Friday, December 10, 2010

Social Studies comes to an end...... for now!

If you would have asked me at the beginning of the semester what I thought about Social Studies I would probably have said that it was one of those boring subjects I had to take in elementary school.  After having this Social Studies class this semester I have seen this subject in a whole new light. 
In America today Social Studies is becoming a thing of the past.  Why would we want to leave out information that has led to our country being what it is today?  I feel as a teacher that it is my duty to create a classroom that incorporates as much social studies into every lesson as possible.  I also do not want to teach just from the text.  This term I have learned many techniques such as living history museum, role playing, and story paths as great interactive lessons to get students engaged into the class. I feel the more involved in a subject a student is the more knowledge they will take in.
I also want to have a culturally responsive classroom.  I want my students to know about each other’s backgrounds.  I want students to be aware of what is going on around the world.   I also feel that students have the right to be taught what is correct, not what we are told to teach.  This is where my critical voice comes in.  As an educator, if I feel that my students are not getting the correct information, then it is my duty to speak up.  I do not want to lose my job my first year as a teacher but I also do not want my students to lose out on their education. My solution would be to teach what I am told but incorporate more into the lessons.  I also want to know what my students want to learn about.  If you cannot get student interested teach something they are curious about. What better way to grab their attention!
The most memorable activity that I participated in this semester would have to be when we used balloons.  We were all given a balloon and wrote something that people typical believed but was incorrect.  An example is “people who work at McDonald’s are not stupid”. After everyone presented their balloons we all popped them.  In one moment we were able to change 17 different misconceptions about people.  What a great activity this could be in a classroom.  This does not just relate to social studies it relates to life. I want my students to be able to look past each other’s differences and see how the many different cultures that encompass our country and their community. 
In the end when I think about Social Studies today, in my classroom it is just as important as reading, math, and science. Our students deserve a balanced education; this will lead them to be well balanced human beings.  They will be the people who lead our country in the future.  We are the people to teach them what they should learn.

Monday, December 6, 2010

Social Studies in America

This weekend we were given an article to read about how Social Studies is being left out of our students curriculum.  We are creating a society of dumb civilians. We no longer have students who are proud or knowledgable about this country.  We as educator need to fight for the rights of our students to be educated properly.  Yes math and reading is vital but social studies is needed for our student to become well rounded people !!!

Saturday, November 27, 2010

Living history museum

Next week we are going to do an activity called Living Museum. Everyone has to pick an important person in history and act like them.  I have chosen to be Sandra Day O'Connor, the first woman to be seated on the supreme court. She was elected in 1981, the next female supreme court justice was not apointed until 1993.  I am anxious for Monday's class to see how our museum unfolds. 

Sunday, November 21, 2010

Book Talks

This week in social studies we all had a to give a book talk.  Earlier on in the semester we all had to choose a chapter book to read during the semester.  I chose to read Esperanza Rising.  I really enjoyed this book. The story was easy to read and follow.  This would be a great multicultural book for middle school students.  Through the book talk session I able to preview many other books wich I can use in my future classroom.  I am not a big reader, however I enjoyed being pushed outside of my box.  In order to be a good teachers I need to be aware of what books are out there for my students to read.  I also need to know what books my students should not read! 

Sunday, November 14, 2010

Story path shines

This week in social studies we worked on a storypath.  We spent one day learning about Mount
Everest and the many different positive and negative aspects of the expeditions that occur there.  On the second day we all created our own character and created a climbing scenario.  We created the mountain, camps, supplies, climbers and the skyline.  This was a neat way to give everyone the ability to create themselves into a character for the story.  We were able to choose between climber or sherpa.  After we designed our characters we designed posters to represent our purpose for being on the mountain.  There were many reasons such as money, thrill, livelyhood, and cleaning crew.  This will be a great activity for students in the classroom.  This allowed us to have a more hands on learning experiance which all students need more of.  I plan on implementing storypaths into my curriculum.  :)

Sunday, November 7, 2010

Photo Diaries

This past week we went over photo diaries in class.  We all had to take pictures and relate them to our teaching strategies in social studies.  At first I though this was going to be a horrible assignment because you had to think outside the box. I am not typically the kind of person who thinks outside the box, so I was a litttle nervous.  However I loved the assignment.  I really enjoyed having to think of ways to express myself through pictures.  It was also really enjoyable to see how others in my class expressed themselves.  I can see how using a photo diary could work well in a classroom setting.  Having your students work together to create such a project could be a great way to teach social studies or other subjects.  I hope to find ways to icnorporate this into my classrroom.  Only if I survive block first!!!

Saturday, October 30, 2010

Geocaching!

This week in class we learned about geocaching.  This is a website that tracks where people place items in random places. You can find all of these places by using GPS.  This is a great tool for a classroom to show how to use latitude and longitude.  It is amazing to learn how many different locations this cache is located in. We located one on ETSU campus and found it difficult to find. It was really well hidden! I can see how so many people find this addicitng.  I plan to do some geocaching myself this summer when I finally have some free time.  You can check it out at http://www.geocaching.com/.