Era and the First World War, 1901-1920:
  • Symbols of the Twentieth Century
  • The Progressive Era
  • Progressive Era Politics and Diplomacy
  • World War I
Section H - The Twenties and the Great Depression, 1920-1940:
  • Life in the 1920s
  • The Politics of the Twenties
  • The Great Depression
  • Franklin D. Roosevelt and the New Deal
  • The Diplomacy of the 1930s and the Beginnings of World War II
Section I - World War II and the Beginning of the Cold War, 1941-1960:
  • The Entry into WWII and the Transformation of American Life
  • The War Abroad
  • The Postwar World
  • The Korean War
  • The Cold War at Home
  • The Eisenhower Years
  • Post-WWII American Life
Section J - Contemporary America, 1960-1990s:
  • The Kennedy Years
  • Lyndon Johnson's America
  • The Nixon Administration
  • The Aftermath of Watergate: Domestic and International Politics under Ford and Carter
  • Reagan, Bush and the Republican Ascendancy of the 1980s
  • Toward the 21st Century

————— Video Introduction —————


You may download our video introduction for The American History CD-ROM. To view the video file you must have a QuickTime video player software.

Windows and Macintosh - Quicktime Movie - Screen size 640x480

General Introduction - IRCAHCD.MOV (6.0Mb)
 
 Back to top


Home   |   Products   |   Purchasing Information   |   Support
© Copyright 1998 Instructional Resources Corporation. All rights reserved.