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Session 1 - Monday, 24 Aug
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- Housekeeping:
- HTCE questions? Sharing a favorite image
- OIM look-ahead – make sure you know what's different about submit #2!
- And you have some unusual homework between now and next Monday
- Explore a specific LUAG web exhibit (https://luag.lehigh.edu/exhibitions/doing-democracy-photography-george-stephanopoulos-collection)
- Do some hands-on work with a geospatial app
- Conceptual work – again, we won't get all the way through this....
- Geography framing: Five Themes vs. Four chunks. I prepared a JamBoard (note new features!!) on play a bit with these topics.
- Sample geography lessons / materials
- Community helpers...vs community resources, community needs
- A static lesson (or 'canned' lesson) on lat/lon...vs a scaffolded geocache
- A static data display vs. gapminder.com
- For elementary purposes, the Dollar Street database is particularly awesome
Tools of geography: Lots of stuff here, but with emphasis on...Map projectionsAnd a lesson plan that I've slightly adapted: The Grapefruit Activity. (While you're there: Note that it's billed as social studies AND science. Geography is the place where social studies starts to overlap with earth science / environmental science / physical science.If you want to see the Flickr map I used, it's here: https://www.flickr.com/map – search 'Islam' or something else with a strong cultural gradient: 'mosque', for example.
Physical geography: Not a perfect demonstration, but here's a Google Earth overlay that I created to divide continents into regions.Human geography: Families and Food activity. This is material borrowed from the book Hungry Planet: What the World Eats.Human-environment interaction: Population density activities / materialsSet of YouTube videosPopulation density enactive, adapted from the Teachers Curriculum Institute geography lessons.Other visual materials on population in this place, time.
Social studies and (de-)"othering"Chimamanda Adichie's TED talk. I'll just play a few bits.Single stories in social studies contextsMapsTextbooks
Attending to multiple stories: Lots of different ways are possible, but I'll single out the Families Of the World video series as one way of introducing the idea.
- Sample geography lessons / materials
- Geography framing: Five Themes vs. Four chunks. I prepared a JamBoard (note new features!!) on play a bit with these topics.
- Closure
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- We're starting off with a guest speaker! We'll be discussing the Lehigh University Art Galleries, but particularly this exhibit: https://luag.lehigh.edu/exhibitions/doing-democracy-photography-george-stephanopoulos-collection
- A little pause for reflection on methods & geography – we'll re-visit our JamBoard of methods for this
- Tools of geography: Lots of stuff here, but with emphasis on...
- How about the latitude & longitude activity I had you guys do outside of class this past week?
- And a lesson plan that I've slightly adapted: The Grapefruit Activity. (While you're there: Note that it's billed as social studies AND science. Geography is the place where social studies starts to overlap with earth science / environmental science / physical science.)
- What this lesson has to do with: Map projections
- A resource that links that same lesson to a larger discussion of map projections: Flattening Earth
- Here's a wiki page that I use for this topic when teaching the Geospatial Tools class
- A much nicer treatment is here: Map Projections
- ...and if you just want to bathe in beautiful maps, here you go: Map Projections in ArcGIS
- If you want to see the Flickr map I used, it's here: https://www.flickr.com/map – search 'Islam' or something else with a strong cultural gradient: 'mosque', for example.
- Physical geography: Not a perfect demonstration, but here's a Google Earth overlay that I created to divide continents into regions.
- Human geography: Families and Food activity. This is material borrowed from the book Hungry Planet: What the World Eats.
- Human-environment interaction: Set of YouTube videos, plus some web images and materials drawn from the Teachers Curriculum Institute geography lessons
- Social studies and (de-)"othering"
- Chimamanda Adichie's TED talk. I'll just play a few bits.
- Single stories in social studies contexts
- Maps
- Textbooks
- Attending to multiple stories: Lots of different ways are possible, but I'll single out the Families Of the World video series as one way of introducing the idea.
- Closure
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- Microteaching
- Julie
- Rachel
- Miki
- Joe
After class
...Monday, 23 November?
...no class, but do see materials on assessment posted in CourseSite
Monday, 30 November Anchor session15 session15
Before class
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- Work on instructional unit. If you can: Turn it in! If not: Turn it in next week or (worst case scenario) by December 10
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- Complete any other remaining assignments (ex: History Through a Child's Eyes) and turn in ASAP
- Don't forget to check out the assessment materials in CourseSite!
During class (ppt)
- Conceptual work: Digging into economics
- What is economics and why isn't it more prominently featured?
- A couple of counter-examples. One isn't really economics, and the other one is...painful. It's econ, but it's painful.
- And an example, albeit an outside-the-box out: Re-purposing children's literature. Two examples here
- A selection from Richard Scarry's What Do People Do All Day?
- A book written to explain what microfinance is: One Hen: How One Small Loan Made a Big Difference
- Why this is a crying shame: Econ is fun, econ is practical, econ is important, econ integrates beautifully. (And it's in the PDE standards)
- Some econ resources
- Ohio State University Research Foundation (OSURF) materials
- Day, 2006: What is Economics?
- VanFossen, 2003: suggestions for teaching econ in elementary SS Council Economic Education
- website.
- standards.
- lesson plan database: EconEd Link.
- The classic: Play Doh Economics (to be demo'd in a few minutes)
- Some econ activities
- Warm up: The economics of
candy consumption– sticker selection - And now for a slam-dunk: A lesson adapted from Play-Doh economics.
- Warm up: The economics of
- Putting our class sessions to bed – so much more to be learned!
- Content goes on forever
- Unfolding pedagogical interests – see, for example, growing support for anti-racist social studies content: Signers of the Declaration of Independence & enslavement
- Rising stakes of our current political situation (specifically, the loser's veto power in a post-election transition)
- Re-visiting 'What is the purpose of social studies?' I think it's time to add: Pro-democracy social studies education
- What is economics and why isn't it more prominently featured?
After class
- Final textbook chapter: Maxim, Ch. 12
- Read over econ standards
- Read one or more econ pieces; stow the rest away for future reference! Strongly recommend keeping the Play-Doh Economics materials somewhere that you know you can find them....
- Complete remaining major assignments
- Is anyone interested in office hours / bonus session next Monday? I'll be online if you want to consult / discuss
(Any final outstanding work due: Monday, 14 December)