Basically most of the (non English) European history of the 19th and 20th century.
:roll:
I have been doing some major ancestry research for over a year now and one of the many things I have learned is what a poor job my high school did of teaching any real world history. My best example is that many of my relatives come from Andau, Austria. But my great grandfather listed himself as Hungarian and coming from Hungary when he immigrated here in 1890. So that has sent me on a learning quest and I found out that it is because it was still part of the Austro-Hungarian Empire back then. And it was known as Mosontarcsa, Moson-Tarcsa rather then as Andau. So I am Hungarian and Polish. Part of my Polish ancestry comes from Białystok which is also a very interesting city to learn about especially as a Jew. We learned very little about any of this region in school. I often wonder if it is because much of the area was still under control of the big bad USSR. My great grandfather on that side came to the US in 1913 on the eve of WWI. He spoke Polish and Russian. It was a smart move as my Polish family names later appear in quite a few ghetto and extermination camp records. Reading some of those records is not easy either.
Overall my high school, and even the lower grades, did a decent job of guiding my education but global history is the one that appears to be most lacking as I learned so little about it. I am curious to know if anyone else has noticed a specific area that their school fell short on teaching them?
:roll:
I have been doing some major ancestry research for over a year now and one of the many things I have learned is what a poor job my high school did of teaching any real world history. My best example is that many of my relatives come from Andau, Austria. But my great grandfather listed himself as Hungarian and coming from Hungary when he immigrated here in 1890. So that has sent me on a learning quest and I found out that it is because it was still part of the Austro-Hungarian Empire back then. And it was known as Mosontarcsa, Moson-Tarcsa rather then as Andau. So I am Hungarian and Polish. Part of my Polish ancestry comes from Białystok which is also a very interesting city to learn about especially as a Jew. We learned very little about any of this region in school. I often wonder if it is because much of the area was still under control of the big bad USSR. My great grandfather on that side came to the US in 1913 on the eve of WWI. He spoke Polish and Russian. It was a smart move as my Polish family names later appear in quite a few ghetto and extermination camp records. Reading some of those records is not easy either.
Overall my high school, and even the lower grades, did a decent job of guiding my education but global history is the one that appears to be most lacking as I learned so little about it. I am curious to know if anyone else has noticed a specific area that their school fell short on teaching them?