Teaching With Primary Sources for Cultural Understanding, Civic Mindedness, and Democracy

This resource has been developed for Pre-K–20 educators in order to help students use primary sources to go beyond simple acquisition of content knowledge and rote memorization. The procedures and approaches outlined in this book are designed to be used with Pre-K–20 students to help them use primary sources in discipline and inquiry-based ways to develop and enhance understandings for cultural understanding, civic mindedness, and democracy. Expert authors demonstrate how the skills students learn through this process can be applied to their everyday life and allow them to think critically about the world around them, better understand various cultures, communicate their understandings effectively, and enhance their democratic values. Grounded in the National Council for the Social Studies C3 Framework, topics include social emotional learning, inclusion, higher order thinking, civic agency, project-based learning, democracy-building across cultures, teaching about war, enacting change through intentional civic engagement, and systemic racism in the United States.

Book Features:

  • Chapters by leading experts in the areas of civic education and teaching with primary sources.
  • Guidance for supporting multilingual learners and students with disabilities.
  • Detailed examples of classroom-tested instructional ideas and approaches from educators teaching with primary sources in Pre-K–20 classrooms.
  • Primary sources and links to resources throughout the book.
1144078454
Teaching With Primary Sources for Cultural Understanding, Civic Mindedness, and Democracy

This resource has been developed for Pre-K–20 educators in order to help students use primary sources to go beyond simple acquisition of content knowledge and rote memorization. The procedures and approaches outlined in this book are designed to be used with Pre-K–20 students to help them use primary sources in discipline and inquiry-based ways to develop and enhance understandings for cultural understanding, civic mindedness, and democracy. Expert authors demonstrate how the skills students learn through this process can be applied to their everyday life and allow them to think critically about the world around them, better understand various cultures, communicate their understandings effectively, and enhance their democratic values. Grounded in the National Council for the Social Studies C3 Framework, topics include social emotional learning, inclusion, higher order thinking, civic agency, project-based learning, democracy-building across cultures, teaching about war, enacting change through intentional civic engagement, and systemic racism in the United States.

Book Features:

  • Chapters by leading experts in the areas of civic education and teaching with primary sources.
  • Guidance for supporting multilingual learners and students with disabilities.
  • Detailed examples of classroom-tested instructional ideas and approaches from educators teaching with primary sources in Pre-K–20 classrooms.
  • Primary sources and links to resources throughout the book.
54.95 In Stock
Teaching With Primary Sources for Cultural Understanding, Civic Mindedness, and Democracy

Teaching With Primary Sources for Cultural Understanding, Civic Mindedness, and Democracy

by Scott M. Waring
Teaching With Primary Sources for Cultural Understanding, Civic Mindedness, and Democracy

Teaching With Primary Sources for Cultural Understanding, Civic Mindedness, and Democracy

by Scott M. Waring

eBook

$54.95 

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Overview

This resource has been developed for Pre-K–20 educators in order to help students use primary sources to go beyond simple acquisition of content knowledge and rote memorization. The procedures and approaches outlined in this book are designed to be used with Pre-K–20 students to help them use primary sources in discipline and inquiry-based ways to develop and enhance understandings for cultural understanding, civic mindedness, and democracy. Expert authors demonstrate how the skills students learn through this process can be applied to their everyday life and allow them to think critically about the world around them, better understand various cultures, communicate their understandings effectively, and enhance their democratic values. Grounded in the National Council for the Social Studies C3 Framework, topics include social emotional learning, inclusion, higher order thinking, civic agency, project-based learning, democracy-building across cultures, teaching about war, enacting change through intentional civic engagement, and systemic racism in the United States.

Book Features:

  • Chapters by leading experts in the areas of civic education and teaching with primary sources.
  • Guidance for supporting multilingual learners and students with disabilities.
  • Detailed examples of classroom-tested instructional ideas and approaches from educators teaching with primary sources in Pre-K–20 classrooms.
  • Primary sources and links to resources throughout the book.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780807782392
Publisher: Teachers College Press
Publication date: 03/22/2024
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
File size: 49 MB
Note: This product may take a few minutes to download.

About the Author

Scott M. Waring is a professor and program coordinator for the Social Science Education Program at the University of Central Florida. His books include The Educator's Handbook for Teaching With Primary Sources, Integrating Primary and Secondary Sources Into Teaching: The SOURCES Framework for Authentic Investigation, and Conducting Authentic Historical Inquiry: Engaging Learners with SOURCES and Emerging Technologies.

Table of Contents

Contents (Tentative)

Part I: Introduction to and Strategies for Teaching with Primary Sources

1.  Making the Invisible Visible: Demystifying Sources and Disciplinary Practice
Heather M. Nice

2.  A Culture of Questioning: How to Use Student Questions to Springboard Powerful Primary Source Learning
Sarah Westbrook and Johnny Walker

3.  Strategies for Close Reading With Primary Sources
Melissa Starkey

4.  In Their Hands, Hearts, and Minds: Strategies for Helping Students Touch, Inquire, and Think Deeply Using Primary Sources
Michael M. Yell and GeoffreyScheurman

5.  Building Into Inquiry: Trade Books and Primary Sources to Drive Inquiry-Based Learning
Allie Whitford

Part II: Developing an Environment for Conducting Authentic Inquiries With Primary Sources

6.  Learning About Children’s Lives at the Turn of the Century Through Visual Discovery and SOURCES
Scott M. Waring

7.  Inquiry by Design: Unit Planning to Ensure Authentic Use of Primary Sources
Stefanie Rosenberg Wager

Part III: Applying Disciplinary Tools and Concepts, Evaluating Sources, andUsing Evidence in the Creation of Evidence-Based Narratives  

8.  Pairing Primary Sources with Literature to Improve Critical Reading and Comprehension
Salika A. Lawrence, Nancy Osborn, Marie Donnantuono, and Tiffany Labissiere

9.  Curating Curiosity
Michael Gurlea

10.  What Does “Primary Source” Mean in Science Education?
Loris Chen, Kathy Biernat, Donna Governor, Heather Anglin, and Eric J. Pyle

11.  Using Arts-Based Primary Sources to Connect Students’ Lives to Learning
Catherine Cooney and Erin Elman

12.  Using Primary Sources in the PK–12 Mathematics and Statistics Classrooms
Peter DeCraene

13.  Teaching Economics Using Primary Sources
Stephen Day, Genevieve Podleski, Scott Wolla, and Diego Mendez-Carbajo

Part IV: Emerging Technologies and Primary Sources

14.  Engaging Students With Emerging Technologies
Scott M. Waring and Richard Hartshorne

15.  My Place in History
William Toledo and Esther A. Enright

16.  Using Emerging Technologies to Deepen Instruction With Historical Artifacts

Index

About the Authors

What People are Saying About This

From the Publisher

“Veteran and new teachers in all levels of education will benefit from this impressive collection of classroom resources and tools. Dr. Scott Waring once again proves his determination is strong, as he continuously strives to support educators in his advocacy for the teaching and learning of history. He illuminates opportunities to use primary sources paired with content to enhance the democratic values of our students, empowering and equipping them to be engaged citizens.”
Tammara Purdin, educator and executive director, Florida Council for History Education

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