Remove Education Remove Geography Remove Primary Sources
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Boost Reading Skills with Social Studies: The Key to Stronger Literacy

TCI

Elementary education has traditionally prioritized English Language Arts (ELA) and mathematics, often sidelining social studies. When students engage with history, geography, and civics, they develop the ability to analyze texts, draw connections between concepts, and retain new information more effectively.

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Making Time for Social Studies and Science Without Sacrificing Literacy

TCI

This post explores the barriers to incorporating social studies and science in elementary education and provides actionable strategies to ensure these essential subjects receive the time and attention they deserve.

educators

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The Week That Was In 234

Moler's Musing

Also, if you’re interested in how AI can be used effectively in education, check out an article I contributed to in EdWeek: Can AI Be Used Effectively in Class? This part helped students connect primary source analysis to the broader motivations for European exploration, further deepening their historical thinking skills.

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The Week That Was In 234

Moler's Musing

Simplifying Primary Sources with AI My goal was to simplify the lesson while still helping students build confidence and learn. It was simple but effective, reinforcing both geography and historical knowledge. The language was jargon-filled, dry, and not exactly something an 8th grader doesn’t give a damn about.

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Closing the Digital Learning Gap

Digital Promise

Most Americans agree that education is a national priority. public education system falls in the middle of international quality rankings. But let’s be clear: the problem with education in America is not lack of excellence. Education researchers and neuroscientists are learning more about how people learn.

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If I was teaching Social Studies today…

Dangerously Irrelevant

Some folks know that I started my education career as a middle school Social Studies teacher in Charlotte, North Carolina. We could listen to podcasts on the geography of world cultures from Stanford University. We could learn about maps and the geospatial revolution from a professor at Penn State University. And so on… .

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2022 Kansas Social Studies Conference (Did I mention it’s free?)

Doing Social Studies

So whether you’re wanting to dive deeper into learning about indigenous Identity with Dr. Brandon Haddock, explore geography through the lens of a zombie apocalypse, dive into economic policy, or attend a wide variety of other breakout sessions with teaching strategies to help you “take it up a notch,” we’ve got something for you.