Unlocking and connecting standards to the historical narrative.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
PROBLEM SOLVING GROUPWORK and RESPONSE GROUPS. Problem Solving Groupwork Use this strategy when: You want to teach higher-level analytical skills You.
Advertisements

Concept Attainment 10 th Grade American History Concept: Primary Sources.
Clues to W’s Unlocking and connecting standards to the historical narrative. Anthony Fitzpatrick The American Institute for History Education.
What is Kentucky History Day?. History Day is a project- based education program that engages students in the process of discovery and interpretation.
My Family and My Roots: A 9 th Grade Film Project Lowell Blackman Atid Lod High School of Sciences Lod, Israel.
Clues to W’s Unlocking and connecting standards to the historical narrative. Anthony Fitzpatrick The American Institute for History Education.
 Discover websites to facilitate implementation of CCSS.  Be able to explore various websites for new curriculum  Find a resource you will incorporate.
Clues to W’s Unlocking and connecting standards to the historical narrative. Anthony Fitzpatrick The American Institute for History Education.
Title: Review of pages 2, 3 & 5 Page 4. QUESTIONS ANSWERS Review What is archaeology? What is history?  record of past events  science of finding and.
Secondary Sources Start your research with secondary sources to learn the story. Primary Sources Use primary sources as the basis for interpretation. Always.
 Welcome Young Detective!!  You have arrived at the Concord Crime Bureau just in time.  We have a murder that occurred and we need a good young detective.
Introduction to CICERO The BLaST IU17 Liberty Fellowship September 20, 2011 Dr. Fran Macko American Institute for History Education.
LTEC 4100 Computers in the Classroom February 20, 2010 Susanne Shanahan University of North Texas.
Why?. Text 1: Franklin’s Snake Literacy Approach: Prediction Students will view Franklins divided snake published in 1754 during the French & Indian.
Christopher Columbus – Primary Sources. Warm Up - Answer in your warm-up section What was the Columbian Exchange? What invisible item was transported.
A New Era of Collaboration for 9 th Grade & 11 th Grade Teachers.
What do you think you know about Columbus? Columbus sailed the blue in 14 hundred 92… 1492.
1 Writing in the Social Studies Social Studies Department March 10, 2016.
Unit 1 Lesson 1 Gateway Lesson: Essential Question and task.
Using Primary Sources and DBQs
Primary and Secondary Sources
*.
Chapter 2 Exploring the Americas
Hidden Slide for Instructor
Let’s All Learn How to Write a DBQ
Mrs. Anestad English language arts Voyager
Thinking Like a Historian Memorizing Dates vs. Investigating Evidence
Department of social sciences best practices
Primary and Secondary Sources
The 5 Minute Marking Plan
Draw a line in your journal, write the date, and complete this task:
Let’s All Learn How to Write a DBQ
Exploration through Archives
*.
X2VOL Student Login September 2015.
Let’s All Learn How to Write a DBQ
HST 206 RANK Education for Service-- hst206rank.com.
Computers, Technology & Education
Social Studies US History GED Support
Social Studies can be SPECtacular
Grade 7: Module 3: Unit 1: Lesson 2
Introduction to American Patriotism—Studying History Through Literature Two-Column Notes.
Thinking Like a Historian
EXPLORATION & COLONIAL AMERICA
Primary and Secondary Sources
INTRODUCTION TO HISTORY AND GEOGRAPHY
Primary and secondary documents
INTRODUCTION TO HISTORY AND GEOGRAPHY
Integrating Google Classroom into Middle School and High School Education Reed Peterson.
Louisiana: Our History.
A Brief Overview of the Structure of US History this year!
Lesson 2: Primary Sources
Use the image on the next slide to answer the following questions:
Using Video and Technology in the Classroom - Conclusion
Mrs. Anestad English language arts Voyager
Lesson 2: Primary Sources
Using Activate.
Thinking About How You Read
World History Ms. Corson F200 Planning Periods: 2A and 2B
NORTH AMERICAN COLONIES
How to take notes, read, and think like a historian!
9/5/14 Aim: What is history and how do historians construct historical narratives? Do Now: Answer the following questions in your notebook or on a separate.
Directions Grab the SIX sheets of paper off of the computer cart
TEST TAKING SKILLS.
Primary and Secondary Sources
6th Grade SS Back to School Night.
Welcome to Global Studies 10: 9/4/12
Pg 26 Historical Investigation
Welcome to World History!
WARM UP – AUGUST 30TH Using the chart in the guided notes – Answer the following questions 1. Define primary and secondary sources 2. Why are primary sources.
Presentation transcript:

Unlocking and connecting standards to the historical narrative. Clues to W’s Unlocking and connecting standards to the historical narrative.

What are Clues to W’s? Clues to W’s is an activity for your classroom that will allow students to practice using context clues and research skills to connect individuals, groups, events, places and other things in state standards to the larger historical narrative.

We are vexed with a problem - We have to find a way to teach the state standards, but the resources available to us rarely match up – causing a situation where there is some great history that we have to try to find a way to teach AND link it into the national narrative. It’s not only a problem for teachers, so let’s use our classrooms and students to tackle this problem.

How to use Clues to W’s in your classroom. There is planning and investment on the part of the teacher in the beginning of the year. But through careful planning – students will becoming active learners and historical detectives. Exposing students to the 5 w’s has always been a cornerstone in our classrooms. Let’s have the W’s leap off of the page and allow students to immerse themselves into history.

Step 1 Identify a broad theme or topic that you’ll be teaching in class The First Contact Colonial Life The French and Indian War The Declaration of Independence American Revolution

Step 2 Take out your state standards. Identify names, places, events, dates from the standards that correlate to the broad topic or theme.

Are you “limited” by your standards? Of course not! Those names, dates and places that don’t fit naturally into your lessons are great with this strategy. How about those little boxes of information in your textbook? Artists, books, inventions etc.

Step 3 For everything you pull out – find a who, what when, where, why. (for people – link the w’s to the overall event you that they are linked with in the standards) For “Why?” – indicate this persons SPEC significance to local, state and national history

Step 4 Locate and reproduce a source that links the topic to the broad theme: Newspaper article Textbook excerpt Political cartoon Movie/ video Literature image

Step 5 Create a heuristic clue the will allow students to unlock the answers to the “W’s” The “Why?” happens later. You can supply some of the “W’s” to the students to provide some scaffolding.

Step 6 Students will then utilize the worksheet to unlock the clues. The correct answers serve as the passcode. The teacher will check their work and then give them access to the primary source document

Step 7 Students will use the primary source document to link the singular event to the larger historical narrative of local, state, national, and world themes.

Let’s walk through an example and then we can try our hand at this. The ocean blue became a major trade route between old and new when this explorer sought to bring honor to The Bull and his wife and attain the 3 G’s. Look into your “crystal ball” and help his three ships find his “paniola”. Crack the code and use the document to discuss the SPEC significance of this topic.

The Documents: The First Globalization chart representing the Colombian Exchange (CICERO Unit 2->Activities->Historical Maps->The First Globalization) A route map for Christopher Columbus’s voyage. Primary Source: Christopher Columbus’ Letter to the King and Queen of Spain, 1494 (CICERO Unit 2->Primary Sources->Speeches and Correspondence ->Christopher Columbus' Letter to the King, 1494)

The Columbian Exchange is the larger issue. http://santanafrance.wikispaces.com/History+7

Back at home . . . Take a brief moment to look at your standards. (some have more to look through that others) What figures, places, events can you do this with? Any documents you can think of? http://www.dunlapplumbing.com/channels/

Let’s 2.0 it with 21st Century Skills How can we use technology and collaboration to efficiently and effectively solve problems and produce a dynamite finished product? http://www.fasttranslator.co.uk/en-UK_Resources.htm

Collaboration Split up the heuristic clues and assign a piece to one member of a group. Each student is responsible for their piece. They come together and unlock the primary source document and research the significance together.

Further Collaboration Have students create a Clue for W assignment for each other. They check the progress of the other student’s work. **This works better after you’ve modeled it.

2.0 Have students use moodle or a wiki page to leave the clues. Students can submit their answers via the same process. The primary source can be password protected. What else can we do?

The Finished Product What do we want our students to do with this information? How will they present the SPEC significance? Standard Essay, Biography, Newspaper account, political cartoon. Anything else?

Questions, Comments, Suggestions? Are there any ways this activity can be modified? What elements would you use or not use? Could you enhance this or make it more grade-level appropriate? Any other scaffolding methods?

Thank You! Look in your state standards and use them to activate student learning!