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Week 01 - Monday, 22 January
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Reading
C3 standards: Read the section on the Inquiry Arc
Catch up on anything in the textbook or standards that you didn’t get to from previous weeks
Optional: For the historical thinking nerds, you have to read Wineburg, 1991
Assignments
WTL post to warm up to Course Plan #2 (please do before spring break!)
Complete & turn in Course Plan #2 (after spring break)
WTL on history ed resources (see CourseSitewhenever)
Week 08 - Monday, 11 March – No class! Lehigh is on Spring Break!
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Before class
Complete & turn in Course Plan #2
Complete WTL
During class (ppt)
Discussing remaining assignments
Current events, history education, and the Inquiry Learning Arc
Wikipedia as an all-purpose tool for history education
Content
Pro-democratic processes
Reading talk pages: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Frederick_Winslow_Taylor
Creating your own articles: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henry_Noll
Historical thinking skills
Images in context: Consider the following two images of the Boston Massacre
Historical investigation – we'll use the article on the Pledge of Allegiance
When was it created? Why?
What historical information on this page is already familiar to you?
What historical information on this page is unfamiliar to you? How can you corroborate it?
Wikipedia, generative AI, and the crisis for social studies instruction
We'll be looking at three responses asking ChatGPT to compare and contrast the cases of Dred Scott and Lucy Berry
Closure
After class
Reading – none
Assignments
Complete and turn in curriculum map
Complete WTL on Wikipedia and/or generative AI
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Before class
Complete curriculum map
Complete WTL
During class (ppt)
Microteaching demo (sort of)
Google Earth file I'll be using
Sorting / scheduling our microteaching
Big Brain Thought #1: Wikipedia, generative AI, and the Inquiry Arc
Big Brain Thought #2: Pitching a 'pro-democracy' goal for history education, starting with a clumsy parallel with Ibram X. Kendi's work
Time permitting: Some playing around with images
After class
Reading
Wineburg, 2004
Optional: ISI, 2006
Assignments
Think about your unit overview – it is due next Mon (8 Apr)
Come to class prepared to go outside! We'll be doing a scaffolded geocache to get started on geography ed
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Before class
Complete reading
Think about / work on your microteaching lesson
Come prepared to go outside!
During class (ppt)
Meeting in lobby of Iacocca! 6:30. We will head outside
Back in class: Let's make sure we're lined up for microteaching next week...
Geography ed! I have no idea how far we are going to get through this; expect some of these to roll over to next week / week after...
TRADITIONAL: What's where and what's it called
A gameified approach: Stack the States / Stack the Countries
Who can name the most post-Soviet republics? Name which countries in Africa were not created via de-colonization? (Tricky question...)
Sketchmaps! Draw me a sketchmap of...Iacocca Hall? Canada?
What is the tallest mountain in North America? Let's take a look via Google Maps...
DISCIPLINARY - Tools of geography
Scaffolded geocache
Other coordinate systems: Try this? https://what3words.com/
Mapping an orange (see the lesson plan I'm adapting here: https://www.educationworld.com/a_lesson/dailylp/dailylp/dailylp009.shtml
Video: “orange globe”
Video: “Why All World Maps Are Wrong” (Vox) – first 45 seconds cover the main move of the lesson plan; rest is a pretty worthwhile discussion of projections, tech, etc.
Photos & video
Photos
Flickr map: https://www.flickr.com/map – my usual move is to search for 'mosque'
'What the World Eats' activity (see ppt in CourseSite)
Video – I'll demonstrate this through a couple of things posted to YouTube...but I'm not going to link them in advance
DISCIPLINARY - The whys of where
So why did the name of the tallest mountain in North America change? Or should we instead say the name(s) didn't change so much as the pattern of use changed? And why did that pattern of use change?
More playing with names and their significance: What's in a State Name? See this spreadsheet, then this map
Follow-ups: Can you do this same thing with Canada? Fun trick: Look at maps of Canada in the English version of Wikipedia (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Provinces_and_territories_of_Canada ) vs. the French version (https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canada#Provinces_et_territoires )
How about Mexico? Guatemala? County names in Pennsylvania? County names in England?
SOCIAL - Geography is power!
Initial example of what I'm talking about: "Town map of Bethlehem and vicinity", circa 1758: https://exhibits.lafayette.edu/s/lvhmc/item/35941
Maps that make a point: https://www.vox.com/2015/5/27/8618261/america-maps-truths
Geospatial inquiry: Weaving the Globe (this is again a lesson borrowed from elsewhere, in this case an old article in Social Education)
Geospatial inquiry in students' neighborhoods: Preparing for the Zombie Apocalypse and Other (Un)natural Disasters
Homebrewing your own localized historical geographic inquiry: Sanborn maps. For example, what's buried underneath Lehigh's College of Business?? (Look here: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1IfeI25VDAmnGXOmCSYM_lvH81lrjvegu/view?usp=sharing )
Maps, analysis, and making decisions: Eagles and Wind Turbines (see Leeson et al., 2022)
After class
Download and read geography standardsRead Chapin, Ch. 8 (geography ed)Skim Leeson et al., 2022Complete and turn in unit overviewPrep for microteaching
Complete WTL on geography ed resources (can complete later, if needed – microteaching definitely takes priority!)
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Before class
Prep your microteaching lesson
During class (no ppt – we’re just going to be working through what we have left over from last week)
Microteaching sessions
Time remaining
Update JamBoard o' methods (linked in CourseSite)
Working through more Geography concepts
After class
Download and read geography standards
Read Chapin, Ch. 8 (geography ed)
Skim Leeson et al., 2022
Complete and turn in unit overview
Write up microteaching reflection (no rush; feel free to take a couple weeks…but don’t leave it for too long!)
Complete WTL on geography ed resources