Eastern Michigan University

College of Arts and Sciences

 

NCSS/Social Studies Education

 

XI. Matrix

 

Matrix Item 1.5 Theme Five: Individuals, Groups and Institutions

 

Social Studies teachers should possess the knowledge, capabilities, and dispositions to organize and provide instruction at the appropriate school level for the study of Individuals, Groups, and Institutions.

 

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 interactions among Individuals, Groups, and Institutions.  They should:

 

*        help learners understand the concepts of role, status, and social class and use them in describing the connections and interactions of individuals, groups, and institutions in society;

*        help learners analyze group and institutional influences on people, events, and elements of culture in both historical and contemporary settings;

*        explain to learners the various forms institutions take, and explain how they develop and change over time;

*        assist learners in identifying and analyzing examples of tensions between expressions of individuality and efforts used to promote social conformity by groups and institutions;

*        ask learners to describe and examine belief systems basic to specific traditions and laws in contemporary and historical movements;

*        challenge learners to evaluate the role of institutions in furthering both community and change; guide learner  analysis of the extent to which groups and institutions meet individual needs and promote the common good in contemporary and historical settings;

*        assist learners as they explain and apply ideas and modes of inquiry drawn from behavioral science and social theory in the examination of persistent issues and social problems.

 

1.5 Theme Five: Individuals, Groups, and Institutions

 

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 interactions among Individuals, Groups, and Institutions.

 

1.5.1 Programmatic Evidence

 

Social Studies, history, economics, political science, psychology, and geography majors address this theme in the following ways:

 

1). All students must take at least one class in a social science as part of their basic studies requirement. Choices are as follows:

 

2). All students must take PSY 101/2 as a prerequisite to their teaching program. This course includes elements of social and group psychology, including the topics: Demonstrate knowledge of the following concepts and topics in psychology: Personality: Social-Cognitive Theory, Personality: Social Psychology, Social Influence of Behavior, and Social cognition. These include theories of obedience, conformity, role and status.

 

3). All students must take EDPS 322, Human Development and Learning, which includes instruction in the social development of identity, the effects of group behavior on individuals, and the relationship of culture to cognition. This course includes the following topics in social psychology:

      1. reflective understanding and evaluation of key psychological theoretical explanations of child/adolescent development and human behavior related to learning

2. identifying cognitive and psychosocial characteristics for each developmental stage from pre-school through adolescence as well as developmentally appropriate expectations for each stage

3. analyzing the relationship between psychological theoretical perspectives, multicultural contexts, and the processes involved in teaching and learning

4. recognizing and applying appropriate theoretical perspectives to simulated classroom practice and field observations

5. reflective understanding of critical issues facing students, families and educators in the 2000s, and the implications of these issues on the processes involved in teaching and learning and

6. developing a knowledge, resource and theoretical base which integrates developmentally and multiculturally appropriate practices in educational settings.

 

 

4). All students must take SOFD 328 as part of their professional education program. This class has the following objectives and topics:

          -The sociocultural dynamics of childhood and youth socialization

          -School's relation to processes of social control and maintenance of status quo

          -School's relation to processes of social and cultural change

          -School's relation to prevailing belief systems

          -School's relation to the economic system and other structures of distributed   power and status

-Diversity as a condition of social life

-The foundation of racism and other prejudices (deficit theories of social inequality and related school policies)

-The social organization and practice of schooling as it relates to the lives of children from diverse linguistic, religious, socio-economic, and ethnic backgrounds

-Relationship of social class, race and ethnicity to patterns of educational achievement and school experience

-Relationship of gender and sexual orientation to patterns of educational achievement and school experience

          The course is assed by tests, exams and an analytical paper that is assigned in all sections of the course.

 

5). All students must take PLSC 112/3 which describes and analyzes the institutions of American government and its polity.

 

1.5.2 Test Evidence

Class evidence for Social Studies Students

 

Grade range

Psy 101

EDPS 322

SOFD 328

A to A-

4

18

15

B- to B+

2

5

9

C- to C+

1

2

0

D- to D+

0

0

0

E

0

0

0

Transfer credit granted (not below C)

18

0

1

 

Class evidence for history majors:

Class

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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

PSY 101

cr

cr

a

cr

a

d

c

cr

cr

cr

c+

 

Class evidence for political science majors:

Class

Student

 

EDPS 322

B+

A-

SOFD 328

B+

CR

PSY 101

CR

A

 

Class evidence for Geography majors:

Course

 

Student

 

 

EDPS 322

 

B+

a-

A

SOFD 328

 

A-

CR

A

PSY 101

 

b-

CR

A

 

Class evidence for psychology majors:

Class

Student 1

EDPS 322

A

SOFD 328

A-

PSY 101

B

 

 

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%.

 

1.5.3 Performance Evidence

 

Students scored as follows on the supplemental evaluation form on this strand:

 

Score

Social Studies

History

Political Science

Geography

5- Excellent

3

0

1

0

4 – Very Good

7

1

0

2

3 Average

4

3

1

1

2 Minimally acceptable

0

3

0

0

1 Inadequate

1

0

0

0

N Not applicable to this student

3

2

0

0

 

Note: Neither psychology nor economics had any students complete student teaching in Winter 2003 when the supplemental form was instituted.