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Curriculum

 
 Social Studies:

“BEST PRACTICES”

 

Recommendations on Teaching Social Studies

 

Adapted from: 

Best Practice:  New Standards for Teaching and Learning in America’ Schools by Steven Zemelman, Harvey Daniels and Arthur Hyde

 

Increase

Decrease

In-depth study of topics in each social studies field, in which students make choices about what to study and discover the complexities of human interaction.

 

Emphasis on activities that engage students in inquiry and problem solving about significant human issues.

 

Student decision making and participation in wider social, political, and economic affairs, so that they share a sense of responsibility for the welfare of their school and community.

 

Participation in interactive and cooperative classroom study processes that bring together students of all ability levels.

 

Integration of social studies with other areas of the curriculum.

 

Richer content in elementary grades, building on the prior knowledge children bring to social studies topics; this includes study of concepts from psychology, sociology, economics, and political sciences, as well as history and geography; students of all ages can understand, within their experience, American social institutions, issues for social groups, and problems of everyday living.

 

Students’ valuing and sense of connection with American global history, the history and culture of diverse social groups, and the environment that surrounds them.

 

Students’ inquiry about the cultural groups they belong to, and others represented in their school and community, to promote students’ sense of ownership in the social studies curriculum.

 

Use of evaluation that involves further learning and that promotes responsible citizenship and open expression of ideas.

Cursory coverage of a lockstep curriculum that includes everything but allows no time for deeper understanding of topics.

 

Memorization of isolated facts in textbooks.

 

Isolation from the actual exercise of responsible citizenship; emphasis only on reading about citizenship or future participation in the larger social and political world.

 

Lecture classes in which students sit passively; classes in which students of lower ability levels are deprived of the knowledge and learning opportunities that other students receive.

 

Narrowing social studies activity to include only textbook reading and test taking.

 

Assumption that students are ignorant about or uninterested in issues raised in social studies.

 

Postponement of significant curriculum until secondary grades.

 

Use of curriculum restricted to only one dominant cultural heritage.

 

Use of curriculum that leaves students disconnected from and unexcited about social studies topics.

 

Assessments only at the end of a unit or grading period; assessments that test only factual knowledge or memorization of textbook information.