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Primary Sources Online : Learn How Online Primary Sources Can Support Teaching and Learning to Meet Ohio's New Social Studies Standards and Common Core State Standards. Sean McCready Barbara Huntwork Sara Adducchio. Today’s Agenda. 3 Main Goals:. Common Core State Standards.
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Primary Sources Online: Learn How Online Primary Sources Can Support Teaching and Learning to Meet Ohio's New Social Studies Standards and Common Core State Standards Sean McCready Barbara Huntwork Sara Adducchio
Today’s Agenda 3 Main Goals:
Common Core State Standards Before Common Core After Common Core • Students must meet demandes of challenging text • Discipline-specific literacy skills • Allow students to develop independence with challenging text (remove scaffold help) • Emphasize multiple texts • Emphasize print and non-print sources • Evaluate text perspective • Texts require critical reading and writing • Focus on cognitive skills • Leveled text • Teachers provide scoffolds to make challenging texts accessible to students • Emphasize print-based sources • Emphasize comprehending single texts • Emphasize writing as separate subject • Text is neutral source of information http://www.definingthecore.com/training/introCommonCore/html/4_2.html
Primary Sources Text and Non-text based sources • Pictures • Videos • Audio • Newspapers • Magazines • Blogs • Twitter Feeds • Textbook • Journal Article • Literature Review • Facebook Page • Quote • Letter • Charts • Maps • Graphs
Instructional Strategies • (Get ready to take notes)
The Importance of Vocabulary Dr. Robert J Marzano
Top 10 Rules for Using Primary Sources • Choose wisely. • Be prepared. • Model the analysis process. • Ask for evidence. • Listen… and learn.
Top 10 Rules for Using Primary Sources • Encourage, and enjoy the unexpected. • Make student thinking visible. • Know your questions, not the answers. • Keep it simple. • Wait! Give students more time.
Beyond the Bubble- Historical Thinking Stanford University • 1. Engage students with primary sources. • Draw on students’ prior knowledge of the topic. • Ask students to closely observe each primary source. • Who created this primary source? • When was it created? • Where does your eye go first? • Help students see key details. • What do you see that you didn’t expect? • What powerful words and ideas are expressed? • Encourage students to think about their personal response to the source. • What feelings and thoughts does the primary source trigger in you? • What questions does it raise?
Beyond the Bubble- Historical Thinking Stanford University • 2. Promote student inquiry. • Encourage students to speculate about each source, its creator, and its context. • What was happening during this time period? • What was the creator’s purpose in making this primary source? • What does the creator do to get his or her point across? • What was this primary source’s audience? • What biases or stereotypes do you see? • Ask if this source agrees with other primary sources, or with what the students already know. • Ask students to test their assumptions about the past. • Ask students to find other primary or secondary sources that offer support or contradiction.
Beyond the Bubble- Historical Thinking Stanford University • 3. Assess how students apply critical thinking and analysis skills to primary sources. • Have students summarize what they’ve learned. • Ask for reasons and specific evidence to support their conclusions. • Help students identify questions for further investigation, and develop strategies for how they might answer them.
APPARTS Analyzing Documents • Author: Who created the source? What do you know about the author? What is the author’s point of view? • Place and Time: Where and when was the source produced, does this influence the meaning of the source? • Prior Knowledge: What else do you know about this source- symbols? Context? • Audience: For whom was this source created ? • Reason: Why was this source created? • The Main Idea: What point is the source trying to convey? • Significance: Why is this source important?
20 Questions Analysis Game El Général Tunisian Rapper 'When I became a rapper, I wasn't looking for love. I was looking to rap for the good of the people.' —Hamada Ben Amor, 21, better known as El Général, the Tunisian rap star whose song "RaisLebled" is credited with helping inspire the uprising in his country that overthrew President Zine el Abidine Ben Ali. The song, which includes blunt allegations of government corruption, also became the anthem of protesters in Cairo's Tahrir Square
Locating Primary Sources Online • (Get ready to take more notes)
Library of Congress http://loc.gov/library/libarch-digital.html • Historical Documents • Maps • Photos • Audio • Newspapers • Veterans History Project • Links
World Fact Book https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/historical-collection-publications/ • De-Classified Documents for: • Intelligence Community • International Relations • Cold War Topics • Current Maps, Information on World Leaders, Countries, Regions
Gapminder www.gapminder.org • World Trends (Graphs) • Video/Documentaries • Maps • Statistical Information • Labs • Teacher Resources
Worldmapper www.worldmapper.org • Reference Maps • Animated Maps • DATA World Alcohol Consumption
History Investigation http://web.wm.edu/hsi/index.html • Lessons/Primary Sources for:
Internet History Sourcebooks http://www.fordham.edu/halsall/ • Compilation of sources for: • Ancient History • Medieval History • Modern History • Internet Citation Guides • Help Guides • *Minor web rot*
Historical Texts http://history.hanover.edu/project.php#ea • HUGE database of historical texts • Ancient, Medieval, Modern History • Global and US
Teach Global Education www.teachglobaled.net
Reading Like A Historian http://sheg.stanford.edu/rlh
Scoop-It http://www.scoop.it/ • Method to curate your finds • Collect resources
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