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National History Day

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National History Day
AbbreviationNHD
Formation1974
TypeNonprofit Organization, Competition
Legal statusActive
PurposeTo promote the study and appreciation of history among students
HeadquartersUniversity of Maryland, College Park
Location
  • Maryland
Region served
United States of America
Membership
500,000 students, 30,000 teachers per year
Official language
English
Executive Director
Dr. Cathy Gorn
AffiliationsAmerican Association for State and Local History, American Historical Association, Federation of State Humanities Councils, National Association of Secondary School Principals, National Center for History in the Schools, National Council for History Education, National Council for the Social Studies, Organization of American Historians, Society of American Archivists
Staff10
Websitewww.nhd.org

National History Day is a competition that educates young children in College Park, Maryland that operates an annual project-based contest for students in grades 6-12. It has affiliates in all fifty states, Washington, D.C., Puerto Rico, Guam, American Samoa, South Korea, China, South Asia, and Central America.[1] It started as a local program in Cleveland, Ohio, headed by Dr. David Van Tassel, a history professor at Case Western Reserve University.[2] It grew from 129 students in 1974 to over 500,000 students in 48 states in 1991, and 700,000 students and 40,000 teachers in 2001.[3][4] Today, more than half a million students enter through local contests. They construct entries as an individual or a group in one of five categories: documentary, exhibit board, paper, performance, or website.[5] Students then compete in a series of regional contests with top three entries advancing to affiliate, then state contests. At state contests, the top two entries in each category and division are invited to compete at the National History Day contest.[6] State winners then go to Maryland for a final competition, held in June for a prize of money.

History

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National History Day started in Cleveland, Ohio in 1974.[7] Members of the History Department at Case Western Reserve University developed the initial idea for a history contest akin to a Science Fair. In 1978, they incorporated the project and hired Lois Scharf as executive director. She worked to raise grant funds and recruit state historical organizations to join the program. She served until 1992.[8][9] Students gathered on campus to devote one day to history calling it "National History Day." Over the next few years, the contest expanded throughout Ohio and into surrounding Midwestern states. By 1980, with the help of the National Endowment for the Humanities, National History Day had grown into a national non-profit organization. In 1992 National History Day moved its headquarters from Cleveland to College Park, Maryland in the Washington, D.C., area. National History Day now runs multiple educational programs but the National Contest is still the largest of these.

Annual theme

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Students from New Mexico participating in the national competition in 2019.

The annual theme frames students’ research within a historical theme. It is chosen for its broad application to world, national, or state history and its relevance to ancient history or the recent past. Themes are rotated each year and prior themes can be used after approximately twelve years.[10] For example, the 2023 theme was "Turning Points in History." Projects are judged in part on their connection to the annual theme.

as of 2024 the theme for NHD is Rights & Responsibilities in History

Competition

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Submissions

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Students, either individually or as a group, can submit a project from one of the following categories: paper, exhibit, performance, documentary, or website. After reviewing the year's theme, the submission handbook, and choosing a topic, the student(s) should gather primary and secondary sources about their research. All sources need to be clearly cited in the annotated bibliography that is required for all projects.[11] Additionally, a title page and a process paper must be submitted with each project.[11] The process paper should include how the project's topic was chosen, how the research was conducted, how the actual project was created, the historical significance of the research, and the historical argument made in the project.[12]

Judging

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National History Day projects are judged using an evaluation form with two categories: Historical Quality (accounting for 80% of the score) and Clarity of Presentation (20% of the score).[13] The Historical Quality category includes judging based on the strength historical arguments, research, quality of primary sources, historical accuracy, multiple perspectives, and relevant connections to the historical context.[13]

State and regional competitions

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In some regions, students who reach enough points in their judging advance to state competitions, and any number of students at regional competitions can advance to states. In other states, such as California, Connecticut, and Pennsylvania, the top three projects at the regional competition advance to the state competition. Regions can be divided by geographic area, population, or by county.

At the affiliate, then state level contests, students compete for a variety of prizes. Some states may have additional categories which do not proceed to nationals, such as California which has a Podcast category. At state level competitions, the top two entries in each category and division are invited to the National Contest, held each June at the University of Maryland, College Park.

National competition

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Preliminaries

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In the preliminary rounds, each entry presents its project before a panel of three judges. In the case of the paper and website categories, the projects are reviewed by the judges before the presentations, while performances, documentaries, and exhibits are seen by the judges for the first time at the presentation. The top 2 entries in the senior, and junior division advance to the national contest. Judges in each room advance one entry to the final round of judging. Each room reviews approximately 9-10 entries.

Finals

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Competitors that have advanced to the final round have their projects judged by a panel of three new judges, but the students are not interviewed in this round. Their project then has to stand alone for the final judging.

Example of a National History Day Medal

The awards for first, second, and third place at the national level are $1000, $500, and $250, respectively. "Outstanding Entry" awards are also given to two projects from each state: one junior entry and one senior entry. There are also more than a dozen special prizes awarded worth between $250 and $10,000.[14]

Impact on students

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In 2011 several researchers from Rockman et al published a study examining the competition's impact on participating students. Funded by the National History Day organization and an independent funder, the study focused on students from New Jersey, Texas, South Carolina, and Colorado, examining both students who participated in the contest and those who did not. Findings indicated that participating students were more likely to outperform the non-participating students scholastically; researchers noted that "Although it is difficult to credit any single program with student success, there are clear and consistent indications that academic performance improves with successive years of NHD participation."[15]

Impact on historians

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Arnita Jones, executive director of the American Historical Association, wrote in 2001:

Perhaps the greatest impact of National History Day...was on the historical profession itself. I truly believe that never have so many historians enjoyed engaging in the pursuit of history outside their offices, their regular classrooms, and their academic research as have the thousands who have participated in National History Day as teachers, mentors, consultants, and judges over more than two decades.[16]

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ "Affiliates | National History Day | NHD". nhd.org. Retrieved 2017-03-02.
  2. ^ Gorn, 2001
  3. ^ Page (1992)
  4. ^ Gorn (2001)
  5. ^ "Categories". Nhd.org. Retrieved 2012-12-27.
  6. ^ "How to | National History Day | NHD". nhd.org. Retrieved 2017-03-02.
  7. ^ "National History Day | NHD". nhd.org. Retrieved 2017-03-02.
  8. ^ Page, Marilyn L. (September 1992). National History Day: An Ethnohistorical Case Study (PhD). Amherst, Massachusetts: University of Massachusetts. pp. 101–103. OCLC 27261357.
  9. ^ "National History Day, Inc". Encyclopedia of Cleveland History. Cleveland, Ohio: Case Western Reserve University. 2017. Archived from the original on 18 August 2019. Retrieved 18 November 2020.
  10. ^ "National History Day | NHD". www.nhd.org. Retrieved 2017-03-02.
  11. ^ a b "Annotated Bibliography | National History Day | NHD". www.nhd.org.
  12. ^ https://www.nhd.org/sites/default/files/NHDRuleBook2021Digital.pdf [bare URL PDF]
  13. ^ a b "How to | National History Day | NHD". www.nhd.org.
  14. ^ "National History Day | NHD". www.nhd.org. Retrieved 2017-03-02.
  15. ^ Sloan, Kay; Rockman, Saul (January 2011). "National History Day Works: Findings from the National Program Evaluation" (PDF). National History Day.
  16. ^ Quoted in Gorn (2001)

Further reading

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  • Adams, David Wallace, and Marvin Pasch. "The past as experience: A qualitative assessment of National History Day." History Teacher (1987) 20#2: 179-194. in JSTOR
  • Matell Cohen, Debra. "Developing Students’ Skills for the 21st Century: The National History Day Model as Academic Enrichment". (Ph.D. dissertation, Drexel University, 2019). online
  • Fehn, Bruce R.; Schul, James E. "Teaching and Learning Competent Historical Documentary Making: Lessons from National History Day Winners," History Teacher (2011) 45#1 pp 25–42. online
  • Gorn, Cathy. "A Tribute to a Founding Father: David Van Tassel and National History Day," History Teacher (2001) 34#2 in JSTOR
  • Page, Marilyn Louise. "National history day: An ethnohistorical case study." (Ph.D. dissertation, U of Massachusetts-Amherst, 1992). online
  • Taber-Conover, Rebecca, "History Day in Connecticut," Connecticut History (2012) 51#2 pp 261–264