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Andreas N. Stratos has written: 'Studies in 7th-century Byzantine political history' -- subject(s): History, Military History
The most common reason is because when the student go home he/she doesn't continue there studies there.
Mathematics is just another word for Math, like Language Arts is for English, and History is for Social Studies
religious studies students
It means that is has been statistically proven that the amount of time a student spends studying negatively relays to the testing anxiety of the student. Ex the more a kid studies the less test anxiety he will have and visa versa.
Social Studies helps a student learn about history and the actions that lead to certain political events. When students learn about history, they learn about mistakes that mankind has made and how to improve upon them.
A historian studies history.
Many subjects are covered in Social Studies, such as: # History # Economics # Geography # Civics # Political Science # Culture # Psychology # Sociology However, the 5 main skills students are meant to learn in social studies, are: # Good citizenship # Critical thinking # Problem solving # Cosmopolitanism # Conservation
Student suck!
Okay, 1: social studies is not hard at all if you are a good student. 2: if social studies is hard, that is because history has lasted longer than 3 thousand years in some places, so there are many places where history is long.
In the United States, 100% of public schools teach US History. There may be some private religious schools that do not. On a world wide basis, US History, is most likely part of world history studies.
A person who studies or writes history is called a historian.
To know information about people, you will need to know about their past or history. That is what Social Studies is about so that is why it has deal with history.
A Historian studies the history of the world. The Archaeologist studies the history of people.
A Historian studies the history of the world. The Archaeologist studies the history of people.
A:History and religion are separate but overlapping studies. A student of history will sooner or later learn about the religion of the people at the time in history that he or she is studying; a student of religion will learn about the history of the times when the religion evolved. Care must be taken because followers of each religion may have, from ancient times, created legends that are not necessarily dissimilar to the true history of the times but nevertheless do not accurately reflect events that actually happened.
I don't think there is a specific major in war studies, but you can major in history or something related to history. War and history are all linked, so I think that is why there is not a separate study for war studies.