logo
Wrong email address or username
Wrong email address or username
Incorrect verification code
Robert Freeman
Robert Freeman has lived a varied life, to say the least. Before finishing college he spent several years in the U.S. Merchant Marines. After college he joined the computer industry in Silicon Valley, CA. He rose quickly through the ranks, becoming Japan Country Manager for 3Com, then the... show more

Robert Freeman has lived a varied life, to say the least. Before finishing college he spent several years in the U.S. Merchant Marines. After college he joined the computer industry in Silicon Valley, CA. He rose quickly through the ranks, becoming Japan Country Manager for 3Com, then the largest data networking company in the world, and Vice President, International Marketing at Sybase, one of the largest software companies in the world. While on a sabbatical in the year 2000, he became bored and started substitute teaching at his local high school. He loved it and never went back. He started by teaching math, but soon found himself teaching social studies when one of the school's teachers fell ill. He was horrified at how bad the textbooks were, little more than compendiums of facts dumped onto a page. No narrative. Little context. No human interest. The students hated the books and, therefore, the subject. Mr. Freeman believed he could do better. He started writing chapters for his students on what he called "the epochal turning points in the unfolding of the Western World." Greece; Rome; the Renaissance; the Reformation; the Enlightenment; and so on. It was at these junctures that the Western World made critical decisions about how to move forward. Many times it fought it out about which way to go. Each of these turning points are explosive with original human drama, both individual and civilizational. He decided to write and teach history that way. The result is The Best One-Hour History series. Mr. Freeman's students score among the highest in the nation on the annual College Board Advanced Placement (AP) examinations. While teaching, Mr. Freeman recognized the longing teenagers have for meaning and efficacy in their lives. So, he founded One Dollar For Life (ODFL), a national non-profit that helps students build schools and other infrastructure projects in the developing world, for a dollar. The goal is to show a generation of young people how to be effective by being connected, compassionate, collaborative, competent, and creative. It's working. Since starting in 2007, ODFL has completed 41 projects in 8 different countries, from Asia to Central America to the Caribbean to Africa. Visit http://onehourhistory.com
show less
Category:
History
Robert Freeman's Books
Recently added on shelves
Robert Freeman's readers
Share this Author
Community Reviews
Bookfever
Bookfever rated it 11 years ago
Thanks to the awesome people at Smith Publicity for sending me review copies, I had to chance to review this book (together with The Protestant Reformation, which I have read and reviewed already.) The Scientific Revolution: The Best One-Hour History by Robert Freeman was another brilliant, interest...
Bookfever
Bookfever rated it 11 years ago
The Protestant Reformation is the second one in this nonfction One-Hour History books that I've read. I first read and reviewed The Renaissance and simply loved it. So when they asked me if I wanted to review more I said yes, of course and asked for this one and The Scientific Revolution, which I sh...
see community reviews
Need help?