Title: social studies -- you
1social studies -- youll need our help!Argument
writing in history and social studies
- Mark Stout, Coordinator of Advanced Programs
Secondary Social Studies - ELA Retreat -- October 5, 2011
2Goals
- Develop an awareness of recent developments in
best practices for history and social studies - Increase understanding about the natural
connections between Language Arts and Social
Studies - See examples of how social studies teachers are
implementing argument writing and engaging
students with complex text.
3History and Social Studies
- Take a moment at your tables and generate 2 or 3
buzzwords typically associated with history and
social studies instruction. - Feel free to be brutally honest!
4Going, going,...
- Giving notes from powerpoint presentations...
- This is important, write this down...
- Read pages 56-67 in your textbook and answer...
- Complete the worksheet...
...OK, not gone, but a lot less prevalent.
5New History Instruction
- Based on research about how students understand
history and read historical documents - Research is primarily from fields of History
Education (Wineburg, VanSledright, Levstik,
Barton), and Reading/Language Arts Education
(Guthrie, Afflerback, Torney-Purta) - Students show interest and learn history best
when it is taught as an investigative process --
like the practices of real historians
6New History Instruction
- Research coincided with the introduction of
Teaching American History Grants - Has influenced both instruction and instructional
materials unlike any other movement in social
studies
Students read and analyze primary and secondary
sources to develop interpretations of historical
events, and then conduct evidence-based
argumentative writing to support their
conclusions.
7Social Studies is primarily the application of
language arts and critical thinking skills to
specific concepts and content
8Historical Thinking Skills
- Sourcing (Who?, When?, Bias?)
- Contextualizing (Imaging, Historical or Cultural
Context) - Corroborating (Cross-Checking, Evidence
Triangulation) - Close Reading (Critical Reading, Tone, Language
Usage)
Reading Like a Historian Stanford History
Education Group
9What is History?
- Accounts/narratives different depending on
perspective - We rely on evidence to construct account of the
past - We must question the reliability of evidence
- Any single piece of evidence is insufficient
- We must use multiple sources to build a plausible
account
Reading Like a Historian Stanford History
Education Group
10Sourcing
- Who wrote this?
- What is the authors point of view?
- Why was it written?
- When was it written?
- Is the source believable?
Reading Like a Historian Stanford History
Education Group
11Contextualizing
- What else was going on?
- What was it like to live in this time?
- What things were different?...the same?
- What would it look like to see this event through
the eyes of someone who lived back then?
Reading Like a Historian Stanford History
Education Group
12Corroboration
- What do other pieces of evidence say?
- Am I finding the same information everywhere?
- Am I finding different versions? Why?
- Where else could I look to find out about this?
- What evidence is most believable?
13Close Reading
- What claims does the author make?
- What evidence does the author use to support
those claims? - How is this document supposed to make me feel?
- What words of phrases does the author use to
convince me? - What information does the author leave out?
Reading Like a Historian Stanford History
Education Group
14Comparing Sources
- Conduct a close reading of the two textbook
excerpts about the Boston Massacre - In what ways do the authors attempt to influence
the reader? - Which source would you consider more reliable?
Why? - Are textbooks reliable sources?
15(No Transcript)
16Argument Writing Quick Cards
17What do we think this looks like in social
studies?
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20Instructional Support Materials
- At your tables, examine the instructional
materials - What kinds of skills are students expected to
demonstrate? - Describe how these materials support the
systemwide initiative of argument writing
21Historical Investigations, DBQs, History Labs
- Essential Question
- Use Historical Thinking Skills to Examine,
Evaluate, Analyze, and Interpret Sources - Develop a claim based on the evaluation of
evidence - Support claim with evidence from sources
- Address counterclaims with evidence from sources
22Questions and Comments...