Content to Classroom

Virginia Council for the Social Studies
Content to Classroom

In each episode of Content to Classroom, a Virginia Council for Social Studies podcast, host, Sam Futrell, interviews historians, politicians, journalists, and educators on topics related to social studies and social studies education. The result is an engaging and authentic discussion that will leave teachers feeling empowered to try something new.

  1. Tips and Tricks for Applying to Summer Professional Development Programs

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    Tips and Tricks for Applying to Summer Professional Development Programs

    Are you a teacher looking to participate in professional development this summer? Want to make the most out of your summer as a teacher? Don’t feel overwhelmed by the application process. We can help Our panelists - Ben Boyce with the Jack Miller Center, Sarah Harris with the National Constitution Center, and Jeff Scott with the Freedoms Foundation - are insiders with nationally renowned institutions who share with us their firsthand experiences and all the tips you need to get accepted into the program of your dreams!  Register for the 2023 VCSS Conference! NEH Institutes Freedoms Foundation at Valley Forge offers summer teacher workshops each year at their Valley Forge campus. Join the over 14,000 educators who have enriched their knowledge and their classrooms through our critically acclaimed and accredited seminars. For over 50 years, teachers like you have connected with our course content taught by extraordinary scholars and thinkers. This March the Foundation will offer complimentary acceptance to one lucky attendee at the VIrginia Social Studies Conference in Richmond. Register to attend the conference: https://sites.google.com/view/vcss-2023-conference/home?authuser=2 Summer Workshop Link: https://www.freedomsfoundation.org/teachers/ The National Constitution Center recognizes not only the importance of primary sources, but also the importance of engaging with teachers across the nation. Throughout the year, and particularly during the summer months, NCC offers their Summer Educator Institute series. Every summer, the National Constitution Center hosts educators from across the country in its summer institute series, bringing together top educators and ideologically diverse constitutional scholars. Through both weeklong in-person sessions and three-day virtual sessions, educators work with content experts throughout these programs to deepen their knowledge of constitutional topics and their historical contexts and modern understandings. While working with teacher facilitators and the Center's education team, participants discover and develop innovative, nonpartisan ways to make the content relevant to their students. Educators gain new content knowledge, teaching tools, classroom-ready resources, and skills for improving constitutional literacy. Summer Educator Institute Link: https://constitutioncenter.org/education/professional-learning-opportunities/summer-educator-institutes The Jack Miller Center website offers a variety of resources for learning more about American political thought and development. These include articles, videos, useful websites, and fellows’ publications. Each summer the Center builds and provides collegial-level educational opportunities for teachers to engage in academic discussions relating to political and governmental topics. The incentive to support educators is derived from the will to build a movement of civic educators to reach the next generation with the principles of equality, liberty, and opportunity that lie at the heart of the American political tradition. Summer workshop offerings will be available soon on the Jack Miller Center website. Jack Miller Center Link: https://jackmillercenter.org/

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  2. Depth by Design: Using Deeper Learning Elements in Social Studies

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    Depth by Design: Using Deeper Learning Elements in Social Studies

    Current trends in social studies education, including within Virginia, point towards deeper learning experiences as the north star of desired practice. In 2015, the Virginia Department of Education (VDOE) revised curriculum framework for social studies introduced a standard dedicated to history and social science thinking skills. Emphasizing the use of disciplinary concepts and a pedagogy centered on inquiry, Virginia’s future embraces constructivist pedagogies and the use of performance assessments to demonstrate student learning.  The shifts are polar opposites of what many VA. teachers have been used to since the early 21st century. In turn, rote memorization and teacher centered instruction continue to be held as markers of successful and valuable teaching and learning.  The alternative to this approach is a pedagogy of deeper learning.   Realizing deeper learning practices in classrooms, however, is ultimately a local, classroom, phenomenon. How a teacher enacts a curriculum, therefore, is where practice intersects with policy. To this end, successful implementation of deeper learning practices involves the following six outcomes: 1. use of inquiry through student generated questions 2. constructivist approach  where students generate meaning and understanding 3. use of disciplinary concepts as part of student learning 4. connections are made to the student’s life or to the contemporary world 5. authentic demonstration of learning by students 6. time to reflect on how the content impacted their understanding of themselves or the contemporary world. Craig Perrier is the High School Social Studies Curriculum and Instruction Specialist for Fairfax County Public Schools in Fairfax, VA. He is also an adjunct professor for the teacher certification program Educate VA and with Framingham State University. .  Previously, he taught at American Schools in Brazil for six years and for six years in public schools in Massachusetts. After leaving the classroom, Craig was the Coordinator for Curriculum and Instruction for Social Studies and History at Virtual High School and then the PK-12 Social Studies Coordinator for the Department of Defense Dependent Schools.  He has consulted with IREX, IIE, iEARN, The Global Campaign for Education, ABC-Clio, The World History Project, and the U.S. Department of State Office of the Historian. In addition, Craig has a M.A. in Global History, M.Ed in Education Leadership and  is pursuing his doctorate in Education Leadership  He presents at regional and national conferences, and is the creator of the free online teacher resource "U.S. History in a Global Context." Links for this episode:  Globalizing US History https://sites.google.com/view/globalizing-u-s-history/home?authuser=0 Ready to Use VT Routines  https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1CvIpxTN0X9LxEaq5tKQAG3q59RAGh4XU?usp=sharing Harvard Project Zero: http://www.pz.harvard.edu/thinking-routines#WithArtOrObjects  Register for the VCSS Conference, March 24-25, 2023! https://sites.google.com/view/vcss-2023-conference/home?authuser=2

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    Bonus Episode! Discussing the War in Ukraine with CEUTTSS at Virginia Tech

    Today's episode explores the War in Ukraine with Dr. Yannis Stivachtis and Colin Baker from the Center for the European Union and Transatlantic Transeuropean Space Studies at Virginia Tech.  Visit the CEUTTSS website: https://liberalarts.vt.edu/research-centers/ceuttss.html  Links from today's episode: 1) BBC lengthy story on the turning points in history and how Feb 24th is now one of these: https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-60767454 (March 19th) 2) https://movingwriters.org/2022/03/08/7-ways-to-get-students-writing-about-the-war-in-ukraine/  3) European History educators site, Euroclio, with a wealth of context and huge amount of resources and lesson plans: https://padlet.com/EuroClio_Secretariat/13ck4n4khw4voyxq?mc_cid=03ce0aaf9e&mc_eid=d8839c893c (March 18th, updated every week or so) 4) New York Times article and podcast (transcript available) on Putin/Russia by Ukraine/Russia expert Timothy Snyder - great context and depth: https://www.nytimes.com/2022/03/15/podcasts/transcript-ezra-klein-interviews-timothy-snyder.html (March 15th) 5) For real depth, Synder's books on Ukraine/Russia and democracy are invaluable: "Bloodlands" (1930s/40s eastern Europe), 2016 and "The Road to Unfreedom"  6) Borders and Self-determination: Crimea https://historiana.eu/historical-content/viewpoints/borders-and-self-determination-crimea?fbclid=IwAR0m-xCa8mHZ3C6bq86HKZoMIcdomCCZIwnB8XTF5lobXMqkKnU24l8auTQ 7) European and other news outlet reports on Ukraine - including articles in the original language (Frech, German etc...so may be of interest to World Language teachers and others) https://www.eurotopics.net/en/276651/ukraine-crisis-between-war-and-peace?fbclid=IwAR0m-xCa8mHZ3C6bq86HKZoMIcdomCCZIwnB8XTF5lobXMqkKnU24l8auTQ 8) Choices Program: https://www.choices.edu/teaching-news-lesson/unrest-in-ukraine/ 9)  How Ukraine became Ukraine, in 7 maps https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/worldviews/wp/2015/03/09/maps-how-ukraine-became-ukraine/?fbclid=IwAR2AJymT9uKJwVYCI-Wi6Ca7qaCqAgtqLQWWaSSi66mGLd2kKyEN7R2iCHc

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In each episode of Content to Classroom, a Virginia Council for Social Studies podcast, host, Sam Futrell, interviews historians, politicians, journalists, and educators on topics related to social studies and social studies education. The result is an engaging and authentic discussion that will leave teachers feeling empowered to try something new.

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