Overview
The National WWII Museum invites applications for the Faculty Seminar in World War II History to be held in New Orleans, Louisiana, from June 15-21, 2025. This seminar is intended to develop the knowledge and understanding of World War II for active college or university faculty who wish to teach, advocate, or design history courses and content regarding this significant conflict.
The deadline for applications is November 22, 2024, at 11:59 p.m. (CT).
All applicants will be informed of their status by January 20, 2025.
The National WWII Museum invites applications for the Faculty Seminar in World War II History to be held in New Orleans, Louisiana, from June 15-21, 2025.
This weeklong intensive study is designed for any college-level instructors or professors who desire a stronger historical background in the American experience in World War II. Particularly, we encourage applicants from under-resourced and smaller colleges and seek to enhance the faculty at Minority Served Institutions (MSIs) and Historically Black Colleges (HBCUs). In addition, the program is available for Professional Military Education (PME) institutions and Reserve Officer Training Corps (ROTC) instructors.
This seminar is intended to develop the knowledge and understanding of World War II for active college or university faculty who wish to teach, advocate, or design history courses and content regarding this significant conflict.
The program consists of a series of content and pedagogical seminars led by the Museum’s expert faculty covering the war’s major themes, campaigns, outcomes, and legacies. Lodging for six nights, select meals, and course materials are provided. Travel costs to and from New Orleans are the responsibility of the attendee or their institution.
A limited number of travel grants will be available on a case-by-case basis. If you are unable to obtain financial assistance from your institution and would like to be considered for a travel grant, limited funds may be available. Further information on such requests will be made available upon acceptance.
Applicants will be selected based upon their potential contributions to the teaching of WWII history and the impact they can make on their institutions. The program is open to all college-level faculty, PME, and ROTC instructors who expect to teach or study military history or American history focused on World War II. A selection committee will consider each applicant’s packet on its own merits.
Interested applicants should submit:
- A completed application form
- Curriculum Vitae
- One letter of recommendation that addresses the applicant’s teaching abilities and skills
Additional details on the program, eligibility criteria, and application information, as well as the application form, can be found below.
Any questions should be directed to taylor.lindner@nationalww2museum.org for more information.
MICHAEL S. BELL, PHD (COL, USA, RET.)
Mike Bell is the Executive Director of the Jenny Craig Institute for the Study of War and Democracy. Commissioned in Armor following graduation from the US Military Academy at West Point, he is a combat veteran, historian, and strategist who has served at every level from platoon through theater army, as well as with US Central Command, the Joint Staff, the West Point faculty, and the National Defense University. As a civilian faculty member at the National Defense University, he also served details to the Office of the Secretary of State and as a National Security Council Senior Director and Special Assistant to the President of the United States. He holds a MA and a PhD in American history from the University of Maryland, College Park and a MS in national security strategy from the National Defense University, where he was a distinguished graduate of the National War College. His monograph on the role of the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff was published by the Strategic Studies Institute. His awards and decorations include the Distinguished Service Medal, two awards of the Defense Superior Service Medal, Bronze Star, Joint Civilian Service Commendation Award, Joint Staff Badge, and Combat Action Badge.
JOHN CURATOLA, PHD
John Curatola is the Samuel Zemurray Stone Senior Historian at the Jenny Craig Institute for the Study of War and Democracy. A Marine Corps officer of 22 years, he graduated from the University of Nebraska and is a veteran of Operation Provide Hope in Somalia, Operation Iraqi Freedom, and the 2005 Indian Ocean tsunami relief effort. He holds masters’ degrees in both American and Military History. With a PhD from the University of Kansas, John’s research focuses upon World War II, airpower, and the early Cold War period. Previously he taught history at the US Army’s Command and General Staff College at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas. His first book, Bigger Bombs for a Brighter Tomorrow, addressed the nature of the American atomic monopoly, and his latest, entitled Autumn of Our Discontent, assessed US national security policy development in 1950. Additionally, his works are available in compendium books, popular magazines, and academic journals with his many presentations available for viewing on CSPAN and YouTube.
Jennifer Putnam, PhD
Jennifer Putnam is the Research Historian at the Jenny Craig Institute for the Study of War and Democracy at the National World War II Museum. Jennifer received her PhD in History from the University of London, where she studied prisoner graffiti in Nazi concentration camps and ghettos. Her current research focuses on Briefaktion, a forced letter-writing campaign that camouflaged the true purpose of the concentration and death camps. Her work has been published in Holocaust and Genocide Studies and Journal of Contemporary Archaeology, and will be featured in upcoming edited volumes as well as a photographic exhibition in London. Jennifer has also worked as the DPAA Research Partner Fellow at the National World War II Museum, as a project assistant at a publishing company, and as a translator. Prior to her PhD, Jennifer received an MPhil in Linguistics from Trinity College Dublin, an MA in Contemporary History and Politics from the University of London. Jennifer is also a Conny Kristel fellow with the European Holocaust Research Infrastructure (EHRI), board member of the Art Deco Society UK, and a member of the planning committee for the Challenging Research Network.
Stephanie Hinnershitz, PhD
Steph Hinnershitz joined the Jenny Craig Institute for the Study of War and Democracy as a Historian in June 2021. Before coming to The National WWII Museum, she held teaching positions at Valdosta State University in Georgia, Cleveland State University in Ohio, and the US Military Academy at West Point. She received her PhD in American History in 2013 from the University of Maryland and specializes in the history of the Home Front during World War II. She has published books and articles on Asian American history, including Race, Religion, and Civil Rights: Asian Students on the West Coast, 1900-1968 and A Different Shade of Justice: Asian American Civil Rights in the South. Her most recent book, Japanese American Incarceration: The Camps and Coerced Labor during World War II, was recently published with the University of Pennsylvania Press. Her research has been supported by the American Council of Learned Societies, West Point, the Social Science Research Council, the Library of Congress, and the US Army Heritage and Education Center, among others.
The Higgins Hotel & Conference Center
The official Hotel of The National WWII Museum, this stunning art-deco style property offers first-class accommodations, meeting spaces, and dining options providing a sophisticated lodging experience for guests. Named after local Higgins Industries shipbuilder Andrew Higgins, the Hotel pays tribute to a historic time when all Americans came together to secure victory and help change the world.