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2008 History and Social Science Standards of Learning: Using Student Engagement To Support Active Learning and Assessment January 2013. We need to approach social studies instruction differently. No longer is memorizing the facts enough.
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2008 History and Social Science Standards of Learning: • Using Student Engagement To Support Active Learning and Assessment • January 2013
We need to approach social studies instruction differently. • No longer is memorizing the facts enough. • While students still need to know the basic facts, they also need to be able to • apply the essential skills, • make connections, • compare and contrast, • analyze primary sources, • interpret maps and charts, and • organize information in flow charts and time lines. • Teachers need to focus on "doing history" not just "knowing history."
2008 History and Social Science Standards of Learning Curriculum Framework • The Curriculum Framework amplifies the Standards of Learning by defining the content understandings, knowledge, and skills that are measured by the Standards of Learning assessments. Each Standard of Learning includes at least one framework page divided into four columns that include: • essential understandings; • essential questions; • essential knowledge; and • essential skills.
Assessment items may be drawn from any of the four columns and items may not and should not be a verbatim reflection of the information presented in the Curriculum Framework.
Teaching Strategies to Support Rigor and Student Engagement • Using inquiry methods to help students seek their own answers • Finding ways to make learning relevant to the real world • Using content vocabulary to show understanding • Integration of technology • Construction of understanding • Using Backwards Design in lesson planning • Helping students learn strategies they need to attack challenging text, detect bias, gather relevant information, and decide how to put what they’ve learned to work in a useful way
Skills in Virginia Studies VS.1 The student will demonstrate skills for historical and geographical analysis and responsible citizenship, including the ability to identifyand interpret artifacts and primary and secondary source documents to understand events in history; b) determinecause-and-effect relationships; c) compare and contrast historical events; d) draw conclusions and make generalizations; e) make connections between past and present; f) sequence events in Virginia history; g) interpret ideas and events from different historical perspectives; h) evaluate and discuss issues orally and in writing; i) analyze and interpret maps to explain relationships among landforms, water features, climatic characteristics, and historical events.
History and Social Science Assessments Released Items for History and Social Science 2013 – complete test in the spring 2011 - 7 sample items per test 2007 – complete test 2003 – 10 sample items per test
2008 History and Social Science Standards of Learning Assessment and Blueprint Information There have been no changes to the number of items or the test format. Technology enhanced items (TEI) are not included in the history and social science tests. Each test continues to include items that have a range of difficulty; however, the overall rigor of the tests has increased. Approximately 50 percent of the questions on the new tests require students to apply knowledge, compare information, or analyze and interpret information in order to respond to the item.
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Thank you! • Please contact me if Ican be of any • further assistance! Betsy Barton, History and Social Science Specialist E-mail: Betsy.Barton@doe.virginia.gov With acknowledgment to Dr. Beverly Thurston, retired history and social science coordinator, who assisted with this presentation.