HIST502/SOSC401 Syllabus

Montclair State University

Department of History


SOSC 401/HIST 502 Social Studies Teaching Methods


Monday 5:30 to 8:00

University Hall 1010


Contact Information

Professor Jeff Strickland

Email: stricklandj@mail.montclair.edu

Office: 425 Dickson Hall

Office Hours: Monday 4 to 5 PM, Tuesday 2 to 5 PM, & by appointment


Professor Fred Cotterell

Email: cotterellf@mail.montclair.edu

Office: 281 Dickson Hall

Office Hours: Monday 2 to 3 PM, Thursday 5:30 to 6:30 PM, & by appointment


Course Description

This course familiarizes prospective social studies teachers, grades K-12, with pedagogical approaches and innovative teaching techniques needed to convey to a diverse population current state and professional standards-based curriculum in the social studies. Innovative uses of technology, development of instructional units, individualizing for students with special needs, and strategies for managing problem behavior will be emphasized throughout the course.


Course Objectives

· You will examine and reflect on the relationships between curriculum, instruction, and assessment in Social Studies classrooms with a particular view to multicultural context, content, and process.

· You will examine and analyze curricular and pedagogical practices for educational significance, integration of history, geography, political science, and economics, sociology, and psychology, respect for students’ cultures, and contribution to equity and social justice.

· You will design a thematic unit.

· You will acquire practical presentation experience.

· You will enhance your knowledge of social studies content

.

Blackboard Web Site

You are responsible for obtaining course updates and submitting assignments via the Blackboard website http://montclair.blackboard.com/. In addition, you will submit all assignments to Blackboard dropbox. Blackboard confirms when files have been uploaded and sent. Please do not send emails to us requesting confirmation.


Email Accounts

You should activate their university email accounts no later than the first week of class. Failure to do so will result in the inability to log into Blackboard, receive course documents, updates and other messages from us.


Required Readings

James Loewen, Lies My Teacher Told Me

Articles available on Blackboard.


Reading Assignments

You are expected to follow the course outline contained at the end of this syllabus.


Attendance

You are expected attend each class meetings since it is necessary preparation for the final planning unit and each class meeting entails some form of assessment (or preparation for it). It is important that you begin thinking of yourself as a professional, since you will begin teaching soon. If you miss more than one class, you will deduct 15% for each absence thereafter from your final grade average. If you miss more than three classes you will need to retake the methods course (a D is the best grade you could earn).


General Rules

If you arrive after 5:30 PM, you will be marked absent.

If you leave class for longer than it takes to use the restroom, you will be marked absent.

If you attempt to use your cell phone during class, you will be asked to leave the room and marked absent.

If you plagiarize, you will fail the course and we will refer you to the Dean of Students for adjudication.

If you plagiarize, you will be removed from the social studies program.


Reading Quizzes (15%)

You will write a short essay response to a question about the assigned readings during the first five minutes of each class. You cannot make up a quiz without a documented excuse for missing the class.


Primary Documents Lesson Plan (7.5 %)

You will design a lesson based on historical documents located on the Internet and present your findings to the class. Detailed primary documents assignment guidelines will be given in advance of its due date. In preparing your lesson plan, you should provide clear expectations and explicit instructions for your students. You will submit a brief lesson plan on the due date. You are expected to implement the jigsaw method. You should include no less than four documents (one document per group member). In the spirit of the Jigsaw method, each group member will have a specific responsibility in preparing this assignment (presenter is not a specific responsibility).


Historical Geography Lesson Plan (7.5 %)

You will design a history/geography lesson that focuses on historical maps. You should consider the topic, method, and means of evaluation.


Mock Trial Lesson Plan (5 %)

You and your group members will construct a mock trial transcript. You will present the mock trial to the class. Choose a famous trial from Douglass Linder’s “Famous Trials” website at the University of Missouri-Kansas City or some other website. Use the primary sources to develop a trial transcript. You should have at least four main characters and each character should speak at least three times. These are minimums and you can develop a much more elaborate trial if you prefer. Refer to the mock trial guide in the course documents section of Blackboard or the American Bar Association website listed above. Each group will present their mock trial to the class. We will hold three mock trials during class.


Précis on Lies My Teacher Told Me (5 %)

On the week when the class meets to discuss the Loewen, each student will turn in a two-page précis. This can be done in prose, outline system, or with headers. The two-page précis is designed to help you read the book critically for argument, historiographical issues, and provide a "road map" for our discussion. You should address briefly:

(1) The Author's background and other works (search the web, web databases such as "American History and Life," "Historical Abstracts", "World Cat," and the MSU Catalog)

(2) The Historical problem(s) the Author tackles. Pose these problems in the form of a question.

(3) Author's thesis (or theses)

(4) Sources

(5) Genre of History (Social, Cultural, Institutional, Diplomatic, Economic, Intellectual, Political, etc)

(6) Significant findings

(7) Historiographical contribution(s)

(8) Author's Ideological/Methodological Orientation (i.e. Marxist, structuralist, post-structuralist, foucaultian, etc).

(9) The Strengths and Weaknesses of the Book.


Professional Resources (7.5%)

You will complete three two-page summary/reflections of professional publications/resources for the teaching of Social Studies. They will provide you with an understanding of the ideas, rationale, approaches, and strategies in Social Studies curriculum and teaching. You will complete two review/reactions from professional publications and one from the Social Studies in Action PBS series. Reflections and reactions will include the relevancy of the ideas/strategies. You will read/view, summarize and reflect on two full-length articles from two different professional journals of the following three: The Social Studies, Social Education (National Council for Social Studies publication), and History Teacher. The third summary/reflection resource is an online video series from the Annenberg/WGBH series Social Studies in Action at http://www.learner.org/resources/series166.html?pop=yes&vodid=724819&pid=1788#


Instruction Material Analysis (5%)

You will examine and analyze instructional materials created for Social Studies educators. A list of materials, location, and specifics guidelines for this assignment will appear on Blackboard.


Film Lesson (5%)

The public often hears stories about students watching “movies” in their Social Studies/History class. Too often the perspective is that nothing meaningful is happening and that the entire situation is just “filler,” and Social Studies teachers have it easy. Your task is to develop guiding questions that you could use with an associated media clip. Assignment guidelines will appear on Blackboard.


Jigsaw Lesson (7.5%)

You will design a lesson plan based upon the jigsaw method www.jigsaw.org. Detailed assignment guidelines will be distributed in advance.


Final Teaching Unit (20 %)

This assessment represents one of the primary goals of the course. You can include revised work from previous assignments. Detailed unit guidelines will be given in advance of the scheduled due date. In short, you will submit a week-long unit as your final project. You must type your unit with no larger than size 12 font and with one-inch margins all around. In addition, you should provide a title page and bibliography/reference page. The unit must be submitted on the date noted, assignments turned in after then will be considered tardy and penalized a grade and subsequently an additional grade each day late thereafter, e.g. an A to a B, etc. etc.

Unit Plan Proposal

You will submit a two-page Unit Plan Proposal due Feb. 21 at 10PM. If you fail to submit the proposal on this date, you will deduct 10% from your final teaching unit.

Unit Plan Rough Draft

You will submit a rough draft of your unit plan on April 4 at 10PM. If you fail to submit a rough draft, you will deduct 10% from your final teaching unit.


In Class Participation and Discussion (10 %)

You are expected to participate thoughtfully in the discussions. You will earn as much as four 4 points per class. In addition you are expected to attend office hours four times per semester (once per month).


Binder (5%)

Your binder will consist of teaching strategies, handouts, print material, and other resources that you can use in your teaching. You should include materials from your field experience. Assignment guidelines will appear on Blackboard.


Revisions

You may revise any assignment except the final unit. Revisions must be submitted within one week of receipt of the initial grade. You will receive the grade earned on the revised assignment. It is important that you seek advisement on each assignment, rather than submit substandard work. In a case where a student repeatedly submits substandard work, they will receive an average of the grades earned on the initial assignment and the revised assignment. In short, the revision policy is a privilege not a right.


Students with Disabilities

The Services for Students with Disabilities office is located in the Academic Success Center in Morehead Hall (Suite 305). You can make an appointment by calling 973-655-5431. You can visit their website at http://www.montclair.edu/wellness/.


Tolerance to Create a Climate for Civility and Human Dignity
Montclair State University
is committed to the principle that it is everyone's responsibility to foster an atmosphere of respect, tolerance, understanding and good will among all members of our diverse campus community. As an ever-growing pluralistic society, it is fundamental to our institutional mission to create an unbiased community and to oppose vigorously any form of racism, religious intolerance, sexism, ageism, homophobia, harassment, and discrimination against those with disabling conditions. Furthermore, the university eschews hate of any kind and will not tolerate behavior that violates the civil and statutory rights of an individual or group. Within this framework, each of us can feel free to express ourselves in ways that promote openness within a pluralistic and multicultural society. (University Statement on Equal Opportunity, Affirmative Action, and Tolerance)


Academic Honesty—Plagiarism—Cheating (Section 9, MSU Code of Conduct)
Plagiarism is defined as using another person's words as if they were your own, and the unacknowledged incorporation of those words in one's own work for academic credit. Plagiarism includes, but is not limited to, submitting as one's own a project, paper, report, test, program, design, or speech copied from, partially copied, or partially paraphrased work of another (whether the source is printed, under copyright in manuscript form or electronic media) without proper citation. Source citations must be given for works quoted or paraphrased. The above rules apply to any academic dishonesty, whether the work is graded or ungraded, group or individual, written or oral. The following guidelines for written work will assist students in avoiding plagiarism:

(a) General indebtedness for background information and data must be acknowledged by inclusion of a bibliography of all works consulted;
(b) Specific indebtedness for a particular idea, or for a quotation of four or more consecutive words from another text, must be acknowledged by footnote or endnote reference to the actual source. Quotations of four words or more from a text must also be indicated by the use of quotation marks;
(c) A project work shall be considered plagiarism if it duplicates in whole or in part, without citation, the work of another person to an extent than is greater that is commonly accepted. The degree to which imitation without citation is permissible varies from discipline to discipline. Students must consult their instructors before copying another person's work.
Minimum sanction: Probation; Maximum sanction: Expulsion

Grading System

95-100

A

90-94

A-

87-89

B+

84-86

B

80-83

B-

77-79

C+

74-76

C

70-73

C-

67-69

D+

64-66

D

60-63

D-

1-59

F


Course Outline

Date

Week

Topic

Assignment

Readings

Professor

Jan. 26

1

Introduction

Lesson Planning

Social Studies Standards

Select a topic for a primary documents lesson and submit it to the digital dropbox by January 31 at 10PM.

Professional Resource Reflection #1 due Jan. 31

Précis on Loewen, Lies My Teacher Told Me due Feb. 14 at 10PM

Folder 1 for Feb.2

Loewen, Lies My Teacher Told Me for Feb. 23

Strickland

Cotterell

Feb. 2

2

Unit Planning

Historical Thinking

Reading Quiz 1: first five minutes of class. You will respond to a general/thematic question about the readings in Folder 1.

Professional Resource Reflection #2 due to the digital dropbox by February 7 at 10PM

Two-page Unit Plan Proposal due Feb. 28 at 10PM

Folder 2 for Feb. 9

Cotterell

Feb. 9

3

Teaching with Technology

Reading Quiz 2: first five minutes of class

Begin working on primary documents/PowerPoint lesson in computer lab

Folder 3 for Feb. 16

Strickland

Feb. 16

4

Teaching with Primary Documents

Reading Quiz 3: first five minutes of class

Primary Documents Lesson Plan due Feb. 21 at 10PM

Meeting in computer lab

Folder 4 for Feb. 23

Strickland

Feb. 23

5

Beyond the Textbook

Loewen Discussion

Reading Quiz 4: on Loewen

Discuss Loewen

Folder 5 for Feb. 16

Strickland

Mar. 2

6

Teaching with films & photographs

Reading Quiz 5: first five minutes of class

Develop film/photography lesson plan due Mar. 7 at 10PM

Folder 6 for Mar. 9

Cotterell

Mar. 9

7

Collaborative Learning

Design Jigsaw Lesson due March 21 at 10 PM

Folder 7 for Mar. 23

Cotterell

Mar. 16


Spring Break




Mar. 23

8

Teaching Geography

Reading Quiz 6: first five minutes of class

Historical Geography/World History Lesson due March 28 at 10PM

Folder 8 for Mar. 30

Strickland

Mar. 30

9

Teaching World History

Teaching Unit Rough Draft due April 4 at 10PM

Folder 9 for Apr. 6

Strickland

Apr. 6

10

Writing and Assessment

Reading Quiz 7: first five minutes of class

Professional Resource Reflection #3 due April 11 at 10PM

Folder 10 for Apr. 13

Cotterell

Apr. 13

11

Teaching Economics

Analyzing Textbooks

Instructional Materials Analysis due April 18 at 10 PM

Folder 11 for Apr. 20

Cotterell

Apr. 20

12

Teaching Politics & Govt.

Reading Quiz 8: first five minutes of class

Mock Trial Lesson Plan due May 3 at 10PM

Folder 12 for Apr. 27

Strickland

Apr. 27

13

Oral History & other projects

Reading Quiz 9: first five minutes of class

Folder 13 for May 4

Strickland

May

4

14

Discussion & Debates

Reading Quiz 10: first five minutes of class

Teaching Unit due May 9 at 10PM.

Folder 14 for May 11

Cotterell

May 11

15

Student Teaching

Professional Notebook due May 11 in class


Strickland

Cotterell

Friday, September 26, 2008

Compare AND Contrast the current economic crisis with the economic crisis of 1927-1933.

Cite at least one source e.g. newspaper, journal/magazine, tv interview, etc.

Friday, September 19, 2008

What can we learn, if anything, from the article below?

Please consider earlier comments when making your own.
TOP OF THE CLASS
Jun 26th 2008

How to learn the right lessons from other countries' schools

THE children at Kulosaari primary school, in a suburb of Helsinki, seem
unfazed by the stream of foreign visitors wandering through their
classrooms. The head teacher and her staff find it commonplace too--and
no wonder. The world is beating a path to Finland to find out what made
this unostentatious Nordic country top of international education
league tables. Finland's education ministry has three full-time staff
handling school visits by foreign politicians, officials and
journalists. The schools in the shop window rotate each year;
currently, Kulosaari is on call, along with around 15 others. Pirkko
Kotilainen, one of the three officials, says her busiest period was
during Finland's European Union presidency, when she had to arrange
school visits for 300 foreign journalists in just six months of 2006.

Finland's status as an education-tourism hot spot is a result of the
hot fashion in education policy: to look abroad for lessons in
schooling. Some destinations appeal to niche markets: Sweden's
"voucher" system draws school choice aficionados; New Zealand's skinny
education bureaucracy appeals to decentralisers. Policymakers who
regard the stick as mightier than the carrot admire the hard-hitting
schools inspectorate and high-stakes mandatory tests in England (other
bits of Britain have different systems).

But visitors to Finland--and to a lesser extent to South Korea, Hong
Kong, Taiwan, Japan and Canada--are drawn by these countries' high
scores in a ranking organised by the Paris-based Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), a rich-country
think-tank. Its Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA)
tests 15-year-olds from dozens of countries (most recently 56) in
literacy, mathematics and science. Finland habitually comes top; the
others jockey for places as runners-up (see chart).

Such a quest is understandable but misguided, says Alan Smithers, an
expert in cross-border education comparisons at Britain's University of
Buckingham. Importing elements of a successful education system--the
balance between central and local government, the age of transfer to
secondary school, the wearing of school uniforms and so on--is unlikely
to improve performance. "You shouldn't try to copy the top performers
in PISA," he says, "because position in those league tables depends on
lots of other things besides what happens in schools."

Bearing out Mr Smithers's caution is an analysis of Finland's most
recent PISA results, from 2006, by Jarkko Hautamaki and his colleagues
at Helsinki University. They highlight only one big policy element that
could easily be replicated elsewhere: early and energetic intervention
for struggling pupils. Many of the other ingredients for success that
they identify--orthography, geography and history--have nothing to do
with how schools are run, or what happens in classrooms.

In Finnish, exceptionally, each letter makes a single logical sound and
there are no irregular words. That makes learning to read easy. An
economy until recently dependent on peasant farming in harsh latitudes
has shaped a stoic national character and an appetite for
self-improvement. Centuries of foreign rule (first Swedes, then
Russians) further entrenched education as the centrepiece of national
identity. So hard work and good behaviour are the norm; teaching tempts
the best graduates (nearly nine out of ten would-be teachers are turned
down).

Few countries would want to copy Finland's austere climate or sombre
history even if they could (though spelling reform in English might
merit consideration). More instructive, perhaps, is looking not at how
Finland's schools are run, but how decisions about education are made.
As in other European countries, Finland merged specialist academic and
vocational schools into comprehensive ones in the 1970s. The first
point Mr Hautamaki highlights is broad consensus, cautiously but
irrevocably reached. "They simply kept going until they reached
agreement," he says. "It took two years."

Comprehensive schools were introduced in 1972 in the sparsely populated
north, and then over the next four years in the rest of the country.
Matti Meri, a teacher-trainer at Helsinki University, was a teacher at
the time. "Grammar-school teachers were quite afraid of the reforms,"
he recalls. "They used to teach only one-third of the students. But the
comprehensive schools used almost the same curriculum as the grammar
schools had--and we discovered that the two-thirds were mostly able to
cope with it." By the time comprehensives reached the more populous
south, teachers were eager to join in what was clearly a roaring
success.

"What you are planning might be the right thing to do, but if teachers
aren't on board it will be very hard to make anything happen," says Sam
Freedman, the director of education for Policy Exchange, a London-based
think-tank. He points to Canada, where Alberta and Ontario both
introduced major reforms in the 1990s. Alberta's provincial government
won general support for its ideas, and the reforms are now
uncontentious. In Ontario, by contrast, politicians' rhetoric was
confrontational and the teachers' unions bitterly opposed. The current
government is having to work hard to mend fences.

Finland's education reforms may have taken ten years from conception to
full implementation, but they have proved durable: little has needed
changing in the 30 years since. Mr Smithers draws a gloomy contrast
with the permanent revolution that reigns in England's schools.
"Politicians here seem to think that a day without an education
announcement is a day wasted," he says. New policies should build on
previous ones, agrees Andreas Schleicher, the OECD's head of education
research. "In some countries, though, a new government's greatest
ambition is to undo everything its predecessors did."

Mr Schleicher acknowledges that the hopeful, or simply naive, sometimes
rifle through the PISA studies for shiny new education initiatives to
pilfer. But, he says, international comparisons teach a crucial lesson:
what is possible. "In 1995, at the first meeting of OECD ministers I
attended, every country boasted of its own success and its own
brilliant reforms. Now international comparisons make it clear who is
failing. There is no place to hide."



See this article with graphics and related items at http://www.economist.com/world/international/displaystory.cfm?story_id=11622383&CFID=21781489&CFTOKEN=39964909