weeks: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5 - 6 - 7 - 8 - 9 - 10 - 11 - 12 -13 - 14 - 15
Week 1 - Tuesday, 29 Aug
Before class
- Buy a copy of the textbook (Maxim, 2017, Dynamic Social Studies for Constructivist Classrooms; currently in 11th edition, but earlier editions are fine). Amazon has it
- Cruise this wiki and the CourseSite.
- Preview the syllabus. We will discuss it during class.
During class (ppt)
- Housekeeping
- Introductions – and here are some classroom-appropriate ideas / suggestions and explanations of why this matters...
- Looking at our toolbox: CourseSite, wiki, etc.
- Reviewing syllabus
- Assignments and grading
- First step: Completing your first WTL entries
- Questions thus far?
- Conceptual work
- What is social studies? Starter activity, drawing upon the work of Hilda Taba. We'll be using the following Google Docs...
- Getting into our running JamBoard (linked in CourseSite), playing with organizing our teaching methods for social studies
- Social studies as a set of disciplines vs. social studies as something bigger, more integrated
- Why we need to push ourselves in this class: Take a brief visit to the teacher store
- Closure
- Review of what's where (wiki, CourseSite)
- Any questions?
- Stick around for portfolio work, if you wish
After class
- Reading
- (Borrow something from me! Read or skim it! Talk about it next week!)
- Maxim, Ch. 1 (What is?)
- Assignments
- WTL for this week: What is the purpose of curriculum??
- 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)
Week 2 - Tuesday, 5 Sep
Before class
- Complete reading
- Don't forget to do the WTL in CourseSite!
- Do the CourseSite updating (it helps me remember names/faces!)
- Think ahead on your assignments
During class (ppt)
- Starting off with something fun: A scavenger hunt! About the built environment
- (I'll have this printed out, but here's a handout; feel free to take it & adapt to your own teaching, if you wish)
- (Feel free to email me your photos so I can share them; you can also join the Zoom URL from your device to show)
- (And here's a fancier version of this activity, one that uses ArcGIS Online & the Field Maps app to do the activity: https://lu.maps.arcgis.com/apps/mapviewer/index.html?webmap=e949efad87e142ef924c49d6617bf0de )
- De-brief of the activity – how is this social studies? What kind of social studies?
- Social studies as a set of related social science disciplines – makes it easy for us, largely irrelevant to students. Just make it interesting for students; don't tie yourself up in knots about serving the discipline
- Among the big four, we are starting with GEOGRAPHY
- Why start with geography?
- What is geography, anyway?
- A look at some geography standards
- Wading into social studies methods
- PDE
- Five Themes
- (National Geography Standards, if anyone wants to look at those, too: https://files.eric.ed.gov/fulltext/ED375073.pdf)
- C3 Framework
- Time for another geography method: Sketchmaps
- Purpose(s) of social studies
- Discussion of OIM #1
- ...can we meet early next week??
After class
- Reading
- Maxim, ch. 8 (geography)
- PDE geography standards (download these to a convenient folder; you'll need to refer to them)
- C3 framework, geography section (again, download to a convenient spot...)
- NCSS, 2009 (powerful and purposeful elementary social studies)
- Assignments
- Complete & bring in OIM #1; be prepared to show-and-tell!
- Complete this Google Form for an in-class demo of a lesson called "Weaving the Globe" (form)
- Complete WTL for week 2
Week 3 - Tuesday, 12 Sep
Before class
- Complete Google Form on shoes/textile (link above)
- Complete reading
- Don't forget to do the WTL in CourseSite!
- Complete & bring in OIM #1
During class (ppt)
- Meet in lobby of Iaccoca at 6:30! We'll start from there
- First thing tonight = scaffolded geocache. I will share starting materials here; if you want the full set, just ask
- Handout with simple visual intro to lat/lon
- List of coordinates for starting point, targets, and finish location
- Decision-making scaffold, if anyone needs it
- (If I were teaching this with elementary students: I'd actually start with this photoset to see locations along the Equator & Prime Meridian before going outside)
- (Alternatively: Here's a webpage [StoryMap] with info about latitude & longitude. This was written for older folks, not elementary students, but it has the images I would use with elementary students. Note that it also has embedded images on the map.)
- (Since this activity does lots work in Google Earth: I encourage you to download Google Earth onto your laptop – https://www.google.com/earth/versions/. It's WAY more powerful as a downloaded program than something that runs in your browser.)
- (And if you want to get into 'real' geocaching, go here: https://www.geocaching.com/play)
- Discussing geography standards – quick look at PDE vs. Five Themes
- Quick look at JamBoard of methods – we have some updating to do!
- Potentially useful framework for thinking about your instructional decision-making: TPACK
- (Additional supporting example of how technology can intersect with content and pedagogy: https://arcg.is/0LiKD1)
- Sharing OIM #1
- More updating of JamBoard!
- Closure
After class
- Reading
- Barton & Levstik, 1996 - skim to get the idea about how to build image set for HTCE assignment
- Optional: If you liked the scaffolded geocache, save a copy of Hammond et al., 2014
- Assignments
- Prepare & turn in HTCE image set; see syllabus for details
- WTL on school activities that relate to calendar events: Sept 11, Constitution Day, Hispanic Heritage Month, etc.
Week 4 - Tuesday, 19 Sep
Before class
- Complete reading
- Don't forget to do the WTL in CourseSite!
- Complete & turn in HTCE prep assignment
During class (ppt)
- Housekeeping; checking in on any calendar events that tie in with social studies content....
- Conceptual work: More geography activities, working towards different stances
- demo: Stack the Countries (see also Stack the States)
- demo: What's in a (state) name? We'll run this on our JamBoard; I also have some other materials for a slightly different version linked from here: Computational thinking & social studies.
- Discussion: Teacher stances – what do they think social studies is for? What does this look like in terms of geography education?
- demo: Weaving the Globe – I'll be showing-and-telling, but feel free to download and play around with this Google Earth file as well. This is adapted from an old lesson that I found in a back issue of Social Education.
- demo: 'Transforming the Globe', borrowed from this lesson plan. If you want to go further with this idea, try this video: The Impossible Map (1947)
- If you have a similar sense of humor to me, this will make you laugh every time: What your favorite map projection says about you (xkcd)
- maps as tools for all three stances + maps that exclude as well as include
- now you produce something: We'll work through the first few steps of the Whose Land? activity
- Closure
After class
- Reading: Gaudelli & Laverty, 2017
- Assignments
- WTL = complete & share your "Whose Land?" map & reflection
- Complete & turn in your OIM #2
Week 5 - Tuesday, 26 Sep
Before class
- Complete reading
- Complete WTL in CourseSite – keep in mind it's a little different than usual
- Complete & turn in OIM #2 – don't forget that there's a reflection component! (See syllabus for details)
During class (ppt)
- Housekeeping
- Anything to comment on about OIM #2?
- Let's check in for a second about your field placements & the field placement assignment
- Conceptual work
- Re-capping big ideas thus far...
- Where we want to go tonight: Curricular planning for social studies. As usual, I'll say it's a little bit different
- Where our attention has been
- Geography ed
- Methods (via JamBoard)
- What we want to do next: Look at curricular planning, plus get into civics ed
- Curricular planning: What is expected and what can never be; example of BASD curriculum, other curricular frames
- Discussion of curriculum map assignment
- Civics ed
- Let's jump into things with a quick demo activity, as per usual – this time, an image annotation activity focusing on a very specific event...
- Discussion of standards: PDe, C3, Center for Civic Ed
- Another activity: A neighborhood walk about the functions of government, adapted to Google StreetView
- Circling back to standards....
- Closure
After class
- Reading
- Maxim, Ch. 9 (civics)
- Civics standards: PDE & C3 (in CourseSite – see folder of standards)
- optional: Brophy & Alleman, 2002 (this is a quick intro to their idea of cultural universals; FML has some of the supporting materials for this curriculum approach)
- Assignments
- WTL on civic ed – play an iCivics game and report back! ...OR... WTL on geography
- Think ahead on your curriculum map assignment
Week 06 - Tuesday, 3 Oct
Before class
- Complete reading
- Complete WTL on iCivics games
- Work on curriculum map! It's a big assignment, and it's due soon!
During class (ppt)
- Housekeeping
- Field work discussion
- Curriculum map / instructional planning assignments
- Conceptual work
- Step back for a second – what is the purpose of geography? What is the purpose of civics?
- Question at the heart of civics: What kind of citizen?
- ...so: Let us all be aware that civics is special
- (Pause to do a learning-about-government thing – note that this isn't necessarily something that you would do with your students or even teach them; this is more a conceptual thing for us, as adults engaged in social studies: a JamBoard about governmental structures - https://jamboard.google.com/d/1JfM6Kz7wrrtG5ag1w3CYMR4ydsjDVwbnSTRF0i3rES8/viewer?f=0 )
- Civics as education for democracy
- Stepping back to pedagogy / civics ed instructional activities
- Looking in classrooms for civics instruction
- #1 (watching norms)
- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5J06NpqnvZ0 (start at 7:30)
- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p4ru5MuYxiI (stop at 2:00)
- #2 (teacher manipulates the classroom laws to impact norms, build empathy)
- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1mcCLm_LwpE (start at 5:00)
- #3 (norms, laws, democratic elections)
- #1 (watching norms)
- Challenges / opportunities of teaching civics
- Civics & games (and models and simulations)
- Closure
After class
- Reading
- Maxim, Ch. 4-5-6 (at least get it started, can finish later)
- skim: Westheimer & Kahne, 2004 (what kind of citizen?)
- optional: Westheimer & Kahne, 2009 (should social studies be patriotic?)
- Assignments
- Turn in fieldwork assignment, first steps
- Work on fieldwork! Don't let it sit!
- Do WTL on civics standards
- Move forward on curriculum map assignment
Week 7 - Tuesday, 10 Oct
Before class
- Work on reading Maxim chapters – highly worth it but may take you some time
- Skim / download Westheimer & Kahne articles
- Do WTL
- Work on curriculum map
- Work on fieldwork; turn in update
During class (ppt)
- Housekeeping
- Re-setting on big ideas about Civics
- Digression about the DART mission
- Methods for teaching civics; games, simulations, and models have a special place...
- Re-visit looking in a classroom #2 (Jane Elliott)
- Looking in a classroom #3: Mr. Salvaterra
- ...and I have taken this special connection to an extreme: perhaps civics & games are mirrors to one another??
- Gerrymandering game
- Playground rule-making
- "Doing Democracy", Project Citizen (Center for Civic Education) – https://www.civiced.org/project-citizen
- And a pedagogical thing about civics...but it also applies more broadly: Giving, Prompting, Making
- And one last digression, about demographic change as a challenge to teaching civics (and other social studies content...)
After class
- Reading
- Finish off Maxim, Ch. 4-5-6
- optional: Hammond & Manfra, 2009
- Assignment
- Complete and turn in curriculum map (+ reflection!)
Week 8 - Tuesday, 17 Oct
Before class
- Complete and turn in curriculum map assignment – don't forget the reflection!
- Finish reading
During class (ppt)
- Housekeeping – questions / comments about curriculum map? Touching on next upcoming assignment, instructional unit overview
- Some stage-setting as we sneak up on history ed...
- ...but not before some last comments about civics ed
- Getting into history ed
- First, an experience for us as adult learners: The Story of Aaron
- (If you want to go further with this type of source, here's where I got the materials used in this activity: http://www2.vcdh.virginia.edu/gos/explore.html)
- History vs. history education – some attempted demonstrations of the differences
- Emmanuel Leutze's Washington Crossing the Delaware / "heroic narrative" version of US history
- StoryMap about signers of the Declaration of Independence, viewed through their history enslavement
- William Penn & enslavement
- "History of immigration to America" activity
- History education...is either pro-democracy or pro-authoritarian??
- I might play some snippets of this video about the PA Capitol Building in Harrisburg:
- Closure
- First, an experience for us as adult learners: The Story of Aaron
After class
- Reading
- Maxim, ch. 9 (history ed)
- History standards (see folder in CourseSite)
- Optional readings
- 1619 Project,
- 1776 Project
- Any of the history ed pieces under this week’s material in CourseSite – lots of great ideas / models for elementary history ed
- Assignments
- Starting working on instructional unit overview
- WTL on citizenship test
- WTL on instructional objectives
Week 9 - Tuesday, 24 Oct
Before class
- WTLs
- Complete reading
- Work on instructional unit overview (at least read the specifications in the syllabus, no?)
During class (ppt)
- Housekeeping
- Curriculum maps - returned?
- Microteaching planning
- Instructional unit overview due next week - discuss?
- Going further with history education
- Last week: Pretty heavy concepts. Let's start out with something more fun and concrete – lots of work with images!
- If you want to see where I'm drawing these images and ideas, see this page from the National Archives: https://www.archives.gov/education/lessons/hine-photos
- Something I have chosen to sit on until we get to history ed: C3 Framework's Inquiry Arc. Simple concept, but powerful – low floor, high ceiling
- And to do some inquiry with a familiar resource: Wikipedia
- The Wikipedia we all know and love (?): https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Main_Page
- But how about these?
- We'll start on this article: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pledge_of_Allegiance
- Cycling back to the idea of "pro-authoritarian" vs. "pro-democracy" history
- Last week: Pretty heavy concepts. Let's start out with something more fun and concrete – lots of work with images!
- Closure
- You don't have to agree with me! I'm still at sea on this topic, after all
For next week
- Reading
- (Finish off anything from last week that you didn't get to. This might be a good time to re-visit the 1619 project.)
- Optional reading: Schweber, 2008 - “What Happened to Their Pets?”: Third Graders Encounter the Holocaust. One of my favorite pieces of research ever
- Assignments
- Fill out this Google Form to help schedule the microteaching
- Complete and turn in instructional unit overview
Week 10 - Tuesday, 31 Oct
Before class
- Complete and turn in instructional unit overview
- Complete reading
- Fill out form for microteaching
During class (ppt)
- Housekeeping
- Since it's Halloween...let's talk holidays!
- Wrapping up history ed
- Timelining activities
- On paper: Text & images
- On paper: Text & dates ...but try to arrange them spatially
- Digital: Re-order these slides into the correct sequence; write in your reasoning
- Re-visiting JamBoard of methods
- One last Big Idea about history education: Danger of a Single Story
- Implications for inclusion & pro-democracy history ed?
- Example of this in a history ed context: Jamestown & its neighboring settlements. What happens when you add/subtract layers? How does it change the story?
- Example in a contemporary (and historical!) context: maps of Israel & Palestine / Occupied Territories
- Timelining activities
- Closure
After class
- Reading: Schur, assessment that emphasizes learning
- Assignments
- Prep microteaching
- Work ahead on remaining assignments
- Complete WTL on Veteran's Day / inclusion
Week 11 - Tuesday, 7 Nov - NO CLASS; Lehigh Civic Engagement Day (aka Election Day!) - don't forget to vote!
Week 11 - Tuesday, 14 Nov
Before class
- Prep microteaching (if it's your turn)
- Complete reading
During class (ppt)
- Housekeeping
- Microteaching
- Assessment & social studies...plus something extra: looking at assessing complex thinking skills (for example: systems thinking) using a performance task (such as: pizzeria scenario)
- Closure
After class
- Re-read Schurr – what are you picking up differently after our discussion this evening?
- Optional reading: Fournier & Wineburg, 1997 (I was drawing on their work for the gender issues discussed tonight)
- Work on end-of-semester assignments (HTCE interview & report, instructional unit, fieldwork paper)
- If you're microteaching next week, prep it!
- If you just finished microteaching: Write up reflection and turn it in (no rush)
- Complete WTL on assessment ideas for your unit
Week 13 - Tuesday, 21 Nov
Before class
- Complete reading
- Don't forget to do the WTL in CourseSite!
- Work on final assignments
- If you're microteaching, prep! If you already went, work on your reflection!
During class (ppt)
- Microteaching – see CourseSite for who is going tonight, and don't forget to fill out the learner response form (!) linked in CourseSite
- Discussion of alignment map
- Topic for tonight: Inclusion
- Some review / refresh / organization
- Some instructional tactics
- Simplifying language: I'm drawing from https://teachinghistory.org/ here, specifically this document: https://teachinghistory.org/sites/default/files/adapting_documents-john_smith.pdf
- Sheltered Instruction: I learned about this through the Iris site from Vanderbilt's Peabody College: https://iris.peabody.vanderbilt.edu/wp-content/uploads/pdf_activities/independent/IA_Understanding_Sheltered_Instruction.pdf
- Using graphic organizers – lots and lots of sources for this, but I'm using
- (RAFT materials – see the 'Inclusion materials' folder in CourseSite)
After class
- Reading
- Pick one of the two multilingual learner pieces (Cruz & Thornton, 2009 or Zehler, 1994)
- Look through folder of inclusion materials
- Assignments
- Work on end-of-semester assignments! (Fieldwork paper, HTCE interview & report, instructional unit), but nothing is due next week unless...
- If you're microteaching, prep your lesson!!
- If you just finished microteaching, write up a reflection and email it to me! Not a rush, just do it in the next week or two
- Complete WTL on accommodating your diverse learners
Week 14 - Monday, 28 Nov
Before class
- Work on end-of-semester assignments!
- If you're microteaching, prep your lesson!! If you finished, write up your reflection and email it to me!
- Complete WTL
During class (ppt)
- Microteaching! Just one person up tonight; don't forget to look in CourseSite for the feedback form
- Conceptual work: Economics education ...and integration
- Closure
After class
- Reading
- Skim through Econ standards in CourseSite
- Read Maxim, Ch. 11 (econ ed)
- DOWNLOAD the econ ed resources and save them – you’ll need them at some point in your career!
- READ at least one of the econ ed resources
- Assignments
- Work on end-of-semester assignments! (Fieldwork paper, HTCE interview & report, instructional unit), but nothing is due next week unless...
- If you just finished microteaching, write up a reflection and email it to me! Not a rush, just do it in the next week or two
- BRING IN SOMETHING FROM YOUR UNIT TO SHOW-AND-TELL NEXT WEEK
Week 15 - Monday, 5 Dec
Before class
- Bring in show-and-tell for your unit!
- If you haven't already, write up & submit microteaching reflection
- Complete & turn in end-of-semester assignments
- Complete reading
- Download econ ed resources
During class (no ppt)
- Checking in on end-of-unit assignments
- Show-and-tell time!
- One last soapbox moment from me: Science and social studies should be friends!
- Slides
- Interactive map I'll use to unpack the cholera outbreak / analysis / resolution
- Bringing us to closure on our semester
- (Brief discussion of the importance of ritual / marking transitions)
- Prompts for us
- Why become a teacher?
- What will help you stay a teacher for all or most of your working career?
- And a silly ritual that I like to employ at the end of classes
After class
- Wrap up final assignments! Get them turned in!