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Social Studies Today
DOI link for Social Studies Today
Social Studies Today book
Social Studies Today
DOI link for Social Studies Today
Social Studies Today book
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ABSTRACT
Social Studies Today will help educators—teachers, curriculum specialists, and researchers—think deeply about contemporary social studies education. More than simply learning about key topics, this collection invites readers to think through some of the most relevant, dynamic, and challenging questions animating social studies education today.
With 12 new chapters highlighting recent developments in the field, the second edition features the work of major scholars such as James Banks, Diana Hess, Joel Westheimer, Meira Levinson, Sam Wineburg, Beth Rubin, Keith Barton, Margaret Crocco, and more. Each chapter tackles a specific question on issues such as the difficulties of teaching historical thinking in the classroom, responding to high-stakes testing, teaching patriotism, judging the credibility of Internet sources, and teaching with film and geospatial technologies.
Accessible, compelling, and practical, these chapters—full of rich examples and illustrations—showcase some of the most original thinking in the field, and offer pre- and in-service teachers alike a panoramic window on social studies curricula and instruction and new ways to improve them.
Walter C. Parker is Professor and Chair of Social Studies Education and (by courtesy) Professor of Political Science at the University of Washington, Seattle.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
part |2 pages
Introduction
part |2 pages
PART I Purpose Matters
chapter 2|8 pages
Social Studies and the Social Order: Transmission or Transformation?
chapter 4|8 pages
Why Don’t More History Teachers Engage Students in Interpretation?
chapter 6|12 pages
Authentic Intellectual Work: Common Standards for Teaching Social Studies
part |2 pages
PART II Perspective Matters
chapter 9|10 pages
Education and Diversity
chapter 12|7 pages
Race, Gender, and the Teaching and Learning of National History
chapter 14|8 pages
Building the Civic Potential of Immigrant Youth
part |2 pages
PART III Subject Matters
chapter 15|7 pages
What Can Forrest Gump Tell Us About Students’ Historical Understanding?
chapter 16|7 pages
What Does It Mean To Think Historically . . . and How Do You Teach It?
chapter 20|10 pages
High Quality Civic Education: What Is It and Who Gets It?
part |2 pages
PART IV Global Matters
chapter 23|8 pages
Using Literature to Teach About Others: The Case of Shabanu
chapter 25|8 pages
Around the World with Geospatial Technologies
part |2 pages
PART V Puzzles