Title: CCSS
1CCSS Writing in the Social Studies Classroom
- Maggie Herrick
- Margaret.herrick_at_arkansas.gov
- http//adesocialstudiesplace.pbworks.com
2 CCSS Writing in the Social
Studies Classroom
- Why do my students need to write?
- Where do I begin?
- How do I handle the grading?
- Other questions? Share
3- Civilization has always been based
- on codified norms and recorded through writing.
Writing is the concrete manifestation of
thinking. Writing allows for organization of the
thinking process, cognitive interactions with
content, development of logic, and creative or
unique presentation of how - thinking can be shared.
4- The Standards for Literacy in History/Social
Studies, Science, and Technical Subjects will
require more writing in all classrooms including
social studies.
5Theoretical Foundation
- Dewey - People optimally learn when they are
confronted with substantive, real-life problems
to solve. - Sizer - Studying fewer things in greater depth
achieves greater levels of understanding and more
appropriate learning outcomes
6Theoretical Foundation
- Freire - Problem posing and problem solving
education is the way to teach students to analyze
and act upon their words curriculum must be
relevant to the immediate worlds of the students.
7What Do the CCSS say about writing?
- Handouts at your table look at literacy standards
- What do the Reading standards say about writing?
- Underline or highlight verbs across grade bands
8What Do the CCSS say?
- Look at CCR College and Career Ready Anchor
Standards - Note on range and content of student writing
- Now look at handout from CCSS Appendix A
writing - Table groups look at definitions of types of
writing 3 types special place of argument
note on - argument and persuasion
-
9What Do the CCSS say?
- Go back to the Literacy standards handout pages
64-66 - Look across the grade bands
- What is required of students?
- How do these standards build across grade bands?
10Informational/Explanatory Writing Skills in
history/social studies
- Formulate essential questions
- Use and present research
- Evaluate sources of information
- Differentiate between fact and opinion
11Informational/Explanatory Writing Skills in
history/social studies
- Develop supporting evidence
- Address the issue of significance
- Communicate and present conclusions and
evaluative summaries with logic and reasoning - look at handout glossary terms
12Forms of Writing in history/social studies
- Persuasive/Argumentative writing
- Reflective writing
- Summarizing
- Reporting information
- Letter-writing
- Presentation of ideas and viewpoints
- Narrative
- Synthesizing or developing interrelationships
between events, eras, the disciplines of
history/social studies
13Writing in social studies
- Develop a thesis statement or reasonable
hypothesis based on factual evidence - Present and defend a position with supporting
documentation - Build a persuasive argument or propose a solution
- Write about literature, including
- historical sources and historical
- fiction
14Examples of types of Writing in history/social
studies
- Explain a process
- Narration of a historical event
- Analyze cause and effect connections
- Compare and contrast
- Analyze problems and present solutions
15Examples of expository writing in history/social
studies
- Present and defend a position with supporting
documentation - Build a persuasive argument or propose a solution
- Write about literature, including historical
sources and historical fiction
16Even more examples
- Create visuals to support expository writing
(timelines, graphic organizers, charts, etc.) - Develop a multi-media presentation using
quotations, key ideas, visuals, and conclusive
evidence for specific audience or purpose
17Sample writing tasks in the history/social
studies classroom
- Write a letter to a congressional representative
stating a position - Describe a day in the life of a historical figure
- Outline the similarities and differences of
historical events, eras, cultures, political
regimes, etc. - Summarize a community issue or problem and pose a
solution - Analyze historical cause and effect factors on
the Crusades, Imperialism in Africa, the Boston
Tea Party, the French Revolution, the industrial
revolution, World War I, World War II, or other
historical events - Explain the historical significance of an event
or era - Explain the effects of economic, geographic,
cultural, or political issues in contemporary
society or global relations - Support or present opposition to a law or
regulation - Describe primary sources to support/oppose court
rulings
18Teacher-Directed Class Preparation for the
Writing Process
- Direct instruction on the writing process
- Teacher-directed discussion on expectations and
requirements with particular attention on the
avoidance of plagiarism - Rubric review and examination of samples of
writing - Direct instruction and discussion on how to
research credible sources of information, how to
differentiate secondary from primary resources,
how to evaluate sources of information, and how
to identify bias and opinion
19Teacher-Directed Class Preparation for the
Writing Process
- Modeling of patterns of logic and reasoning
- Identification and teaching of the appropriate
academic vocabulary that applies specifically to
the topic as well as generic words that pertain
to the genre in which students are writing - Provision of adequate time for students to review
and revise for ongoing improvement
20Pre-writing activities for student work in
history/social studies
- Analyze the writing prompt and place it in the
proper context - Determine the purpose
- Consider the audience
- Develop a thesis statement
- Collect, research, and sort information
- Share and discuss knowledge among students
regarding the topic - Evaluate information that is significant,
identify related variables, and determine how to
reconcile seemingly incongruent facts
21Writing the draft in history/social studies
- Develop an outline or graphic organizer into an
essay with an introduction, body and conclusion.
- Start the essay with a hook such as a quotation
or an interesting fact - Direct the reader to the essential question and
the thesis in the introductory paragraph - Develop the thesis in straightforward and concise
wording using opinion authoritatively with
supporting detail - Compare draft outline to assignment or writing
prompt
22- Construct each paragraph with a main idea,
general and specific details (three to four
details), and a transition or conclusion. In the
body of the essay, students should start with the
weakest argument and progress to other questions
raised. - Review the conclusion paragraph for clarity,
specificity, and logic. Rather than offering a
simple summary, the formal history/social studies
essay concludes by restating the thesis and
applying the analysis to a broader context to
show significance. - Review the introduction paragraph for overall
consistency
23Revising, editing, and publishing in
history/social studies
- Provide support over time for ongoing improvement
- Use tools such as word sorting activities,
computerized word banks, or a thesaurus for word
choice variety and specificity - Utilize strategies such as peer review,
read-alouds, and question-the-author - Verify that the message is clear, logical, and
supported - Reread for consistency, coherency, and clarity
- Check for punctuation, complete sentences,
capitals, grammar, and paragraph structure - Review for appropriate and consistent text
features such as font sizes, bold and italicized
print, labels, charts, maps and pictures - Include the source citations, bibliography, and
footnotes in the appropriate format
24Include
- Ways for students to show creativity
- Ways for students to self-evaluate and reflect.
- A variety of ways for students to communicate.
- Ways for students to interact with each other
25Remember to Include
- A variety of ways for the work to be evaluated
- Clearly stated goals and objectives
- Ways for students to research the topic
- Ways to tie the learning to real world
experiences