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Session 1 - Thursday, 1 Sep
Before class
- Buy a copy of the textbook (Maxim, 2014, Dynamic Social Studies for Constructivist Classrooms). Amazon has it; used copies are fine.
- Cruise this wiki and the CourseSite.
- I have paper copies of the syllabus; you don't have to print out a copy yourself.
During class (ppt)
- Housekeeping
- Introductions
- Looking at our toolbox: CourseSite, wiki, bookmarks, etc.
- Reviewing syllabus
- Assignments and grading
- First step: Completing your first WTL entries
- Questions thus far?
- Conceptual work
- What is social studies?
- (This is a variation on a List-Group-Label activity, which is a technique created by Hilda Taba; see also https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_group_label_strategy for more info and https://delicious.com/tchammond/TLT412,methods for more methods)
- Look through assigned materials
- Discuss materials in your group
- Present to the whole class: What did you see?
- Look at compiled list of statements
- Form groups of related ideas – each group gets its own Google Doc
- Label each group with a word or short phrase
- Compare what your group came up with to what other groups came up with
- (This is a variation on a List-Group-Label activity, which is a technique created by Hilda Taba; see also https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_group_label_strategy for more info and https://delicious.com/tchammond/TLT412,methods for more methods)
- What is social studies methods?
- Content?
- Techniques?
- Lesson planning?
- Who am I as a social studies educator?
- What is social studies?
- Closure
- Review of what's due next week – reminder about filling in info for "Weaving the Globe"
- Review of what's where (wiki, CourseSite)
- Any questions?
- Stick around for portfolio work
After class
- Reading
- Maxim, Ch. 1 (What is?)
- Crocco, 2004 (as an overview and critique of the field – if nothing else, this should teach you to be an informed, critical consumer of social studies materials)
- NCSS, 2009
- Assignments
- WTL
- Update your profile in CourseSite to include your picture
- Starting planning out your upcoming assignments: Original Instructional Materials product #1, who you'll interview for HTCE, etc.
- Bookmark class websites on your computer (e.g., CourseSite, relevant wiki pages)
- Fill out the “Weaving the Globe” input form.
Input your portfolio URL ASAP
Session 2 - Thursday, 8 Sep
Before class
- Complete reading
- Think ahead: What do you want to do for your Original Instructional Materials assignments? Are you able to find a preK-4 student to interview for the HTCE?
During class (ppt)
- Housekeeping
- Conceptual work
- Opening activity: Sketchmaps
- Sketchmaps & schema
- Examples of how social studies schema are complicated / slippery / layered
- NCSS on the purpose of social studies
- Curricular frameworks
- A proposed, deliberately provocative framework of aims: A three-ring circus
- NCSS and powerful social studies
- Digging into geography
- Standards – analyze these for suggested / implicit curricular frameworks and aims
- PDE (all via CourseSite)
- new geography, 3-8
- new geography, preK-2.
- C3 Framework – note that for geography, they reach back to the old "Five Themes" of geography.
- PDE (all via CourseSite)
- Parsing it a little more simply
- Geography as "What's Where and What's It Called?"
- Geography as "The Whys of Where"
- "What's in a Name" activity
- Geography as whys of where & what's it to me?
- Geography as "What's Where and What's It Called?"
- Standards – analyze these for suggested / implicit curricular frameworks and aims
- Closure
After class
- Reading
Maxim, Ch. 3 (Standards), Ch. 8 (Geography)
Re-visit NCSS, 2009
Brophy & Alleman, 2002
optional: Wade, 2002
skim: Keeler & Langhorst, 2008 (to get ideas for orig inst materials assigns)
- Assignments
- WTL
- Complete instructional product #1, bring it to class ready to share!
Session 3 - Thursday, 15 Sep
Before class
- Complete reading
- Complete and bring in your Original Instructional Material assignment #1, bring it to class. (But don't forget to also upload it to CourseSite!)
- Complete the WTL
During class (ppt)
- Housekeeping
- Original instructional materials work
- Getting ready to share our OIP #1sI'll be demoing using this Google Earth file built from the data you gave me (plus older data)
- Sharing
- Talking about OIM #2: Check out my SmartBoard-based puzzle map of South America. What approach to geography is it? (Traditional) So: For your OIM #2, try a new-to-you technology (SmartBoard? Google Earth?), a different lens (traditional vs. disciplinary vs. student-centered) – mix it up! Stretch your thinking and your tech skills!
- Conceptual work
- Finishing off what I didn't get to last week: Three stances of geography ed, demo'd with three methods
- "Weaving the Globe" (which we did at the beginning of the session)
- SmartBoard puzzle map (which we did after sharing OIP #1)
- "What's in a Place Name?"
- Taking a look at standards
- C3's geography section
- PDE's straddle of Five Themes and a more disciplinary approach
- (And because I can never resist: Check out these these user-generated videos on the Five Themes)
- Digging into geography's Big Ideas
- Natural environment vs. built environment
- Physical geography vs. political, economic, or human geography
- Human-environment interaction
- Tools of geographic representation
- Finishing off what I didn't get to last week: Three stances of geography ed, demo'd with three methods
- Closure
After class
- Reading
Review Geography standards: PDE, C3; see other nat’l orgs as you see fit
Read Barton & Levstik, 1996 (at least to the point where you understand context of HTCE assignment)
- Assignments
WTL
Work on original instructional materials assignment, product #2
Please consider sharing your OIM #1 by uploading to the Forum in CourseSite for this week’s class
Complete and turn in HTCE prep work
Session 4 - Thursday, 22 Sep
Before class
- Complete reading
- Prepare and turn in HTCE prep
- Complete WTL
During class (ppt)
- Housekeeping: OIM work, HTCE
- Conceptual work
- Geography framing: Five Themes vs. Four chunks
- Tools of geography: Lots of stuff here, but with emphasis on...
- Map projections
- And a lesson plan that I've slightly adapted: The Grapefruit Activity.
- If you want to see the Flickr map I used, it's here: https://www.flickr.com/photos/tags/islam/map?&fLat=38.5481&fLon=4.0429&zl=3
- 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 / materials
- Set of YouTube videos
- Population 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 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.
- Tools of geography: Lots of stuff here, but with emphasis on...
- Geography framing: Five Themes vs. Four chunks
- Closure
After class
- Reading
- optional: Hammond, Bodzin, & Stanlick, 2014
- If you haven't already: Read through PDE ELPS, or at least the stuff I extracted for social studies.
- Assignments
- Complete & turn in OIP #2. (If you need help thinking of something: re-read Keeler & Langhorst, 2008)
Session 5 - Thursday, 29 Sep
Before class
- Complete the reading.
- Complete and turn in your Original Instructional Material #2. Don't forget to write the reflection! (See syllabus for details)
During class (ppt)
- Housekeeping
- Conceptual work
- Diversity ed implication of geography (and more! History, civics, you name it):
- Here are some images / webmaps I'm drawing from
- Flickr world map, searching "Families" in N'Djamena. Note that it comes up a little off from N'Djamena, so feel free to re-run the search, just looking for images from the city
- I'll be using Chimamanda Adichie's TED talk. I'll just play a few bits; feel free to watch all of it.
- Here are some images / webmaps I'm drawing from
- History ed work
- I'll be using some data from the University of Virginia's Geography of Slavery project from their Virginia Center for Digital History.
- I'm also doing things with images and materials available from the National Archive's DocsTeach database.
- The picture-and-picture mashup is from the "Looking Into the Past" group in Flickr
- Diversity ed implication of geography (and more! History, civics, you name it):
- Closure
After class
- Reading
Skim: Hammond & Manfra, 2009- Maxim, Ch. 7 (history – note how this is first in his content-specific chapters?)
- History standards (at least skim): PDE, C3; look at NCHS if you wish
Maxim, Ch. 4, 5, & 6 – just get started on this; they expand upon the pedagogical points I was making tonight. You can finish them up later, but give a quick skim for now and maybe drill down on one of the three chapters
- Assignments
- WTL on history ed
- Field experience update
- Think ahead about curriculum map
Session 6 - Thursday, 6 Oct
Before class
- Complete readings–note that I crossed off some bits
- Complete and turn in fieldwork update / "first installment"
- Do WTL
During class (ppt)
- Housekeeping
- Conceptual work
- Pushing forward on history ed methods: Things with images:
- Some of this is drawn from the National Archive's DocsTeach database.
- The picture-and-picture mashup is from the "Looking Into the Past" group in Flickr
- Pedagogical framing: Giving-Prompting-Making; observe how this overlays with the stances
- And a deep, philosophical look at Why: Why do we teach history?
- Back into history ed methods: Things with timelines
- I'm focusing on physical things: writing things on paper and/or moving bits of paper around
- Note that a variety of online tools exist for this, and can allow you to plug in media
- And a closing question or two about Wikipedia
- Pushing forward on history ed methods: Things with images:
- Closure
After class
- Reading
- Hammond & Manfra, 2009
- Maxim, Ch. 4, 5, & 6 – these expand upon the pedagogical points I was making tonight, but with a much better theory base.
- Assignments
- Complete and turn in curriculum map
Session 7 - Thursday, 13 Oct
Before class
- Complete reading
During class (ppt)
- Housekeeping
- Qs about turning in curriculum map?
- Organizing microteaching
- Thinking about curriculum map
- Conceptual work: Finishing off history ed
- Re-visiting big picture from geography ed & what we've covered thus far in history ed
- Wikipedia work
- Extending wikipedia work
- Closure
After class
- Reading
- Read whatever is at the level that interests you most (preK-4)
- Barton, 1997 (4th & 5th grade)
- Tiemann & Fallace, 2009 (K)
- Jensen, 2009 (5th grade...but applies broadly)
- Read whatever is at the level that interests you most (preK-4)
- Assignments
- Tell me where you would like to fall in the microteaching schedule, using this handy form (also linked in CourseSite).
- Working ahead: Think about unit overview
FYI: Pacing break - Monday, 17 Oct & Tuesday, 18 Oct
Session 8 - Thursday, 20 Oct
Before class
- Complete reading
During class (ppt)
- Housekeeping
- Unit overview Qs
- Conceptual work: From standards to objectives
- Conceptual work: Getting started on civics ed
- Initiating activity #1: Branches of government
- Initiating activity #2: Community resources
- Let's start with an activity, or sequence of activities. It's a twist on the classic 'community helpers' topic (see some sample materials, if you need to, or consult this set of lesson descriptions), but it takes a broader frame: 'community needs' vs. 'community resources'. If you want to look through the materials:
- The game was created using arisgames.org; I'll be happy to share the game so you can see it and make a copy to tinker on your own.
- Here's a sample Google Earth overlay I made, focusing on the area around Building 21, in Allentown. Note that you need to create one that is relevant to whatever school environment you would want to run the activity in.
- Here's the handout (one sheet for classwork, one sheet for homework).
- Let's start with an activity, or sequence of activities. It's a twist on the classic 'community helpers' topic (see some sample materials, if you need to, or consult this set of lesson descriptions), but it takes a broader frame: 'community needs' vs. 'community resources'. If you want to look through the materials:
- What do these activities tell us about civics?
- Another look at civics ed: questions from the US Customs & Immigration Service
Some standard questions as we encounter a new content areaWhat are the content-area associations that focus on civics ed? Center for Civic Ed (http://www.civiced.org/) is the biggie.What are the standards for civics ed? PDE, C3 Framework (in CourseSite); Center for Civic Ed (CCE) also has their own set of standardsWhat are some resources for civics ed? https://delicious.com/tchammond/TLT412,civics --see also the 'We the People' and 'Project Citizen' materials from CCEWhat are different approaches to civics ed – traditional? Disciplinary? Community-centered?What's so special about civics education?
Three salient 'buckets' of civics resourcesBucket #1: Materials from the Center for Civic EducationK-2 materials (Foundations of Democracy Primary)grades 3-4 materials (Foundations of Democracy Elementary)"We the People" elementary materials.(And apropos of not much: their "60-Second Civics" podcast– I think it helps illustrate a tension at work in what we call civics ed.)...de-brief
Bucket #2: Materials from iCivicsAbout page – be sure to check out some of the info under "Our Impact" to get a sense of what grade(s) they think this is for and how they feel they're doing.Scope-and-sequence – just get a sense for what topics and methods they have going on. Note that they don't make any statements about what grade levels should work on which topics!Games – these are all Flash-based and therefore might not work on some mobile devices. I picked a timely one: "Cast Your Vote"...de-brief
Bucket #3: And now some other materials, that you'll hopefully have more context for by this pointYes, that "Schoolhouse Rock" video that everyone remembers. (More of the same here.) My question is: Which vision of civics is this about?From the US Dept of Ed: "Helping Your Child Become a Responsible Citizen"– again, I'm after the question of 'what kind of civics do we have here?' If you search for different terms, you'll get a sense (e.g., search for 'vote' vs. 'moral')Returning again to the USCIS – they have a "Citizens Almanac" that is, if nothing else, a source of interesting things to hang on your classroom wall....
- Closure
After class
- Reading
- Civics standards: PDE, C3, and perhaps (your call) Center for Civic Ed. All of these are available in the folder in CourseSite
- Maxim, Ch. 9
- As needed: Review materials on instructional objectives
- Assignments
- Complete and turn in unit overview
- If you are microteaching: Prep your lesson and materials; if you need to turn in your unit overview late, that's fine.
Session 9 - Thursday, 27 Oct
Before class
- Complete reading
During class (ppt)
- Housekeeping
- Microteaching
- Katie E.
- Molly S.
- Kelsey K.
- Conceptual work: Moving forward with civics ed
- Re-visiting what we did last week
- Some standard questions as we encounter a new content area
- What are the content-area associations that focus on civics ed? Center for Civic Ed (http://www.civiced.org/) is the biggie.
- What are the standards for civics ed? PDE, C3 Framework (in CourseSite); Center for Civic Ed (CCE) also has their own set of standards
- What are some resources for civics ed? https://delicious.com/tchammond/TLT412,civics --see also the 'We the People' and 'Project Citizen' materials from CCE
- What are different approaches to civics ed – traditional? Disciplinary? Community-centered?
- What's so special about civics education?
- Three salient 'buckets' of civics resources
- Bucket #1: Materials from the Center for Civic Education
- K-2 materials (Foundations of Democracy Primary)
- grades 3-4 materials (Foundations of Democracy Elementary)
- "We the People" elementary materials.
- (And apropos of not much: their "60-Second Civics" podcast– I think it helps illustrate a tension at work in what we call civics ed.)
- ...de-brief
- Bucket #2: Materials from iCivics
- About page – be sure to check out some of the info under "Our Impact" to get a sense of what grade(s) they think this is for and how they feel they're doing.
- Scope-and-sequence – just get a sense for what topics and methods they have going on. Note that they don't make any statements about what grade levels should work on which topics!
- Games – these are all Flash-based and therefore might not work on some mobile devices. I picked a timely one: "Cast Your Vote"
- ...de-brief
- Bucket #3: And now some other materials, that you'll hopefully have more context for by this point
- Yes, that "Schoolhouse Rock" video that everyone remembers. (More of the same here.) My question is: Which vision of civics is this about?
- From the US Dept of Ed: "Helping Your Child Become a Responsible Citizen"– again, I'm after the question of 'what kind of civics do we have here?' If you search for different terms, you'll get a sense (e.g., search for 'vote' vs. 'moral')
- Returning again to the USCIS – they have a "Citizens Almanac" that is, if nothing else, a source of interesting things to hang on your classroom wall....
- Bucket #1: Materials from the Center for Civic Education
- Closure
After class
- Reading
- Assignments
Session 10 - Thursday, 3 Nov
Before class
- Complete reading
- Complete and turn in your unit overview
- If you're scheduled to microteach, please prepare!
During class (no ppt)
- Housekeeping
- Microteaching
- Elizabeth H.
- Kendall D.
- Ashley B.
- Conceptual work
- Closure
After class
- Reading
- Westheimer & Kahne, 2004
- Assignments
- (Work ahead on your HTCE, fieldwork)
Session 11 - Thursday, 10 Nov
Before class
- Complete reading
During class (no ppt)
- Housekeeping
- Microteaching
- Samantha K.
- Kate D.
- Madi M.
- Conceptual work
- Civics education: Here is the video clip of David Souter that I wanted to show last week. This week it's even more terrifyingly prescient: . If you want more context for the clip, here's a page from PBS that overviews the entire talk (and offers more clips)
- Prediction: Social studies ed, and particularly civics ed, is about to make a comeback. You have no idea what your curriculum is going to be or what kind of time you will be given, but you do have events to work with
- Constitution Day – this is a federally-required school observance!
- Elections, inaugurations (don't forget local! Do those on odd-numbered years) – see, for example, TIME for Kids on this week's election
- WTL: Post a suggestion for what to do with one of these events, in the context of your imagined curriculum and time schedule (i.e., whatever you're doing your unit on). I'm particularly interested in what can stretch toward the idea of civic engineering: digging into problems, solutions, figuring out where responsibility lies, and taking (effective) action.
- To return to building up your pedagogical skills. Both are huge topics, ones you will spend your career exploring.
- Assessment:
- (I'm working on compressed this into a stand-alone video, but we will briefly discuss as needed for the moment.)
- Adaptation & accommodation for diverse learners: Four different ways to approach this
- Teacher behaviors: Lots of possibilities, but I'll focus on sheltered instruction
- Experience it
- Go to https://iris.peabody.vanderbilt.edu/wp-content/uploads/pdf_activities/independent/IA_Understanding_Sheltered_Instruction.pdf
- One partner watch video #1 while the other one watches video #2.
- After you watch: Write down what you think the teacher's lesson was about, then compare. The viewer of video #2 should have a MUCH clearer idea of what happened – why?
- Watch video #3. Again, this should be easier for you. Why?
- Think through the implications for your instruction – what did these experiences teach you?
- Background info
- Note how this used to be something that only ESL teachers did: http://www.ericdigests.org/pre-9210/english.htm
- ...but now it's part of inclusive practices in mainstream classrooms, too: http://ritell.org/Resources/Documents/General%20Education%20Resources/Sheltered_Instruction_for_Mainstream%5B1%5D.pdf
- Now you think it through in terms of your own instruction – re-visit one or both of your microteaching lessons – how would / should you change it to include the techniques of sheltered instruction?
- (And if you liked what you saw in the videos from Vanderbilt, see their whole module on working with English Language Learners: http://iris.peabody.vanderbilt.edu/module/ell/
- Modifying materials
- Modifying documents: Read http://teachinghistory.org/teaching-materials/teaching-guides/23560 – be sure to follow the links to the sample documents
- Modifying assessments: Go to http://www.lakewoodcityschools.org/userfiles/2191/Classes/8975/Hurleys-ESL-Modifications.pdf and read the "Assessment Modifications" on pp. 2-3.
- Finally, go to http://www.pdesas.org/module/Assessment/questions/search/ and retrieve some PDE-recommended assessment items. (I recommend "History", "5th grade"– to see less textually-driven questions, also add "constructed response".) Try your hand at adapting these items (both text-only and visually-driven) for ELLs. If this isn't giving you access, try this DBQ (document-based question) from a different source; try not to laugh at the grammatical mangling in the Task instructions.
- Differentiation of student assignments – many possibilities here, but we're going with RAFT (Role-Audience-Format-Topic)
- Go to http://delicious.com/tchammond/RAFT and review the links – start at the bottom and work your way up. View things with a critical eye.
- Discuss: What merit does this approach have? In ways can a RAFT be inclusive?
- Prepare one or more ideas to present to the class.
- Graphic organizers – in general, you want to be multi-sensory; within that advice, I recommend being as visual & spatial as possible – graphic organizers let you do both!
- Lots of pages provide information about graphic organizers; here is the most comprehensive site I've found: http://www.sblair.com/teachers/graphic_organizers.htm
- (Feel free to include material from other classes, if you can)
- Re-visit one or both of your microteaching lessons – how would / should you change it to include the techniques of sheltered instruction?
- Teacher behaviors: Lots of possibilities, but I'll focus on sheltered instruction
- Assessment:
- Closure
After class
- Reading
- (see links on adaptation & differentiation in CourseSite; explore whatever you didn't personally get to)
- Other two articles I posted: Download and refer to as needed for completing the accommodations for your diverse learners in your instructional unit
- Assignments
- Complete & turn in your field experience paper
- Complete WTL described above: Post a suggestion for what to do with one of these events, in the context of your imagined curriculum and time schedule (i.e., whatever you're doing your unit on). If you can make it connect to part or all of "civic engineering", that would be cool.
Session 12 - Thursday, 17 Nov
Before class
- Complete reading
During class (ppt)
- Housekeeping
- Microteaching
- Janelle J.
- Elizabeth F.
- Conceptual work: Digging into economics
- What is economics and why isn't it in our textbook?
- 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 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)
- Warm up: The economics of candy consumption
- And now for a slam-dunk: A lesson adapted from Play-Doh economics.
- Closure
After class
- Reading
- Maxim, Ch. 11
- Read, or at least save, the econ materials in CourseSite. You don't need to read these immediately, but do save them for future reference. They're extremely useful, and they're rare!
- Assignments
- Wrap up whatever you haven't finished: HTCE, field paper
- Work on final unit
Session 13 - Thursday, 24 Nov = THANKSGIVING, NO CLASS
Things I recommend you work on...
- Reading
- Assignments
Session 14 - Thursday, 1 Dec
Before class
- Complete reading
During class (ppt)
- Housekeeping
- Conceptual work
- Closure
After class
- Reading
- Assignments
...go back to top?
end