Methods of Addressing Social Studies Instruction Standards - There are 10 themes that form the social studies standards. At elementary and middle school, schools usually address social studies curriculum by teaching a variety of topics from these strands. In high school, it is more specific such as history and civics.
The 10 themes are:
- Culture
- Time, continuity, and change
- People, places, and environments
- Individual development and identity
- Individuals, groups, and institutions
- Power, authority, and governance
- Production, distribution, and consumption
- Science, technology, and society
- Global connections
- Civic ideals and practices
Dilemmas in Teaching Social Studies Effectively
Since many teachers tend to focus instruction primarily on tested topics, social studies is often put on the back burner. The shear amount of material to review creates an ongoing challenge to schools teach social studies in a meaningful way. Adding to this challenge is the role of technology itself. And the issue of costs for high quality resources.
See Top Ten Strategies for Technology in Social Studies Instruction, page 353
Perils of the Information Explosion
The ready availability of information on the Internet has created several concerns for social studies education. First, some believe that Internet information has the potential to alter the traditional relationship between the teacher and the student. (Because the student may find different information on a website.) Schools need to "mobilize their curriculum leaders into quality management" to monitor and help students become more analytical about the information they receive.
Technology Integration Strategies for Social Studies Instruction
Simulated Problem-Solving Environments - lets students interact with simulated models of environments or events - see Figure 12.2 page 356
Graphic Representations - Graphing software and other tools represent abstract concepts in more concrete forms - see Figure 12.3 page 356
Virtual Trips - Some of the same instructional benefits of simulated environments but not as interactive. They send students to Internet locations to supplement or replace real field trip.
Student Telecollaborations - Email and the Internet let students in various locations share diverse perspectives.
Digital storytelling - the use of digital images in social studies can accomplish many purposes:
- Assist students in comparing and contrasting the past and the present.
- Sensitize students to diverse perspectives and biases.
- Provide visual cues and reinforce geographic concepts.
- Represent abstract and concrete social studies concepts.
- Foster skills in analysis and critical thinking.
- Facilitate greater connections to the community.
- Personalize associations with the study of geography, history, economics, government and other related disciplines.
Benefits - images communicate biographies and historical events in ways that make them more real and relevant. **Students need to learn how to analyze images and tell fact from fiction.**
Electronic Research - Since information changes quickly and frequently, Internet sources give students and teachers up-to-date information they could not obtain easily from other sources.
GIS and GPS Lessons - Geographic Information Systems (GISs) house a wealth of information, so the students get a highly graphic way of looking at numerical information, such as population, overlaid on an area map. GPS is Global Positioning System, another system that allows students to look at geography from many different perspectives.
Practice of factual information - Drill-and-practice and instructional game programs are fun, motivational ways to help students remember historical and geographic facts.