|
|
Showing 1 - 11 of
11 matches in All Departments
Interdisciplinary in nature--combines history, education, political
science, economics, and climatology. Presents climate history,
human history, and climate science in a readable format that avoids
highly technical jargon. Integrates research insights and findings
into a coherent narrative accessible to students.
Interdisciplinary in nature--combines history, education, political
science, economics, and climatology. Presents climate history,
human history, and climate science in a readable format that avoids
highly technical jargon. Integrates research insights and findings
into a coherent narrative accessible to students.
This book empowers teachers to support student activists. The
authors examine arguments for promoting student activism, explore
state and national curriculum standards, suggest activist projects,
and report examples of student individual and group activism. By
offering suggestions for engaging students as activists across the
K-12 curriculum and by including the stories of student activists
who became lifetime activists, the book demonstrates how activism
can serve to bolster democracy and be a component of rich,
experiential learning. Including interviews with student and
teacher activists, this volume highlights issues such as racial and
immigrant justice, anti-gun violence, and climate change.
This book empowers teachers to support student activists. The
authors examine arguments for promoting student activism, explore
state and national curriculum standards, suggest activist projects,
and report examples of student individual and group activism. By
offering suggestions for engaging students as activists across the
K-12 curriculum and by including the stories of student activists
who became lifetime activists, the book demonstrates how activism
can serve to bolster democracy and be a component of rich,
experiential learning. Including interviews with student and
teacher activists, this volume highlights issues such as racial and
immigrant justice, anti-gun violence, and climate change.
Drawing on his widely read Huffington Post columns-rated one of the
top educational blogs in the United States-Alan Singer introduces
readers to contemporary issues in education in the United States.
The issues are presented with a point of view and an edge intended
to promote widespread classroom debate and discussion. Each section
opens with a new topical summary essay followed by a series of
brief essays updated and adapted from Huffington Post columns. The
book includes guest contributions, guiding questions, and responses
to essays by teacher education students and teachers to further
classroom discussion. Education Flashpoints is written in a
conversational style that draws readers into a series of debates by
presenting issues in a clear and concise manner, but also with a
touch of irony and a bit of rhetorical bite. The topics examined in
these essays read like the latest newspaper headlines in the battle
to define public education in the United States.
Blending historical narrative with ideas for engaging young people
as historians and thinkers, Alan J. Singer introduces readers to
the truth about the history of slavery in New York State, and, by
extension, about race in American society. Singer's perspective as
a historian and a former secondary school social studies teacher
offers a wealth of new information about the past and introduces
people and events that have been erased from history.New York, both
the city and the state, were centers of the abolitionist struggle
to finally end human bondage; however, at the same time, enslaved
Africans built the infrastructure of the colonial city. The author
shows teachers how to develop ways to teach about this very
difficult topic. He shows them how to deal with racial
preconceptions and tensions in the classroom and calls upon
teachers and students to become historical activists, conduct
research, write reports, and present their findings to the public.
Teaching to Learn, Learning to Teach uniquely addresses three
problems that frequently concern pre-service and beginning
teachers: classroom control, satisfying state and federal mandates,
and figuring out exactly what is the role of the teacher.
Integrating practical, theoretical, and critical teaching
considerations, it presents a model student-centered approach for
designing lessons, developing personal connections with students,
and building classroom communities: PRO/CLASS Practices (Planning,
Relationships, Organization, Community, Leadership, Assessment,
Support, Struggle). Pre-service teachers are encouraged to
reinterpret the principles and continually redefine them as they
develop their own reflective practice. Changes in the Second
Edition * Updates throughout with attention to the Common Core
State Standards, high stakes testing, the possibilities and
limitations of technology use in the classroom, and preparing for
the job market\ * Fully revised chapter on literacy * New
interviews with teachers * Companion Website: Supplemental
planning, teaching, and assessment materials; 32 extended essays
including a number of the author's widely read Huffington Post
columns; interviews with beginning and veteran teachers; Ideas for
Your Professional Portfolio, Resume, and Cover Letter; Recommended
Websites for Teachers
This updated edition of Teaching Global History challenges
prospective and beginning social studies teachers to formulate
their own views about what is important to know in global history
and why. This essential text explains how to organize curriculum
around broad social studies concepts and themes, as well as student
questions about humanity, history, and the contemporary world. All
chapters feature lesson ideas, a sample lesson plan with activity
sheets, primary source documents, and helpful charts, graphs,
photographs, and maps. This new edition includes connections to the
C3 framework, updates throughout to account for the many shifts in
global politics, and a new chapter connecting past to present
through current events and historical studies in ways that engage
students and propel civic activism. Offering an alternative to
pre-packaged textbook outlines and materials, this text is a
powerful resource for promoting thoughtful reflection and debate on
what the global history curriculum should be and how to teach it.
Drawing on his widely read Huffington Post columns-rated one of the
top educational blogs in the United States-Alan Singer introduces
readers to contemporary issues in education in the United States.
The issues are presented with a point of view and an edge intended
to promote widespread classroom debate and discussion. Each section
opens with a new topical summary essay followed by a series of
brief essays updated and adapted from Huffington Post columns. The
book includes guest contributions, guiding questions, and responses
to essays by teacher education students and teachers to further
classroom discussion. Education Flashpoints is written in a
conversational style that draws readers into a series of debates by
presenting issues in a clear and concise manner, but also with a
touch of irony and a bit of rhetorical bite. The topics examined in
these essays read like the latest newspaper headlines in the battle
to define public education in the United States.
This updated edition of Teaching Global History challenges
prospective and beginning social studies teachers to formulate
their own views about what is important to know in global history
and why. This essential text explains how to organize curriculum
around broad social studies concepts and themes, as well as student
questions about humanity, history, and the contemporary world. All
chapters feature lesson ideas, a sample lesson plan with activity
sheets, primary source documents, and helpful charts, graphs,
photographs, and maps. This new edition includes connections to the
C3 framework, updates throughout to account for the many shifts in
global politics, and a new chapter connecting past to present
through current events and historical studies in ways that engage
students and propel civic activism. Offering an alternative to
pre-packaged textbook outlines and materials, this text is a
powerful resource for promoting thoughtful reflection and debate on
what the global history curriculum should be and how to teach it.
Teaching to Learn, Learning to Teach uniquely addresses three
problems that frequently concern pre-service and beginning
teachers: classroom control, satisfying state and federal mandates,
and figuring out exactly what is the role of the teacher.
Integrating practical, theoretical, and critical teaching
considerations, it presents a model student-centered approach for
designing lessons, developing personal connections with students,
and building classroom communities: PRO/CLASS Practices (Planning,
Relationships, Organization, Community, Leadership, Assessment,
Support, Struggle). Pre-service teachers are encouraged to
reinterpret the principles and continually redefine them as they
develop their own reflective practice. Changes in the Second
Edition * Updates throughout with attention to the Common Core
State Standards, high stakes testing, the possibilities and
limitations of technology use in the classroom, and preparing for
the job market\ * Fully revised chapter on literacy * New
interviews with teachers * Companion Website: Supplemental
planning, teaching, and assessment materials; 32 extended essays
including a number of the author's widely read Huffington Post
columns; interviews with beginning and veteran teachers; Ideas for
Your Professional Portfolio, Resume, and Cover Letter; Recommended
Websites for Teachers
|
You may like...
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R367
R340
Discovery Miles 3 400
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R367
R340
Discovery Miles 3 400
|