Eastern Michigan University

College of Arts and Sciences

 

NCSS/Social Studies Education

 

XI. Matrix

 

 

2.0 DISCIPLINARY STANDARDS

 

Matrix Item 2.1 Disciplinary Standard: History

 

Teachers who are licensed to teach history at all school levels should possess the knowledge, capabilities, and dispositions to organize and provide instruction at the appropriate school level for the study of history.

 

Indicators of Capabilities for Teaching History

 

Teachers of history at all school levels should provide developmentally appropriate experiences as they guide learners in their study.  They should:

 

*        assist learners in utilizing chronological  thinking so that they can distinguish between past, present, and future time; can place historical narratives in the proper chronological framework; can interpret data presented in time lines and can compare alternative models for periodization;

*        enable learners to develop historical comprehension in order that they might reconstruct the literal meaning of a historical passage, identify the central questions addressed in historical narrative, draw upon data in historical maps, charts, and other graphic organizers; and draw upon visual, literary, or musical sources

*        guide learners in practicing skills of historical analysis and interpretation, such as compare and contrast, differentiate between historical facts and interpretations, consider multiple perspectives, analyze cause and effect relationships, compare competing historical narratives, recognize the tentative nature of historical interpretations, and hypothesize the influence of the past;

*        assist the learners in developing historical research capabilities that enable them to formulate historical questions, obtain historical data, question historical data, identify the gaps in available records, place records in context, and construct sound historical interpretations;

*        help learners to identify issues and problems in the past, recognize factors contributing to such problems, identify and analyze alternative courses of action, formulate a position or course of action, and evaluate the implementation of that decision;

*        assist learners in acquiring knowledge of historical content in United States history in order to ask large and searching questions that compare patterns of continuity and change in the history and values of the many peoples who have contributed to the development of the continent of North America;

*        guide learners in acquiring knowledge of the history and values of diverse civilizations throughout the world, including those of the West, and in comparing patterns of continuity and change in different parts of the world;

*        enable learners to develop historical understanding through the avenues of social, political, economic, cultural history, and the history of science and technology.

 

 

2.1 History

 

 

The program prepares Social Studies teachers who possess the knowledge, capabilities and dispositions to organize and provide instruction at the appropriate school level for the study of History.

 

 

2.1.1 Programmatic Evidence

 

 

Students in the History for Secondary Education major must complete the following:

 

1. All students in the history program complete 36 credits of a history major, in which students take coursework in United States, European, and World History. All students complete a class in Historical Research and Writing, in which they write a substantial research paper utilizing primary and secondary sources.

 

2. Courses for the history major include GEOG 107 or Introduction to Geography, and GEOG 110, World Regions, which provide the geographic underpinning for the study of history.

 

 

GEOG 107: Introduction to Geography

 

 

      Objectives for this class include:

 

 

 

1). Students will be able to analyze the spatial information about people, places, and environments in a spatial context;

 

2). Students will be able to describe the physical and human characteristics of places;

 

3). Students will be able to interpret the past, present and to plan for the future;

 

4). Students will be able to ask questions and to acquire, organize, and analyze geographic information so they can answer geographic questions as they engage in the study of substantive geographic content;

 

5). Students will be able to describe and apply basic geographic concepts.

 

6). Students will be able to use maps and other geographic representations, tools, and technologies to acquire, process, and report information from a spatial perspective;

 

7). Students will be able to use Geographic Information Systems (GIS).

 

8). Students will be able to describe and analyze the physical processes that shape the earth’s surface;

 

 

 

                     i.  Geologic time

 

                    ii.   Movements of continents

 

                   iii.    Earth materials

 

                    iv.   Tectonic forces

 

                    v.    Gradational/erosional  processes

 

 

 

9). Students will be able to describe how human actions modify the physical environment;

 

10). Students will be able to analyze how physical systems affect human systems.

 

11). Students will be able to analyze processes that affect weather and climate;

 

12). Students will be able to analyze how weather and climate affect human systems.

 

13). Physical Geography - Environmental Geography

 

14). Students will be able to describe the characteristics and spatial distribution of ecosystems on the earth’s surface;

 

15). Students will be able to describe how human interactions modify the environment;

 

16). Students will be able to examine the changes that occur in the meaning, use, distribution, and importance of resources.

 

17). Students will be able to describe the characteristics, distribution, and migration of human population on the earth’s surface and describe the processes, patterns, and functions of human settlement;

 

18). Students will be able to describe and analyze the characteristics, distribution, and complexity of the earth’s cultural mosaics;

 

19). Students will be able to describe how culture and experience influence people’s perceptions of places and regions.

 

20). Students will be able to use mental maps to organize information about people, places, and environments in a spatial context.

 

21). Students will be able to describe and analyze world political systems and  how forces of cooperation and conflict among people influence political division and control.

 

22). Students will be able to describe world economic systems;

 

23). Students will be able to describe the patterns and networks of economic interdependence on the earth’s surface and the changes that occur in the meaning, use, distribution, and importance of resources.

 

24). Students will be able to describe and analyze urban settlement patterns on the earth’s surface and the processes, patterns, and functions of human settlement.

 

25). Students will be able to describe and analyze the characteristics, distribution, and complexity of the earth’s urban settlements.

 

26). Students will be able to apply the concept of regions as a means to interpret the earth’s complexity.

 

 

GEOG 110 World Regions, has the following outcomes/objectives that are sought for each of the world realms.

 

Objectives for this class include:

 

 

1). Students will be able to describe and analyze the concepts of realms and regions as means to geographically interpret the earth's complexity.

 

2). Students will be able to describe and analyze how physical systems affect human systems.

 

3). Students will be able to describe and analyze the spatial information about people, places, and environments around the world.

 

4). Students will be able to describe and analyze the physical and human characteristics of places.

 

4). Students will be able to describe and analyze how culture and experience influence people's perceptions of places and regions.

 

5). Students will be able to describe and analyze the characteristics, distribution, and complexity of global cultural mosaics.

 

6). Students will be able to describe and analyze patterns and networks of economic interdependence on Earth's surface

 

7). Students will be able to describe and analyze how the forces of cooperation and conflict among people influence the division and control of the earth's surface.

 

8). Students will be able to describe and analyze how geography can be used to interpret the past and present and to plan for the future. Regions studied include: Europe, North America, Asia, Africa, Australia, and South America.

 

 

 

3. All history majors take HIST 102, Western Civilization, 1648 to World War I, whose objectives include to learn about the major aspects, trends, and events of modern Western Civilization, and to acquire analytical and critical historical thinking skills.  Major themes of the class are the secularization of what had been a largely religious society, the rise of rationalism in both the Scientific Revolution and Enlightenment, the development of absolute monarchy on the continent, contrasted with limited government in England, the revolutionary era, the rise of nationalism and industry in the 19th, socialism in both its utopian and Marxist variants, the rise of European culture to a position of world dominance, and the outbreak and course of what the world would call “The Great War.”

 

4. All history majors are required to take HIST 103, 20th-Century Civilization. This course is an examination of the international developments of the 20th century, with particular emphasis on the interactions between the West and other world cultures. Objectives of the class include providing a general understanding of the major events that shaped the twentieth century world from a variety of perspectives.  More practical goals include developing students’ critical abilities and allowing them to ask historical questions about why things happened and not just what happened.  Students should also develop an increased sense of how to explore and understand the way people with different experiences look at the world.

 

5. All majors are required to take HIST 123, The United States to 1877, or HIST 124, The United States, 1877 to the Present.

 

Objectives for these classes include students’ ability to understand relationships between an individual, his or her culture and society, and the international world.  Its focus is upon how ordinary Americans navigated their ways through the various transformations that created and changed the American landscape and American minds.  Part of the goal of the course is for students to synthesize the experiences of ordinary Americans with larger forces in the society and the world.

 

6. All History for Secondary Education majors must also take six hours of history courses 300 level or above in two of the following areas and three hours in the remaining area, thus providing a wide variety of history experiences:

 

 

A. United States and Canada

 

B. Europe

 

C. Latin America, Africa, Asia, History of Religions.

 

 

7. All History for Secondary Education majors must take HIST 300, “Methods of Historical Research and Writing,” which includes instruction and assessment of students’ abilities to critically use primary sources to construct a cohesive narrative about an historical issue of their choice. This class includes instruction in research methods and on taking multiple perspectives into account in the writing of history.

 

8. All History for Secondary Education majors must take HIST 481, in which they learn the national history standards, as devised by the National Center for History in the Schools and the history section of the Michigan Curriculum Framework. They also learn and apply the state’s history themes, a list of key concepts and events in American and Michigan history. The class includes instruction, models, and resources in the teaching of history. The class also includes instruction in assessment of history, including project-based learning, national (Advanced Placement), and state (Michigan Education Achievement Program) assessments.

 

 

2.1.2        Test Evidence

 

Grade Evidence for the History Major:

Required courses:

Course

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Geo 110

C

cr

a

cr

cr

b-

b-

b

cr

cr

cr

His 103

cr

cr

a

cr

cr

b

a-

b+

cr

c

c+

His 102

c+

a

a-

cr

cr

b

c

c+

cr

cr

b

HIS 300

a-

a-

a-

a-

b-

a-

a-

c+

b

c+

b+

 

Elective courses:

Courses in Major

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

His 123

cr

A-

c+

a

a-

b

a

 

 

 

cr

His 124

cr

A

a-

b

a

 

a

 

 

 

b-

His 303

 

 

 

 

 

b-

 

c+

 

 

c

His 313

a-

 

a

b+

 

 

a-

 

a

b+

 

His 301

 

 

a

 

 

 

 

b

 

 

 

His 305

 

 

a

 

 

b-

a-

 

a

b

b

Hist 315

 

a-

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Hist 319

a-

 

 

 

 

a-

 

 

 

 

 

His 321

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

b+

His 324

 

 

 

a-

c+

 

 

 

 

 

c+

His 323

 

 

a-

a

 

 

 

 

 

 

b

His 328

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

d+

His 330

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

a

 

 

His 333

 

a

 

b-

 

 

 

c

 

c

 

His 336

a-

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Hist 339

b+

 

 

 

 

b+

 

 

 

 

 

His 342

 

a

 

 

 

 

b-

 

 

c

 

Hist 343

d+

a-

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Hist 362

 

 

 

 

b

 

 

 

 

 

 

His 348

c+

 

 

 

 

 

 

b

a

b

 

Hist 375

 

 

a

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

hist 379

 

 

 

 

 

b

a-

 

 

 

 

Hist 383

 

 

 

b+

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Hist 411

 

 

 

 

b+

 

 

 

a-

 

 

Hist 425

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

b-

 

 

 

Hist 426

 

 

 

 

b+

 

 

 

 

 

 

Hist 441

 

 

 

 

 

d+

 

 

 

 

 

Hist 457