- Snapshots from a Network (Penney Clark)
 
- ‘We don’t actually know what happened’: Pupils’ Understanding of 9/11 and Its Wider Context Ten Years On (Alison Kitson)
 
- Teaching and Researching History in a Divided Society (Alan McCully)
 
- Big Ideas and Ambitious Teaching (S. G. Grant)
 
- Historical Consciousness and History Curricula in Sweden (Per Eliasson)
 
- Teaching With and About Film and Museums (Jeremy Stoddard)
 
- Cutting Across Time: Histories, Identity and Inter-group Relations (Tsafrir Goldberg)
 
- How Young People’s Social Identities Influence Their Understandings of National History (Terrie Epstein)
 
- What Brings Us to Our Research and What Sustains Us? (Penney Clark)
 
- Designing Opportunities for Text-Based Historical Discussions (Abby Reisman)
 
- Objects as Evidence (Linda Levstik)
 
- Identifying and Navigating the Levels or Scales Problem in Teaching and Learning (Bob Bain)
 
- Do Media Teach the Past? (Scott Alan Metzger)
 
- The Historiographic Gaze as a Curricular Response to the History Wars (Robert Parkes)
 
- Memory Practices: On What Counts as Worth Remembering in History Education (Felicitas Macgilchrist)
 
- Where History is Not Bunk (Sirkka Ahonen)
 
- History Education in Turkey (Ismail H. Demircioglu)
 
- History Education in England: National Programs, National Impact? (Stuart Foster)
 
- So What are Your Epistemic Beliefs About History Anyway? (Bruce VanSledright)
 
- Finding Avenues to Implement Historical Thinking Into the Classroom (Jill Colyer)
 
- The Franklin Mystery: Life and Death in the Arctic (Lyle Dick)
 
- Encounters with Heritage: Tensions between Familiarity and Strangeness (Maria Grever)
 
- Meaningful Learning in History (Samantha Cutrara)
 
- Treaty Education (Jennifer Tupper)
 
- Teaching History through Cultural Media (Vincent Boutonnet)
 
- Landscapes and Mindscapes: Engaging Indigenous Research and Researchers Historically (Michael Marker)
 
- History and Its Wonderful Potentials for Making a Difference in Peoples’ Lives (Paul Zanazanian)
 
- The Power of Empathetic Engagement: History Education and the History of Children and Childhood (Mona Gleason)
 
- The GREDICS Group: Research in Historical Consciousness and Citizens’ Consciousness (Joan Pagès and Antoni Santisteban)
 
- From the Airwaves to the Archives (Gene Allen)
 
- Don’t Bother With the Textbooks—History-Making in a Digital Age (Henry Yu)
 
- Building Bridges (Jennifer Pettit)
 
- History Beyond Humanity (Sean Kheraj)
 
- Being Historically Connected (Anna Clark)
 
- Capturing the Historical Consciousness of Young People (Jocelyn Létourneau)
 
- Heritage Studies: An Emerging Field (Christina Cameron)
 
- Researching Antiracism, Researching History (Timothy J. Stanley)
 
- Exploring the History of Educational Policies and Their Impacts (Helen Raptis)
 
- Teaching and Learning in the Eighteenth-Century Northeast (Thomas Peace)
 
- My Scholarly Passions (Margaret Conrad)
 
- History Education in the Name of Democracy (Kristina Llewellyn)
 
- History Education and National Identities (Mario Carretero)
 
- Finding My NiCHE (Alan MacEachern)
 
- Having Fun With History (Mills Kelly)
 
- The Politics of History Education: from the Battle of the Boyne to Chairman Mao (Tony Taylor)
 
- Twenty Questions… And the Historical Roots of Contemporary Canada (Michael Dawson)
 
- Thinking and Feeling School through its Historical Contours: Pedagogy, Métis Places and Spaces, and Teachers in Learning (Jonathan Anuik)
 
- Assessing Historical Thinking (Peter Seixas)
 
- Contraception: Much More than Preventing the Meeting of Ova and Sperm (Christabelle Sethna)
 
- Exploring Classroom Perspectives on the Past (Amy von Heyking)
 
- Connecting the Diverse Parts of My Scholarly Life (Alan Sears)
 
- Research, Yes, But for What Purpose? “Action Research Training” with Teachers in the Field (Jean-François Cardin)
 
- Everyday History (Christopher Dummitt)
 
- History Education at the University of Ottawa (Sharon Anne Cook)
 
- Oral History at Concordia University (Steven High)
 
- History, Education and Nunavut (Heather E. McGregor)
 
- Imagining the Historical and the International: Education Foundations at Nipissing (John Allison)
 
- Groupe de recherche sur l’éducation à la citoyenneté et l’enseignement de l’histoire (Marc-André Éthier and David Lefrançois)
 
- The Relationship between Historical Thinking and Historical Consciousness (Catherine Duquette)
 
- Textbooks: More Than a Pedagogical Tool (Penney Clark)
 
- Historical Thinking in Quebec History Education (Sabrina Moisan)
 
- History of Education in British Columbia (Eric Damer)
 
- Canada’s History Wars (Ruth Sandwell)
 
- Textbooks as Mediators in the Intellectual Project of History Education (Katalin Morgan)
 
- The Pedagogical Imperative of Cultural Heritage Institutions: Or, How I Came to Love Dorothy’s Ruby Red Shoes (Brenda Trofanenko)
 
- Histories of Environments, Histories of Place (Jennifer Bonnell)
 
- Including Women: The Establishment and Integration of Canadian Women’s History Narratives into Toronto, Ontario Classrooms and Historic Sites 1966-1996 (Rose Fine-Meyer)
 
- Using Historical Thinking in the Classroom (Lindsay Gibson)
 
- Colonial Despatches and Teaching Canadian History (John Lutz)
 
- Teaching History in an Age of Pervasive Computing: The Case for Games (Kevin Kee and Shawn Graham)
 
- Research in Practice: Doing History at Fox Creek School (Carla Peck)
 
- Learning by Playing: Can digital history improve students’ learning? (Stéphane Lévesque)
 
- Interview with Stéphane Lévesque on the Virtual History Lab©
 
- Institut universitaire de formation des maîtres (Nicole Tutiaux-Guillon)
 
- Historical Thinking Freestyle: Complexifying Regional Identities at the Museum -- Research in Progress (Viviane Gosselin)