Sounds like your schtick, Billy. :-)

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Applied_history

Applied history
Applied history, also widely known as public history, is "the explicit attempt 
to illuminate current challenges and choices by analyzing historical precedents 
and analogues. Mainstream historians begin with an event or era and attempt to 
provide an account of what happened and why. Applied historians begin with a 
current choice or predicament and analyze the historical record to provide 
perspective, stimulate imagination, find clues about what is likely to happen, 
suggest possible interventions, and assess probable 
consequences."[1][unreliable source?] Applied history incorporates historical 
events in a hands-on environment encouraging historical analysis, 
investigation, museum studies, archival work, historic/heritage preservation, 
documentaries and firsthand experience.

Applied history courses are meant to teach history in a way to engage the 
pupil. It is taught to have the students question, reason and connect with 
history. Analysis of every event and reflection is highly encouraged. Students 
investigate history and dig for a deeper level of meaning behind events in 
history. Such courses stress the idea of museology or museum studies and 
heritage. Students learn from museum exhibits and displays and material culture 
and built heritage in their environment. They often participate in the 
curatorial process and help in conducting research for the museum. Their own 
perspective on the historic event is then formed and broadens their ideas for 
the subject. Students gain hands on experience and may even possibly handle 
historical documents, enriching their experiences with history. Archival work 
is the direct source, very different from learning from a textbook because they 
are interpreting the documents itself. Applied history teaches students to 
immerse themselves in history. Applied History is a course that makes students 
take on their own approach to history and analyze history to uncover a deeper 
meaning.

Programs of applied history can be found at universities and even some high 
schools. The course is meant to teach students and engage them in history. In 
some college programs that offer applied history, “Coursework includes 
expository writing, public speaking, museum administration, archives and 
manuscript preservation, archival records technology, and related subjects. 
Graduates may become museum curators, lecturers, administrators of historical 
sites, popular writers, or enter other careers that keep the public aware of 
its heritage.”



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