Title: Cracking the Social Studies Essential Standards Code
1 Cracking the Social Studies Essential Standards
Code
- Collaborative Conference for Student Achievement
- Joseph S. Koury Convention Center
- Greensboro, North Carolina
- March 21, 2012
2From ACRE to READY
3Todays Session Includes
- A Essential Standards Implementation Plan of
Action - NCDPI Toolkit Sharing
- A Glimpse into a Ready Classroom
- QA
4K-12 Social Studies Essential Standards
Implementation
- Understanding the Standards
- Developing Local Curricula Frameworks
- Instructional Design
5Standards
Student Achievement
6Understanding the Standards
- Understanding the Cognitive Content Shifts
- Crosswalks of 2006 2010 Standards
- Unpacked Content Documents
- Online Modules (NC Education Portal)
- Glossary of Terms
7The Shifts
- Use of Revised Blooms Taxonomy
- Organization around five broad conceptual strands
- Use of a Conceptual Framework
Image taken from http//www.wired.com/epicenter/
2009/11/singularity-university-decharms/
8- This two dimensional table is used to help
determine the type of knowledge and the cognitive
behavior of the standard/ objective. - The knowledge dimension identified the type of
knowledge to be learned. - The cognitive dimension identifies the which
provides you with the process used to learn the
content.
9The Five (5) Conceptual Strands
- The New Social Studies Essential Standards Are
Organized Around Five (5) Conceptual Strands - The strands provide a framework by which to
organize concepts, generalizations and critical
content that are important for understanding the
disciplines of social studies.
10Conceptual Framework
Essential Understanding / Generalization / Big
Idea
The student will understand that The physical
and human geography of a place contributes to
the identity of a region, community, state,
nation or the world.
11Elementary Shifts
- Kindergarten Citizenship Responsibility
- 1st grade Culture Diversity
- 2nd grade Interdependence Global Economics
- 3rd grade Geography Environmental Literacy
- 4th grade History course focused on North
Carolina History - 5th grade History course focused on United
States History
12The Shifts for Middle Grades
- Sixth and Seventh Grades Integrated World
Studies - Eighth Grade Integrated Study of North Carolina
and United States History - Integration of Common Core Literacy Standards in
History/Social Studies
13The Sixth Grade Shift
Economics and Personal Financial Literacy
Civics and Government
Culture
History
Geography and Environmental Literacy
The Roots of Modern Societies
14Beginnings of Human Society to the Emergence of
the First Global Age (1450)
- Focus World Geography, History Culture
- Patterns of Continuity and Change
- First formal look at a study of the world
- Focus heavily on the discipline of geography
(five themes) - Systematic look at the history and culture
various civilizations, societies, and regions - Various factors that shaped the development of
civilizations, societies and regions in the
ancient world - Comparative study of world regions
- Recognize and interpret the lessons of social
studies transferable ideas
15The Seventh Grade Shift
Geography and Environmental Literacy
History
Civics and Government
Economics and Personal Financial Literacy
Culture
Global Connections
16The Great Global Convergence (1450 - 1800) to the
Present
- Focus World Geography, History Culture
- Patterns of Continuity and Change
- Expansion of knowledge, skills and understandings
about the world from a more modern perspective - Focus heavily on the discipline of geography
(five themes) - Systematic look at the history and culture of
various world regions - Various factors that shaped the development of
civilizations, societies and regions in the
modern world - Comparative study of world regions
- Recognize and interpret the lessons of social
studies transferable ideas - Focus on issues, solutions, and decision-making
17The Geographic Perspective
http//education.nationalgeographic.com/education/
multimedia/geographic-perspective/?ar_a1
18The Eighth Grade Shift
Economics and Personal Financial Literacy
Civics and Government
Culture
History
Geography and Environmental Literacy
Historical Study of NC in the context of the US
19The Shifts for High School
- World History has a focus more on the study of
global history from mid 15th century to present. - American History additional focus on teaching
Founding Principles (legislative act) - Integration of PFL into the Civics Economics
course - Integration of Common Core Literacy Standards in
History/Social Studies
20World History (High School)
- Focus World History has a focus more on the
study of global history from mid 15th
century to present. - WH.H.4.4 Analyze the effects of increased global
trade on the interactions between nations in
Europe, Southwest Asia, the Americas and Africa. - WH.H.5.1 Explain how and why the motivations for
exploration and conquest resulted in increased
global interactions, differing patterns of trade,
colonization, and conflict among nations. - WH.H.6.3 Explain how physical geography and
natural resources influenced industrialism and
changes in the environment. - WH.H.7.6 Explain how economic crisis contributed
to the growth of various political and economic
movements.
21Understanding the Standards
- Understanding the Cognitive Content Shifts
- Crosswalks of 2006 2010 Standards
- Unpacked Content Documents
- Online Modules (NC Education Portal)
- Glossary of Terms
22- This Crosswalk
- can show you the
- cross of the old cognitive
- process with the new
- can help you see type of
- knowledge
- can show you how even
- if the content is the same
- or similar that there are
- differences is in what the
- student is being asked to
- do with the content
- can help you see the
- gaps that may exist where
- content is moved from one
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24Unpacking the Essential Standards
25What type of knowledge?
26For Example
- Clarifying Objective
- 7.G.1.1 Explain how environmental conditions and
human response to those conditions influence
modern societies and regions (e.g. natural
barriers, scarcity of resources and factors that
influence settlement). -
-
Understanding/Generalization The student will
understand that Environmental conditions may
alter human settlement patterns.
27From Concepts to Generalizations
- USH1.H.8.2 Explain how opportunity and mobility
impacted various groups within American society
through Reconstruction (e.g., City on a Hill,
Lowell and other mill towns, Manifest Destiny,
immigrants/migrants, Gold Rush, Homestead Act,
Morrill Act, Exodusters, women, various ethnic
groups, etc.). - What are the stated concepts you see in the
objective? - What are some other concepts that you could teach
from this standard? (implied concepts) - From the concepts, write a generalization
/understanding.
28From Concepts to Generalizations
3.G.1.3 Exemplify how people adapt to, change
and protect the environment to meet their Need.
7.E.1.1 Explain how competition for resources
affects the economic relationship among nations
(e.g. colonialism, imperialism, globalization
and interdependence).
CE.CG.1. Explain how the tensions over power
and authority led Americas founding fathers to
develop a constitutional democracy (e.g.,
mercantilism, salutary neglect, taxation and
representation, boycott and protest,
independence, American Revolution, Articles of
Confederation, Ben Franklin, George Washington,
John Adams, Sons of Liberty, etc.)
29Standards
Student Achievement
30HOW DO YOU BEGIN TO ORGANIZE CONTENT?
- Center around central concepts and
- generalizations, supported by selected facts
- and information.
- Promote student inquiry by using essential or
- guiding questions to lead students to enduring
- understandings or generalizations.
31Major concepts for each Grade
- Continuity and change (over time and in various
civilizations, societies, and regions) - Conflict and cooperation
- Compromise and negotiation
- Migration and population distribution
- Cultural expression/practices and diffusion
- Human-environment interaction
- Trade and economic decision-making
- Societal organization (economic, political, and
social systems) - Technology and innovation
- Quality of life
- Citizenship
32Where to start for 6th Grade?
- National World History Standards
- http//nchs.ucla.edu/Standards/world-history-stand
ards -
- The periodization of the new Essential Standards
for sixth grade social studies is based on the
five eras identified by the National Standards
for World History, -
- Era 1 The Beginnings of Human Society Giving
Shape to World History - Era 2 Early Civilizations and the Emergence of
Pastoral People, 4000-1000 BCE/BC - Era 3 Classical Traditions, Major Religions,
and Giant Empires, 1000 BCE/BC-300 CE/AD - Era 4 Expanding Zones of Exchange and
Encounter, 300-1000 CE/AD - Era 5 Intensified Hemispheric Interactions,
1000 1500 CE/AD
33Integration
34Organizing The Social Studies Standards Into
Curriculum AsUnits Of Instruction
Its A Process!
Step 1 Start with the Essential Standards
(unpack/deconstruct). Step 2 Create an outline
of units you may teach for the entire year.
(includes unit titles and
conceptual lens) Step 3 Draft a brief summary
describing each unit Step 4 Identify Clarifying
Objectives that support each unit. Step 5
Create a Concept/Content web. (can also be used
in developing 8 9) Step 6 Write
Generalizations/Understandings
Step 7 Write Guiding/Essential Questions to
support each understanding/generalization. Step
8 Identify Critical Factual Content. Step 9
Identify Key Skills. Step 10 Align Assessments
to know, skills, and understandings Step 11
Develop Learning Experiences Step 12 Identify
Unit Resources and write any helpful Teacher
Notes
35YEARLY/SEMESTER PLAN OUTLINES
Grade level/Course __________________
Step 3 Create an outline of units you may teach
for the entire year or semester.
3 to 4 units for grades K-3 4 to 6 units for
grades 4-6 5 to 8 units for grades 7-12
36The Seventh Grade Unit Example
- Unit focus The Age of Exploration Reasons and
Impact - Throughout the unit, students could explore the
quest for trade, innovation, power, authority and
wealth among European nations led to increased
global interaction throughout the world.
Included in this inquiry, could be the
implications of these global interactions i.e.
cultural diffusion (goods, religion, cultural
practices, ideas, etc.), colonization, wealth,
slave trading, etc. And, finally, how these
global interaction specifically led to European
exploration and inhabitation of the Americas. - From a more modern perspective, students could
study implications of global exploration today
i.e. exploration for new natural resources, new
source of labor, etc. - What are the big ideas?
37Standards
Student Achievement
38Lets Look at a concept-based classroom
39The Instructional Toolkit
- Priority One Tools
- Crosswalks of 2006 2010 Standards (on web)
- Unpacked Content Documents (on web)
- Priority Two Tools
- Graphic Organizer Exemplars (Draft on web)
- Glossary of Key Terminology (Draft on Web)
- Assessment Samples (Late Spring 2012)
- Other Tools
- Sample Units of Instruction
- Crosswalks with CC Literacy Standards (Summer
2012) - Grade/Course Specific Resources to Support
Instruction (Summer 2012)
40Professional Development Opportunities
- Past Training
- Summer Institute 2011 (6)
- Unit Development Training (3)
- RESA Training - Assessment (8)
- Future Training
- Summer Institute 2012 (6)
- Other Needs?
- Online Modules
- NC Education Portal http//center.ncsu.edu/nc/
41Modes of Communication
- K-12 Social Studies Listserv
- To subscribe , send an email to
Bernadette.Cole_at_dpi.nc.gov with the following
info - your name
- School/district
- grade level responsibility
- Role in your school/district i.e. curriculum
coordinator, teacher - email address
- Wiki Site http//ssnces.ncdpi.wikispaces.net/h
ome - Intel Groups The Community
- ACRE Website
- Webinars Next Session March 27, 20112
- https//www1.gotomeeting.com/register/494279105
42Wiki Site
- http//ssnces.ncdpi.wikispaces.net/home
- Training PowerPoints
- Legislative Updates
- Links to DPI Resources including Professional
Development Wiki site Social Studies Livebinder - FAQ Sheet High School Sequencing Doc
- Much More!
43Intel Groups
- Access the Intel site at http//engage.intel.com
- If you have an account, log-in. If not,
register. - Find any of the group names listed below and ask
for permission to join - NC Social Studies
- NCSBE Region (your region i.e. 1, 2, etc.)
Collaborative (8 groups) - NC Concept-Based Unit Development (3 groups)
44ACRE SITE
- Essential Standards http//www.ncpublicschools.or
g/acre/standards/new-standards/social - Common Core Literacy Standards
- http//www.ncpublicschools.org/acre/standards/comm
on-core/ - Support Tools http//www.ncpublicschools.org/acre
/standards/support-tools/
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46Graduation Requirements
- The new requirement of 4 social studies courses
for graduation will go into effect beginning with
the freshmen entering high school for the first
time during the 2012-2013 school year (see State
Board Policy GCS-N-004 governing Student
Accountability Standards/Graduation
Requirements). The requirements includes World
History, Civics and Economics, American History
I The Founding Principles and American History
II (AH II). Students may take AP United States
History in lieu of AH I and AH II. - For students who are enrolled at an
International Baccalaureate (IB) school, the IB
United States History course may fulfill the AH I
and AH II requirements. (verdict is still out
will have a response in the next week or so )
47American History I II
- Beginning with the 2012-2013 school year,
teachers will teach all social studies courses
using the new Social Studies Essential Standards.
American History is the one exception. If you
offer AH I and AH 2, to freshmen who enter high
school for the first time next year, you must
offer the two American History courses supported
by the new Essential Standards. If you offer
American History to students other than freshmen
entering high school for the first time, you have
the option of teaching the two new American
History courses or the United States History
course supported by the 2006 Standard Course of
Study. This exception is made because students
who were enrolled in high school prior to the
2012-2013 school year were not required to take
four social studies courses for graduation.
48High School Sequencing
49AP Courses
- Students may substitute AP US History for AH I
and AH II, but they are required to take a fourth
social studies course to receive the fourth
credit necessary to fulfill the graduation
requirements for social studies. - Students may continue to substitute AP World
History for the World History requirement. - AP Courses will continue to be offered as
elective options. - AP Government may not be a substitute for Civics
and Economics because it does not cover Econ or
PFL.
50Course Codes Its A Collaboration! The
Curriculum Instruction (CI) Consultant
Contacts and NC WISE Management Team Work
Together
- DPI Curriculum Instruction consultants work to
- Address course code concerns and issues from the
LEA - Research the history of a course that is in the
Utility - Decide if a course can or should be added to the
ESIS and Utility - Decide if a course needs to end or be reopened
- Create new course codes for NEW courses
- Determine if a course should be added with a new
academic level or if an academic level needs to
be given an End Date - Make decisions and recommendations based on NC
General Assembly statutes, NC SBE policy, agency
guidelines and the intent of the curriculum
- DPI NC WISE Management Team works to
- Ensure help desk tickets are appropriately
assigned and addressed - Troubleshoot with CI to address course code
concerns and issues from the LEA - Review and confirm a list of possible codes that
have no history attached to them - Troubleshoot how to set up in the system the
requests from CI - Makes changes and additions to ESIS and the
Utility that are requested by CI - Makes decisions and recommendations based on NC
General Assembly statutes, NC SBE policy, agency
guidelines and the final written responses from
CI
51Circle of Collaboration
52Are You Using This?
Locate The Utility Database At This
Address https//schools.nc.gov/pls/apex/f?p4861
145380498531359NO
53One Of The Most Frequent Challenges Consultants
Address When Issues Come To Curriculum
- The scheduling of students without checking the
utility - The scheduling of students in courses that are
not in the Utility - The scheduling of students in courses that have
end dates in the Utility - The scheduling of students in courses that do not
give them the credit weight they need or expect
54Assessment
- EOCs Pursuant to Session Law 2011-8 House Bill
48 No Standardized Testing Unless Reqd by the
Feds., there will be no End-of-Course testing for
American History or Civics and Economics
effective during the 2011-12 school year. For
specific questions regarding standardized testing
contact Jim Kroening at jim.kroening_at_dpi.nc.gov - Assessment Samples Instructional support
focused on performance based/constructed response
methods - Primary Artifact Questions(PAQs) part of Online
Writing Instruction System (focused on writing in
Social Studies grade 6) - District/School Level Balanced Assessment
System formative, benchmark and summative (more
emphasis placed on formative) - Measures of Student Learning one measure of
teacher effectiveness for Standard 6 of the
teacher evaluation instrument. For questions
additional information contact Jennifer Preston
at jennifer.preseton_at_dpi.nc.gov
55Common Core Standards for Literacy in
History/Social Studies
- Share responsibility between ELA and SS.
- Does not replace content standards for Social
Studies - Embedded skills standards instructional
practice - Focus on disciplinary literacy
56Connecting The Use Of Primary Sources To The
History/SS Common Core Literacy Standards
- Grades 9-10
- Key Ideas Details 9-10
- RH.9-10.1. Cite specific textual evidence to
support analysis of primary and secondary
sources, attending to such features as the date
and origin of the information. - RH.9-10.2. Determine the central ideas or
information of a primary or secondary source
provide an accurate summary of how key events or
ideas develop over the course of the text. - RH.9-10.3. Analyze in detail a series of events
described in a text determine whether earlier
events caused later ones or simply preceded them.
- Craft Structure
- RH.9-10.6. Compare the point of view of two or
more authors for how they treat the same or
similar topics, including which details they
include and emphasize in their respective
accounts. - Integration of Knowledge Ideas
- RH.9-10.9. Compare and contrast treatments of the
same topic in several primary and secondary
sources.
- Grades 11-12
- Key Ideas Details 11-12
- RH.11-12.1. Cite specific textual evidence to
support analysis of primary and secondary
sources, connecting insights gained from specific
details to an understanding of the text as a
whole. - RH.11-12.2. Determine the central ideas or
information of a primary or secondary source
provide an accurate summary that makes clear the
relationships among the key details and ideas. - Craft Structure
- RH.11-12.5. Analyze in detail how a complex
primary source is structured, including how key
sentences, paragraphs, and larger portions of the
text contribute to the whole. - RH.11-12.6. Evaluate authors differing points of
view on the same historical event or issue by
assessing the authors claims, reasoning, and
evidence. - Integration of Knowledge Structure
- RH.11-12.7. Integrate and evaluate multiple
sources of information presented in diverse
formats and media (e.g., visually,
quantitatively, as well as in words) in order to
address a question or solve a problem. - RH.11-12.9. Integrate information from diverse
sources, both primary and secondary, into a
coherent understanding of an idea or event,
noting discrepancies among sources.
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59Instructional Resources
- Textbook adoption slated for 2013/14
- Working this spring to align resources to the new
standards - Continuing/Developing partnerships with various
Social Studies organizations and IHEs that
provide FREE resources - Research and Sharing around the state
60 61- It always seems impossible until its done.
- -- Nelson Mandela
- 20 years from now you will be more disappointed
by the things you didnt do than by the ones you
did. So throw off the bowlines. Sail away from
the safe harbor. Catch the trade winds in your
sails. Explore. Dream. Discover. - -Mark Twain
62NCDPI K-12 Social Studies Team Section
Chief Fay Gore fay.gore_at_dpi.nc.gov Program
Assistant Bernadette Cole bernadette.cole_at_dpi.nc.g
ov Elementary Consultant Vacant Middle Grades
Consultant Vacant High School Consultant Michelle
McLaughlin michelle.mclaughlin_at_dpi.nc.gov