Social Studies Curriculum, Instruction, and Assessment Plan
Social Studies Curriculum, Instruction, and Assessment Plan
Social Studies Curriculum, Instruction, and Assessment Plan
Social Studies
World History and Geography United States History and Geography Civics Economics
Course Offerings
9
World History and Geography 1 credit , 2 semester course, graduation requirement, MME curriculum
10
U.S. History and Geography (1870 to the present) 1 credit , 2 semester course, graduation requirement, MME curriculum
11
Government and Economics .5 credit, 1 semester course each, graduation requirement, MME curriculum
12
Global Issues 1 credit , 2 semester course, elective course, NOT a graduation requirement
World History & Geography assists students in development of understanding of world wide events, processes, and interactions among the worlds people, cultures, societies and environments.
U.S. History & Geography from 1870 to the present provides the student with historical understanding of key events of the 20th century. The course will help the student understand the origins, development, growth, and challenges of our institutions and our culture. Government introduces the students to the form and functions of the federal, state and local government in the United States. The course will concentrate on an examination of our democratic government and the political process. Through this course on economics, students will further their economic knowledge and decision making skills to better participate in a global economy. Students will describe and demonstrate how economic forces affect consumer and producer decisions. Global issues is a thematic course addressing contemporary global concerns of the 21st century. Issues to be studied include interdependence, weapons proliferation and conflict, nationalism, human rights, peacemaking and peacekeeping, international trade, poverty, population issues and the environment.
We will take a closer look at Februarys Unit of Instruction. If you were an administrator walking into our US History class today, you will see instruction for HSCE 7.1.2
Unit of Instruction
SS - HSCE P. 43
The Great Depression The New Deal
Unit of Instruction
HSCE: 7.1.2 The Great Depression and New Deal
Formative Assessments
We plan to use formative assessments to check for understanding along the way and guide teacher decision making about future instruction. Formative assessments help us differentiate instruction and thus improve student achievement. We intend for our formative assessments to provide feedback to students so they can improve their performance. Assessments can be administered individually, partnered, in a small group, and as a whole class. Student's need to understand what success looks like and to use each assessment to try to understand how to do better the next time.
Summative Assessments
We will use summative assessments as cumulative evaluations to measure student growth after instruction . They will be given at the end of a course in order to determine whether our long term learning goals have been met. The types of summative assessments used will include:
State-mandated assessments MME, used for accountability for schools (AYP) End-of-unit or -chapter tests
Summative Assessments
Instructional Research Based Strategies 1 - Writing Across the Curriculum 2 - Cooperative Learning Activities 3 - Project based Learning 4 - Classroom Instruction That Works, Marzano (9 Strategies)
5 - A 6 Step Process for Teaching New Vocabulary Terms, Building Academic Vocabulary, Marzono
A writing-to-learn strategy is one that teachers employ throughout and/or at the end of a lesson to engage students and develop big ideas and concepts. Strategy: GIST- Generating Interactions between Schemata and Texts GIST (Cunningham 1982) is a strategy designed to help students learn to write organized and concise summaries. Summaries restate only the authors main ideas, omitting all examples and evidence used in supporting and illustrating points. For students who are at a loss as how to put a reading into their own words, GIST can be used as a step by step method. How to implement: The teacher should begin with modeling the technique by coaching the class through a paragraph. After modeling assign a reading for students to do independently.
Writing Assessments
Project based learning is a hands on approach for students to learn or further understanding of concepts.
It is built upon authentic learning activities that engage student interest and motivation. These activities are designed to answer a question or solve a problem and generally reflect the types of learning and work people do in the everyday world outside the classroom. Project Based Learning is synonymous with learning in depth. A well-designed project provokes students to encounter (and struggle with) the central concepts and principles of a discipline. Project Based Learning teaches students 21st century skills as well as content. These skills include communication and presentation skills, organization and time management skills, research and inquiry skills, self-assessment and reflection skills, and group participation and leadership skills. Project Based Learning is generally done by groups of students working together toward a common goal. Performance is assessed on an individual basis, and takes into account the quality of the product produced, the depth of content understanding demonstrated, and the contributions made to the ongoing process of project realization. Finally, Project Based Learning allows students to reflect upon their own ideas and opinions, exercise voice and choice, and make decisions that affect project outcomes and the learning process in general.
Intervention
What will we do if our students show evidence of struggling? Differentiate Instruction
Unit of Instruction
SS - HSCE P. 43
The Great Depression The New Deal
KC 4 Social Studies
People lost jobs, were evicted from their homes, and ended up in the streets Some people lived in sewer pipes or parks, keeping warm wrapping themselves in newspaper Others built makeshift shacks out of scrap material When these joined together, they became known as shantytowns
Homelessness
Drought in Midwest wreaked havoc on Great Plains. Why did this happen? Farmers from TX to ND broke up the grassland with tractors and planted millions of acres of farmland. This removed the thick prairie grasses. Farmers exhausted the farmland soil and it became unsuitable for growing crops
Conclusion
Review
Feedback Questions