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Creating and Teaching Real World History
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Cosby Hunt session 3
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Creating and Teaching Real World History
Collection Name
Creating and Teaching Real World History
Title
Cosby Hunt session 3 interview
Handle
http://hdl.handle.net/1961/dcplislandora:276609
Date Created
2020-10-27
Creator/Contributor
Hunt, Isaac Cosby, III, 1971-, interviewee
Peterson, Max, interviewer and transcriptionist
Extent
01:51:30
Note
This is the third session of a life history interview with Cosby Hunt, a career educator, native Washingtonian, and creator of Real World History at the Center for Inspired Teaching. In this interview Cosby Hunt discusses his college experience at the University of Pennsylvania, teaching in Hancock County, Georgia, through Teach for America, and his experience attending graduate school at the University of Georgia.
Isaac Cosby Hunt, born December 12 1971, is a high school history teacher in Washington, D.C., and a native Washingtonian. Cosby is the only child of Isaac 'Ike' Cosby Hunt Jr. and Elizabeth 'Betty' Dollie Hunt. Cosby grew up in the Hawthorne neighborhood of D.C. and attended Lafayette Elementary School and St. Albans School before graduating from University of Pennsylvania. Upon completing his undergraduate degree, Cosby began his career as an educator by joining Teach for America (TFA). Cosby taught for two years at his TFA placement in Hancock County, Georgia, before enrolling in a graduate education program at the University of Georgia. After receiving his master's degree, Cosby returned to Washington, D.C., to become a public school teacher and taught at Bell Multicultural High School (now CHEC - Columbia Heights Education Campus) for 13 years before leaving to work for Center for Inspired Teaching, an educational non-profit with a focus on innovative teacher training. After several years of working with teachers, Cosby began teaching a city-wide history course called Real World History, a program he developed for Inspired Teaching youth programs, which was piloted in SY 2014-2015. In SY 2019-2020, Cosby returned to full-time classroom teaching and began working at Thurgood Marshall Academy in Anacostia.
Neighborhood
Massachusetts Heights, Washington, D.C.
City
Washington, D.C.
Subject
Private schools
Education, Higher
Education
Music
Travel
Race identity
Teachers
Segregation
Racism
African Americans
Source
Max Peterson
Local identifier
198_MaxPeterson_ohp_003.mp4
Rights Information
http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC-NC/1.0/
In Copyright - Non-Commercial Use Permitted
DC Public Library
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