1 / 27

“The qualifications for self-government in society are not innate.

Major funding provided by: the National Endowment for the Humanities, Auburn University, Indiana University. “The qualifications for self-government in society are not innate. They are the result of habit and long training.” Thomas Jefferson, 1824. Major funding provided by:

aram
Download Presentation

“The qualifications for self-government in society are not innate.

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Major funding provided by: the National Endowment for the Humanities, Auburn University, Indiana University “The qualifications for self-government in society are not innate. They are the result of habit and long training.” Thomas Jefferson, 1824.

  2. Major funding provided by: the National Endowment for the Humanities, Auburn University, Indiana University John Saye, Cory Callahan Auburn University Tom Brush Indiana University

  3. The PIH Mission • To develop and support a community of master teachers who: • Focus their teaching on developing civic competence • Are skilled in engaging their students in problem-based historical inquiry

  4. Promoting Civic Competence • Preparing informed citizens of a diverse democratic society who can reason together about the public good

  5. Overview of Presentation • Program Rationale • What is Problem-based Historical Inquiry? • Challenges to PBHI Implementation • Affordances of Technology • Examples of PIHNet Learning Environment

  6. PIH Rationale • History’s prominence in 6-12 curriculum demands a focus on civic competence • What are the requirements for civic competence in a constitutional democratic republic?

  7. PIH Rationale • “Democracy is an on-going, creative struggle to work out a way of living together fairly, freely, and equally.” Walter Parker, 2001

  8. PIH Rationale • Assumptions about Democratic Life • Pluralistic democratic societies are innately conflictual • Competent democratic citizenship requires: • Experience with persistent societal conflicts • Resources for reasoning together about the public good

  9. PIH Rationale • Pragmatism • Current approaches show little effect • Disengagement • Failure to think deeply • Current approaches lack focus and authenticity • Cohesive conceptual framework • Real world purpose for history study

  10. PIH Curriculum Organization

  11. Problem-Based Historical Inquiry (PBHI) • Historical Inquiry Refocused for Civic Purposes • Standard historical inquiry • Problem of meaning making: Interpreting Texts & Constructing Narratives • “What were the events and causes of the Boston Massacre?” • Problem-based historical inquiry • Focus on ethical decision-making • “Were colonists justified in actions they took against British authority?”

  12. Problem-Based Historical Inquiry (PBHI) Focus on Reasoning about Ethical Issues • Issue: What actions are justified to create • a more just, equal society? • Proposal: Reject pacifism & integration • Right to self-defense • Separatism

  13. Challenges of Implementing PBHI: Learners • Learner Obstacles • Motivation • Cognitive load of ill-structured problems

  14. Learner Obstacles to Competent PBHI: Cognitive Load • Building a Model of the Problem Landscape • Historical Thinking • Epistemological assumptions • Disciplinary knowledge • Declarative & Conceptual • Procedural & Strategic • Metacognitive • Dialectical Reasoning

  15. Technological Affordances:Learner • Engagement • Realistic representations and multiple media • Support for Disciplined Inquiry • Conceptual, chronological database structure • Introductory essays hyperlinked to: • Related primary documents • Conflicting accounts • Embedded expertise: • Structured inquiry activities & strategic scaffolds • On-line models

  16. Database Structure/ Links to Primary Documents

  17. Hyperlinks Confront with Conflicting Accounts

  18. Embedded Expertise:Structured Inquiry withContextual Cues/ Strategic Scaffolds

  19. No “Ghost in the Machine” • Utilizing the affordances of PIH infrastructure hinges on skilled teachers • Soft Scaffolding: • Spontaneous • Interchanges in • the construction • zone

  20. Challenges of Implementing PBHI: Teachers • Teacher Obstacles • Vision: Lack of PBHI models • Time demands: Preparation / implementation • Cognitive load of inquiry practice

  21. Technological Affordances:Teacher • Multiple online models of PBHI • Online curriculum development tools • PIHNet Community • Peer support • Curriculum expertise • Technological expertise

  22. Example: Models of PBHI

  23. Example: Online Development Tools

  24. Example: PIHNet Community

  25. The PIHnet Learning Environment • A PIHnet tour

  26. PIHnet Timeline • Summer 2003 - First PIH Summer Seminar • YR 2003-04: First PIH Fellows pilot PIHnet • Summer 2004 • 2nd PIH Summer Seminar • Phase 1 of PIHnet open for enrollment • YR 2004-05: • Develop distance professional development infrastructure • Collaborate to develop new DP content databases

  27. For More Information • Contact: • John Saye - sayejoh@auburn.edu • Tom Brush - tbrush@indiana.edu • Visit our web site: • http://www.pihnet.org

More Related