Eastern
College of Arts and
Sciences
NCSS/Social Studies
Education
XI. Matrix
Matrix Item 1.4 Theme Four: Individual Development and Identity
Social Studies
teachers should possess the knowledge, capabilities, and dispositions to organize
and provide instruction at the appropriate school level for the study of
Individual Development and Identity.
Indicators of
Capabilities for Teaching Social Studies
Teachers of Social Studies at all school levels should provide
developmentally appropriate experiences as they guide learners in the study of
ideas associated with individual human development and identity. They
should:
* assist learners in
articulating personal connections to time, place, and social/cultural systems;
* help learners to
identify, describe, and express appreciation for the influences of various
historical and contemporary cultures on an individual’s daily life;
* assist learners to
describe the ways family, religion, gender, ethnicity, nationality,
socioeconomic status, and other group and cultural influences contribute to the
development of a sense of self;
* have learners apply concepts, methods, and theories about the study of
human growth and development, such as physical endowment, learning, motivation,
behavior, perception, and personality;
* guide learners as
they examine the interactions of ethnic, national, or cultural influences in
specific situations or events;
* enable learners to
analyze the role of perceptions, attitudes, values, and beliefs in the development
of personal identity;
* have
learners compare and evaluate the impact of stereotyping, conformity, acts of
altruism, and other behaviors on individuals and groups;
* assist learners as
they work independently and cooperatively within groups and institutions to
accomplish goals;
* enable learners to
examine factors that contribute to and damage one’s mental health and analyze
issues related to mental health and behavioral disorders in contemporary
society.
1.4 Theme Four:
Individual Development and Identity
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 Individual Development and Identity.
1.4.1 Programmatic Evidence
For Social Studies, History, Economics, Political Science and
Geography majors, this theme is addressed in five ways:
1. All students are required take EDPS 322. This course studies childhood psychology from birth
through adolescence with a focus on intellectual and psychosocial behavior and
the role of parents and teachers in fostering learning and development. This
course is approximately 50% human development, birth through adolescence, and
50% information on learning and motivation. There is considerable focus on the
impact of cultural and other environmental factors on development and learning.
The required assessment is a group
diversity project that requires students to work together to research the
impact of specific variables on learning (race, gender, sexual orientation,
etc.) and the types of school interventions that can enhance learning.
2. EDPS 322 has a co-requisite field experience in which students
visit a Comer school in
3. All students must take SPGN
251 Teaching Exceptional Children. This class in the Department of
Special Education teaches about the development and needs of students with a
variety of exceptionalities (both educational disabilities and gifts and
talents). It includes information on appropriate classroom adaptations.
4. All students are required to take SOFD 328 Schools in a Multicultural Society. This course examines
social, political, and economic influences on schooling and emphasizes the
teacher’s role in preparing diverse students to succeed in school and
participate in a democratic society.
5. The topics of individual identity are also addressed in the
Social Studies Methods Class, HIST 481.
For psychology majors, this theme is addressed in the following
six ways:
1. In the psychology major, this theme is addressed in the
following required classes, and the following electives:
PSY 101 or PSY 102 (General Psychology)
PSY 205 (Quantitative Methods)
PSY 301 (Experimental Psychology)
PSY 453 (History and Systems in Psychology)
The objectives of PSY 101
and PSY 102 include:
Upon completion of this course students will:
1. Demonstrate knowledge of a general overview of different areas,
principles and theories of psychology.
2. Demonstrate a basic knowledge of psychological systems and
their applications to daily life.
3. Demonstrate basic abilities to integrate principles and
applications of psychology.
4. Demonstrate knowledge of the following concepts and topics in
psychology: Historical Foundations, Different Approaches of the last century, Learning Principles: Behaviorism, Classical. Conditioning,
Operant Conditioning, Observational Learning, Personality: Differences between
people, Psychoanalysis, Personality: Humanism, Personality: Social-Cognitive
Theory, Personality: Trait Theory, Social Influence of Behavior, Social
cognition (thinking, Brain Physiology, Sensation & Perception,
Consciousness: Sleep, Consciousness: Drugs, Stress & Illness, Clinical
Psychology: Depression, and Personality Disorders.
The objectives of PSY
205 include:
Students will be able to:
1. Describe, analyze and apply mathematical and statistical
techniques which psychologists employ.
2. Describe, analyze and apply basic mathematical concepts and
descriptive statistics, and inferential statistical procedures.
3. Apply statistical techniques in the context of research
examples
4. Students will be able to describe and apply the following
concepts: Frequency Distributions, Percentiles and Graphs, Measures of Central
Tendency and Dispersion, Measures of Dispersion and the Standard Normal
Distribution, Probability, Correlation, Regression and Prediction, Statistical
Inference: Single Samples, Statistical Inference: Two-Sample Case, Two Factor
ANOVA, and Statistical Inference with Categorical Variables.
The objectives of PSY
301 include:
Students will be able to:
1. Describe, analyze and evaluate psychology research.
2. Describe, analyze and evaluate the different methodologies
employed by psychologists (e.g., descriptive, experimental).
3. Apply the American Psychological Association's ethical and
manuscript preparation guidelines.
4. Apply search skills in the psychological literature (library skills!),
and the application of statistics in the research process.
5. Apply SPSS to analyze data.
6. Generate their own research proposal.
The objectives of PSY 453
include:
Students will be able to recall and apply:
1. Concepts of psychology in pre-20th century philosophy, science,
and culture.
2. Developments in psychology in
3. Concepts and theories such as Psychology in Ancient Greece, the
Structuralism, William James: Forerunner of Functionalism, Functionalism,
Modern Associationism, Early Behaviorism, Gestalt Psychology, Field Theory,
Psychoanalysis, and Later Behaviorism (Guthrie, Hull, Kantor, Skinner,
Bandura).
All psychology majors must also take a series of restricted
electives to give them a broad base in the different psychological methods and
approaches. These include one class on Adjustment and Psychology, one class in
Biological psychology, one class in Learning and Motivation, one class in
Developmental and Social Psychology and 2 more open electives. A list of
classes for each restricted elective is below:
Restricted electives (take one course from each group):
Group A: Adjustment and personality
PSY 360 Abnormal psychology
PSY 451 Dynamics of personality
Group B: Biological psychology
PSY 357 Sensation and perception
PSY 457 Physiological psychology
PSY 458 Comparative animal behavior
Group C: Learning and motivation
PSY 304 Learning
PSY 356 Motivation and emotion
Group d: Developmental and social
PSY 321 Child psychology
PSY 309 Social psychology
Electives:
Two more psychology courses in areas that are relevant to your
goals: some electives commonly taken:
PSY 203 Self analysis and control
PSY 207 Psychology of adjustment
PSY 240 Psychology of sex
PSY 242 Psychology of women
PSY 322 Psychology of adolescence
PSY 351 Industrial psychology
PSY 365 Behavior modification
2. All students are required take EDPS 322. This course studies childhood psychology from birth
through adolescence with a focus on intellectual and psychosocial behavior and
the role of parents and teachers in fostering learning and development. This
course is approximately 50% human development, birth through adolescence, and
50% information on learning and motivation. There is considerable focus on the
impact of cultural and other environmental factors on development and learning.
The required assessment is a group diversity project that requires
students to work together to research the impact of specific variables on
learning (race, gender, sexual orientation, etc.) and the types of school
interventions that can enhance learning.
3. EDPS 322 has a co-requisite field experience in which students
visit a Comer school in
4. All students must take SPGN
251 Teaching Exceptional Children. This class in the Department of Special
Education teaches about the development and needs of students with a variety of
exceptionalities (both educational disabilities and gifts and talents). It
includes information on appropriate classroom adaptations.
5. All students are required to take SOFD 328 Schools in a Multicultural Society. This course
examines social, political, and economic influences on schooling and emphasizes
the teacher’s role in preparing diverse students to succeed in school and
participate in a democratic society.
6. The topics of individual identity are also addressed in the
Social Studies Methods Class, HIST 481.
1.4.2 Test Evidence
Grade evidence for Social Studies majors:
|
Grade range |
SPGN 251 |
RDNG 311 |
Psy 101 |
EDPS 322 |
SOFD 328 |
|
A to A- |
19 |
23 |
4 |
18 |
15 |
|
B- to B+ |
5 |
1 |
2 |
5 |
9 |
|
C- to C+ |
0 |
0 |
1 |
2 |
0 |
|
D- to D+ |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
|
E |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
|
Transfer credit granted (not below C) |
1 |
0 |
18 |
0 |
1 |
Grade evidence for history majors:
|
Course |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
EDPS 322 |
a- |
a |
a |
a- |
a |
c+ |
a- |
B+ |
a- |
b- |
a |
|
|
SOFD 328 |
A |
b |
a- |
a- |
a |
b- |
b- |
a- |
a |
b+ |
b |
|
|
RDNG 311 |
A |
a |
a |
a |
a- |
a |
a |
a |
a |
a |
b+ |
|
|
PSY 101 |
cr |
cr |
a |
cr |
a |
d |
c |
cr |
cr |
cr |
c+ |
|
|
SPGN 251 |
b- |
b+ |
a- |
b+ |
b+ |
b+ |
b+ |
b |
a- |
b |
c |
|
Grade evidence for political science majors
|
Course |
Student grades |
|
||
|
EDPS 322 |
B+ |
A- |
||
|
SOFD 328 |
B+ |
Not yet taken |
||
|
RDNG 311 |
A |
Not yet taken |
||
|
PSY 101 |
CR |
A |
||
|
SPGN 251 |
B |
CR |
||
Grade evidence for geography majors
|
Course |
Student grades |
|
||||||||||
|
EDPS 322 |
|
B+ |
a- |
A |
||||||||
|
SOFD 328 |
|
A- |
|
A |
||||||||
|
RDNG 311 |
|
A |
|
A |
||||||||
|
PSY 101 |
|
b- |
|
A |
||||||||
|
SPGN 251 |
|
B+ |
B |
A |
||||||||
Grade evidence for psychology majors
|
Course |
Grade |
|||
|
PSY 101 |
B |
|||
|
SPGN 251 |
B+ |
|||
|
PSY 205 |
C+ |
|||
|
PSY 301 |
C |
|||
|
PSY 453 |
B |
|||
|
EDPS 322 |
A |
|||
|
SOFD 328 |
A- |
|||
|
RDNG 311 |
A |
|||
State test data for psychology:
Of the four 2002-3 graduates with a major in Psychology for
Secondary Education, four student took the Psychology
MTTC, and received scores of 236, 239, 244, 248. The passing score for the MTTC
is 220. This equals a pass rate of 100%, as compared to a state pass rate of 79%.
State test data for Social Studies
Of the twenty two 2002-3 graduates with a major in History for
Secondary Education, seventeen student took the Social Studies MTTC, and
received a scores of 217, 220, 228, 228, 236, 241, 247, 255, 257, 263, 267, 268,
271, 271, 276, 276, 276. The passing score for the MTTC is 220. This equals a
pass rate of 94% for the exam, as compared to a state rate of 78%.
1.4.3 Performance
Evidence
Students scored as follows on the supplemental evaluation form on
this strand:
|
Score |
Social Studies |
History |
Political Science |
Geography |
|
5- Excellent |
1 |
1 |
1 |
0 |
|
4 – Very Good |
2 |
1 |
0 |
2 |
|
3 Average |
6 |
2 |
0 |
0 |
|
2 Minimally acceptable |
3 |
1 |
0 |
0 |
|
1 Inadequate |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
|
N Not applicable to this student |
6 |
5 |
1 |
1 |
Note: Neither psychology nor economics had any students complete
student teaching in Winter 2003 when the supplemental
form was instituted.