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AERO SOCIAL STUDIES CURRICULUM FRAMEWORK K-12 STANDARDS AND PERFORMANCE INDICATORS 1 Table of Contents Introduction and Explanation of Framework Components 3 Longstanding Ideas, Renewed Emphasis 3 Inquiry and Social Studies Practices 4 C3 and AERO Framework 5 Table 1: AERO Practices and C3 Dimensions 6 Assessing the Social Studies Practices 6 Table 2: AERO Social Studies Practices and Literacy Connections 7 AERO, International Baccalaureate Diploma Programme, and Advanced Placement 12 K-12 Framework Components 13 Standards, and Performance Indicators 13 K-12 Components of the Framework. 14 Grades K-2 Standards and Learning Progressions 15 Grades 3-5 Standards and Learning Progressions 24 Grades 6-8 Standards and Learning Progressions 33 Grades 9-12 Standards and Learning Progressions 41 High School Elective Courses 56 Appendix A: Literacy in History/Social Studies, Science, and Technical Subjects 66 References 80 2 Introduction and Explanation of Framework Components Project AERO views social studies as a critical school subject that allows students to gain a comprehensive body of knowledge, understandings, and skills that will enable them to better understand the world as it was and currently is and provide them with the tools necessary to become critical and creative thinkers that can solve complex world problems now and in the future. The National Council for the Social Studies (NCSS) defines social studies as: …the integrated study of the social sciences and humanities to promote civic competence. Within the school program, social studies provides coordinated, systematic study drawing upon such disciplines as anthropology, archaeology, economics, geography, history, law, philosophy, political science, psychology, religion, and sociology, as well as appropriate content from the humanities, mathematics, and natural sciences. The primary purpose of social studies is to help young people make informed and reasoned decisions for the public good as citizens of a culturally diverse, democratic society in an interdependent world. The purpose of the AERO Social Studies Curriculum Framework is to provide schools with the foundational components for designing a Kindergarten through Grade 12 aligned curriculum and assessment program that prepares students with the knowledge and intellectual processes, practices, and dispositions to be active, informed, engaged participants in public life. Longstanding Ideas, Renewed Emphasis The authors of the original AERO Social Studies Framework (2002) designed standards which represented enduring ideas in the field and were international in scope. The first version of the Framework included eight K-12 standards with learning progressions in grade bands: K- 2, 3-5, 6-8, and 9-12. The fundamental premise was that the standards remain consistent grade-to-grade, while evidence of learning progresses over time. By design, specific content or course topics were not included, thus allowing schools maximum flexibility to build curricula consistent with their missions and/or specific program needs. During the revision process in 2012, the eight standards remained intact, but in response to requests from schools, the learning progressions were identified for each grade level. This expansion resulted in tighter sequential alignment of skills and related content across the grades. Schools also requested the addition of suggested course and/or content topics to be added. This was done; for example, Grade 1 focused on 3 family as context and grades six and seven on world regions. In addition, Enduring Understandings and Essential Questions were added for each standard to provide focus for student inquiry to be central to the classroom teaching and learning experiences. The 2018-2019 revision process of the AERO Social Studies Framework has maintained the original K-12 standards and learning progressions based on the strength of their substance and their continued viability as the foundation for a robust and rigorous Social Studies curriculum. The Enduring Understandings and Essential Questions for each standard have also remained intact; however, the suggested course study or topics were removed to once again provide schools with greater flexibility when designing curriculum. The process has also recognized the merits of the College, Career, and Civic Life (C3) Framework for Social Studies State Standards (NCSS, 2013), specifically, as it relates to the pedagogical shift to greater emphasis on inquiry in the classroom. Though the focus on inquiry is not new to AERO social studies, this iteration of the framework gives it explicit emphasis. Questioning is key to learning, and by its nature, social studies promotes the use of questions throughout the learning process. As noted in the Scholarly Rationale for the C3 Framework, “A growing body of research on how students learn school subjects such as social studies repeatedly teaches us that students need opportunities to ask questions, pursue answers to those questions under the tutelage of expert teachers who can show them how to discipline their thinking processes, and take part in opportunities to communicate and act on their understandings.” (NCSS, 20). Inquiry and Social Studies Practices In the AERO Social Studies Curriculum Framework, questions play a key role in curriculum design. These questions aid students in the exploration of the disciplines in relation to the standards, while others transcend individual disciplinary categories and allow students to develop the habits of mind required of a social scientist. Social scientists share similar practices which refer to those habits of mind that cross the disciplines of social studies. The term practices is used instead of skills to stress that engaging in social studies inquiry requires coordination of knowledge and skills (NRC, 2012). During the 2018-19 review process, five AERO Social Studies practices were developed, requiring students to: 1. Develop Questions and Plan Inquiries 2. Evaluate the Credibility of the Sources and Relevance of the Information to the Inquiry 3. Construct Coherent, Reasoned Arguments and Explanations 4. Communicate Conclusions From an Inquiry 5. Take Informed Action for the Common Good 4
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