ABSTRACT

This edited volume showcases work from the emerging field of design-based research (DBR) within social studies education and explores the unique challenges and opportunities that arise when applying the approach in classrooms. Usually associated with STEM fields, DBR’s unique ability to generate practical theories of learning and to engineer theory-driven improvements to practice holds meaningful potential for the social studies. Each chapter describes a different DBR study, exploring the affordances and dilemmas of the approach. Chapters cover such topics as iterative design, using and producing theory, collaborating with educators, and the ways that DBR attends to historical, political, and social context.

part |27 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|25 pages

Design Research in the Social Studies

History, Methodology, and Promise

part I|78 pages

Improving Practice through Iterative Design

chapter 2|27 pages

From Form to Function

Learning with Practitioners to Support Diverse Middle School Students’ Disciplinary Reasoning and Writing

chapter 4|23 pages

Developing Authentic Performance Assessments in a Classroom Mini-Economy

Reflections on the Process of Design

part II|48 pages

Using and Producing Theory

chapter 5|18 pages

Applying theory to problematic practice

Lessons Learned from Two Implementations of a Unit on Gender

chapter 6|28 pages

From Practice to Theory

Ontological Innovation in a Ninth-Grade History Classroom 1

part III|48 pages

Collaborating with Educators

chapter 7|22 pages

Intersecting Goals in an Elementary Social Studies Design Project

Confessional Tales of Teacher and Researcher Relationships

chapter 8|24 pages

Design-Based Implementation Research in a Government Classroom

A Teacher’s Shifting Pedagogy over Four Years 1

part IV|44 pages

Contextualizing DBR Historically, Socially, and Politically

chapter 9|20 pages

Theorizing Context in DBR

Integrating Critical Civic Learning into the U.S. History Curriculum

chapter 10|22 pages

Beyond National Discourses

South Korean and Japanese Students “Make a Better Social Studies Textbook”

part |12 pages

Conclusion

chapter 11|10 pages

Toward Socially Transformative Design Research for Social Studies

A Critical Epistemological Approach