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Welcome to Gear Up Preparing students for the Social Studies Extended Response Pam Ampferer Saint Paul ABE John Trerotola Robbinsdale ABE – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Welcome to Gear Up


1
Welcome to Gear Up Preparing students for the
Social Studies Extended Response
  • Pam Ampferer Saint Paul ABE
  • John Trerotola Robbinsdale ABE

2
The 2014 GED Social Studies Extended Response
  • An Enduring Issue for Educators

3
  • Session Objectives
  •  
  • Give an overview of the 2014 GED Social Studies
    Extended Response Question.
  • Discuss the necessary reading and writing skills
    students will need to effectively answer the
    extended response.
  • Explore methods and strategies to incorporate
    social studies content while teaching the
    extended response.
  • Provide suggestions and resources for introducing
    students to the concept of an enduring issue
    and for finding the relationship between texts,
    evaluating evidence and related skills.
  • Show ways to model the extended response to
    students and have them draft their own essays for
    review and feedback.
  • Give a brief overview of assessment and feedback
    strategies for practice extended responses by
    students.

4
Social Studies Practices  1. Drawing conclusions
and making inferences 2. Determining central
ideas, hypotheses and conclusion 3. Analyzing
events and ideas 4. Interpreting meaning of
symbols, words and phrases 5. Analyzing purpose
and point of view 6. Integrating data presented
in different ways 7. Evaluating reasoning and
evidence 8. Analyzing relationships between
texts 9. Writing analytic responses to source
texts 10. Reading and interpreting graphs,
charts, and other data representation 11.
Measuring the center of a statistical data
set 2014 GED Social Studies Safari, Steve
Schmidt (schmidtsj_at_appstate.edu)
5
2002 2014
The test contains 50 multiple-choice questions. The test takes around 70 minutes to complete. The number of questions on the Social Studies test will vary. It takes around 90 minutes to complete.
The test contains multiple-choice questions only. The test includes an extended response item. It is suggested that test-takes use 25 minutes to provide an analysis of primary and secondary source documents. Extended response passages will range from 550 to 650 words.
Questions come from the following areas U.S. History25 World History15 Geography15 Civics and Government25 Economics20 Questions come from the following areas Civics and Government50 U.S. History20 Economics15 Geography and the World15
6
  • The Social Studies ER requires the following
    skills
  • Analyze ideas in two source texts.
  • Recognize the context of the source materials for
    the prompt.
  • Create an argument about how texts are related.
  • Support claims with evidence drawn from the text.
  • Incorporate elements from the passages into
    presentation of your own ideas.
  • Incorporate content and background knowledge into
    the written response.
  • Present ideas logically.
  •  
  •  
  • GEDtestingservice.com GED.com

7
HOW IS IT SCORED? Three-trait, Multi-dimensional
Scoring Rubric Responses scored based on three
traits Trait 1 Creation of arguments and use
of evidence Trait 2 Development of ideas and
structure Trait 3 Clarity and command of
standard English conventions  MORE ON THAT
LATER GEDtestingservice.com GED.com
8
WHERE TO START?
9
WHY THE EXTENDED RESPONSE?
The notion that learning comes about by
accretion of little bits is outmoded learning
theory. Current models of learningcontend that
learners gain understanding when they construct
their own knowledge and develop interconnections
among facts and concepts. Shepard
10
The extended response asks students to unpack a
prompt, read source material, plan their
response, type it, and then edit/revise.
Students should be able to keyboard about 25
words per minute.
11
(No Transcript)
12
The enduring issue An enduring issue is an
important topic or idea that may be subject to
ongoing discussion throughout multiple eras of
history. Enduring issues do not have easy
solutions. Rather, they are ideas the American
people wrestle with as new situations arise (GED
Testing Service). Many of the enduring issues
concern first amendment rights like the freedom
of speech. Others center on issues like the
majority rules but must respect minority rights.
The enduring issue is a one sentence quote or
excerpt. The later writing The later writing
is more recent and concerns how we view the
enduring issue in a more modern context. It may
be a speech, letter, or editorial. Before the
later writing, the prompt writers outline the
historical context that students are asked to
discuss in the question. The question Always
have students read this part first! It will ask
students how the two writings tie together, to
use evidence to back up their conclusions, and to
include their own knowledge about the issue.
Page 14 US History 1, Steve Schmidt
(schmidtsj_at_appstate.edu)
13
  • Excerpt
  • Section 1. The right of citizens of the United
    States to vote shall not be denied or abridged by
    the United States or by any state on account of
    race, color, or previous condition of servitude.
  • Section 2. The congress shall have the power to
    enforce this article by appropriate legislation.


  • Fifteenth Amendment, US Constitution
    1870
  • Speech
  • In this excerpt from his March 15, 1965 speech to
    Congress, President Lyndon B. Johnson outlines
    the need for a national voting rights act.
  • Our fathers believed that if this noble view of
    the rights of man was to flourish, it must be
    rooted in democracy. The most basic right of all
    was the right to choose our own leaders. The
    history of this country, in large measure, is the
    history of the expansion of that right to all of
    our people.
  • Many of the issues of civil rights are very
    complex and most difficult. But about this there
    can and should be no argument. Every American
    citizen must have an equal right to vote
  • Yet the harsh fact is that in many places in this
    country men and women are kept from voting simply
    because they are Negros.
  • Every device of which human ingenuity is capable
    has been used to deny this right. The negro
    citizen may go to register only to be told that
    the day is wrong, or the hour is late, or the
    official in charge is absent. And if he persists,
    and if he manages to present himself to the
    registrar, he may be disqualified because he did
    not spell out his middle name or because he
    abbreviated a word on the application.
  • For the fact is that the only way to pass these
    barriers is to show a white skin.
  • In such a case our duty must be clear to all of
    us. The Constitution says that no person shall be
    kept from voting because of his race or his
    color. We have all sworn an oath before God to
    support and to defend that Constitution. We must
    now act in obedience to that oath.
  • Wednesday I will send to Congress a law designed
    to eliminate illegal barriers to the right to
    vote.

14
Prompt In your response, develop an argument
about how President Johnsons position in his
speech reflects the enduring issue expressed in
the excerpt from the United States Constitution.
Incorporate the relevant and specific evidence
from the excerpt, the speech and our own
knowledge of the enduring issue and the
circumstances surrounding voting rights to
support your analysis. Type your response in the
box. This task may require 25 minutes to
complete.  
15
Dont Panic
  • Fight writers block and dont try to be
    perfect.
  • All writing is expected to be on-demand, draft
    quality.
  • Monitor your time but get something down on
    paper.
  • Any points earned are points earned towards a
    passing score.

16
TEACHERS SHOULD NOT PANIC EITHER!
17
  • What students are saying about the extended
    response after taking the GED Ready social
    studies practice test
  • Unfamiliar Language in the documents
  • Too much reading in such a short period of time
  • Not having the necessary content background to
    understand the passages
  • Not understanding the concept of an enduring
    issue
  • Not knowing how to relate the two social studies
    ER passages to each other

18
Lets look at some of the reading skills specific
to the Social Studies test.
19
Evaluate resources
  • Stanford History Education Group

Read like a historian
20
Differentiate between primary and secondary
documents.
21
  • SS Webinar\Reading Skills\Primary Secondary Def
    and Ex.pdf

22
National Archives
23
Practice with the important historical documents.
24
  • Go to Library of Congress Declaration of
    Independence

25
(No Transcript)
26
  • SS Webinar\Reading Skills\LP Preamble Dec of In
    Pledge.pdf

27
How Well Do Students Need to Know
Content? Reminder incorporate it into every
lesson, even if talking about summarizing!
28
  • PDF Webinar\Assesment Targets Content.docx

29
Breaking Down the Prompt Its now time to take
students through the drafting process
30
  • So what is it our students need to do?
  • Identify Enduring Issues
  • Analyze the relationship between 2 source
    documents
  • This implies knowledge of context and background
    knowledge

31
Heres That Prompt Again
32
  • Excerpt
  • Section 1. The right of citizens of the United
    States to vote shall not be denied or abridged by
    the United States or by any state on account of
    race, color, or previous condition of servitude.
  • Section 2. The congress shall have the power to
    enforce this article by appropriate legislation.


  • Fifteenth Amendment, US Constitution
    1870
  • Speech
  • In this excerpt from his March 15, 1965 speech to
    Congress, President Lyndon B. Johnson outlines
    the need for a national voting rights act.
  • Our fathers believed that if this noble view of
    the rights of man was to flourish, it must be
    rooted in democracy. The most basic right of all
    was the right to choose our own leaders. The
    history of this country, in large measure, is the
    history of the expansion of that right to all of
    our people.
  • Many of the issues of civil rights are very
    complex and most difficult. But about this there
    can and should be no argument. Every American
    citizen must have an equal right to vote
  • Yet the harsh fact is that in many places in this
    country men and women are kept from voting simply
    because they are Negros.
  • Every device of which human ingenuity is capable
    has been used to deny this right. The negro
    citizen may go to register only to be told that
    the day is wrong, or the hour is late, or the
    official in charge is absent. And if he persists,
    and if he manages to present himself to the
    registrar, he may be disqualified because he did
    not spell out his middle name or because he
    abbreviated a word on the application.
  • For the fact is that the only way to pass these
    barriers is to show a white skin.
  • In such a case our duty must be clear to all of
    us. The Constitution says that no person shall be
    kept from voting because of his race or his
    color. We have all sworn an oath before God to
    support and to defend that Constitution. We must
    now act in obedience to that oath.
  • Wednesday I will send to Congress a law designed
    to eliminate illegal barriers to the right to
    vote.

33
  • FirstThink!
  • Whats the enduring issue in the first passage?
    What do you know about the issue or the person
    quoted?
  • Next, what kind of information does the
    introduction to the second passage give you?
  • Now look at the second passage. What does it tell
    me about the enduring issue? Does it support it
    or criticize it? Is it an example of the issue in
    a more modern context? What do you think is the
    authors purpose in the second passage?

34
ENDURING ISSUES What are they and, more
importantly, how do we teach them to our students?
35
An enduring issue reflects the founding
principles of the United States and is an
important idea that people often struggle with as
new situations arise.
36
Sowhats an enduring issue?
37
Match pictures and cartoons to enduring issues.
  • Privacy vs Security

38
(No Transcript)
39
Match Headlines
  • Majority Rule
  • States Rights vs Federal Power
  • Individual Rights
  • The U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals in San
    Francisco on Thursday upheld the right of the
    federal government to impose a 55-m.p.h. speed
    limit on highways by threatening to withhold
    highway construction money from states." Los
    Angeles Times - September 1, 1989

40
  • SS Webinar\SS Assesment targets.docx

41
More ways to teach enduring issues
  • SS Webinar\Constitutional Principals\constitutionp
    rincipleshsms_eng_ver4.pdf

42
Deliberating in a Democracy
  • PDF Webinar\Deliberating in a Democracy.pdf
  • Principals of Democracy Lesson

43
  • FirstThink!
  • Whats the enduring issue in the first passage?
    What do you know about the issue or the person
    quoted?
  • Next, what kind of information does the
    introduction to the second passage give you?
  • Now look at the second passage. What does it tell
    me about the enduring issue? Does it support it
    or criticize it? Is it an example of the issue in
    a more modern context? What do you think is the
    authors purpose in the second passage?

44
Use a prompt to teach related content and
enduring issue.
  • Excerpt
  • Government has no other end, but the
    preservation of property.
  •  
    John Locke, 1690
  • http//www.icivics.org
  • I civics
  • Speech
  • This March 30, 1973 speech from Marlon Brando was
    delivered at the Academy Awards where he refused
    his award to protest the United States treatment
    of Native Americans.
  •  
  • For 200 years we have said to the Indian people
    who are fighting for their land, their life,
    their families and their right to be free ''Lay
    down your arms, my friends, and then we will
    remain together. Only if you lay down your arms,
    my friends, can we then talk of peace and come to
    an agreement which will be good for you.''
  •  
  • When they laid down their arms, we murdered them.
    We lied to them. We cheated them out of their
    lands. We starved them into signing fraudulent
    agreements that we called treaties which we never
    kept. We turned them into beggars on a continent
    that gave life for as long as life can remember.
    And by any interpretation of history, however
    twisted, we did not do right. We were not lawful
    nor were we just in what we did . . .

45
Looking at the attachment we sent
  • PDF Webinar\Prompt Guiding questions Voting
    age.pdf

46
Teach writing as a process
  • Unpack the prompt
  • Read the source material
  • Plan the response
  • Write the response
  • Edit the response
  • It is important to model this process multiple
    times!

47
Model the Process
  • The US Constitution makes clear in the 15th
    Amendment the enduring principle that Americans
    have the right to vote regardless of race,
    color, or previous condition of servitude. In
    his March 1965 speech to Congress, President
    Johnson supports this enduring principle and asks
    Congress for a law to uphold this right.
  • The enduring principle is explained in bold.
  • The underlined shows the connection between the
    enduring principle and the later speech.

48
  • In areas of the country, Negroes (African
    Americans) were denied the right to vote because
    of their skin color. Election officials worked to
    stop African Americans from voting by charging
    poll taxes or making them pass literacy tests.
    President Johnsons speech shows the election
    workers true goal was to keep African Americans
    from voting when he said, For the fact is that
    the only way to pass these barriers is to show a
    white skin.
  • Personal information on the historical context is
    in the first two sentences of the second
    paragraph.
  • Italics show specific evidence from the text.

49
  • Italics show specific evidence from the text.
  • Next, President Johnson shows his support of the
    enduring issue of voting rights for all races by
    describing what history and the Constitution
    says. He said that peoples basic rights in a
    democracy were the right to choose their leaders.
    The President quotes the Constitution which says
    that no one should be prevented from voting
    because of their race or color. He also said
    that in order for all of Americas races to be
    treated the same, every American citizen must
    have an equal right to vote.

50
  • Finally, President Johnson called for a national
    voting rights act to help African Americans. The
    15th Amendment to the Constitution allows
    Congress to enforce voting rights for African
    Americans by passing appropriate legislation.
    At the end of his speech, President Johnson tells
    Congress that he will send them a bill to end the
    illegal acts that were stopping African Americans
    from voting that he wants Congress to pass.
  • Transition words connect the last two paragraphs.
  • The paragraphs bring in evidence from both
    passages and explain how they support the
    enduring principle.

51
TIME FOR THE STUDENTS TO PRACTICE
52
Idea. You may want to completely simulate the
testing environment and have students draft their
responses with no cheat sheets. Or, depending
on the students level, have them use graphic
organizers and other related tools for their
first attempt at a full response. Here are some
examples  
53
ER Guidelines from GED Testing
54
Writing Frame
  • The second way ___________________ (explains,
    supports, criticizes, gives an example of) the
    enduring principle is by__________________________
    ______ ___________________________________________
  • The evidence for this is_________________________
  • ____________________________________________
  • During this time in history, _____________________
    _ ____________________________________________
  • In conclusion, ________________________________
  • ____________________________________________
  • ______________________________ states the
    enduring principle
  •  _________________________ (explains, supports,
    criticizes, gives an example of) the enduring
    principle by______________________________________
    ____________________________________________
  •  
  • The first way ___________________ (explains,
    supports, criticizes, gives an example of) the
    enduring principle is by__________________________
    ______
  • The evidence for this is _______________________
  • ____________________________________________
  • During this time in history, _____________________
  • ___________________________________________

55
Extended Response Graphic Organizer

56
SUGGESTIONS FOR ASSESSMENT AND FEEDBACK OF
STUDENT WRITING
57
  • Social Studies Extended Response Rubric
  •  
  • The Social Studies rubric is very similar to the
    Reasoning through Language Arts rubric and has
    the same 3 traits. Both rubrics ask students to
  • Write a response based on the prompt
  • Back up an argument with evidence from the
    passage(s)
  • The main differences between the 2 rubrics are in
    trait 1.
  •  
  • An Extended Look at the Extended Response, Steve
    Schmidt (schmidtsj_at_appstate.edu page 17

58
(No Transcript)
59
What if my students come to me with a response
that they drafted on the official practice test,
GED Ready?
60
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61
(No Transcript)
62
SUGGESTIONS FOR FEEDBACK
63
(No Transcript)
64
(No Transcript)
65
(No Transcript)
66
Student Feedback sheet.
  • SS Webinar\Evaluation Assessment\ER Rubric
    Blank.pdf

67
  • Resources are available from GEDtestingservice.com
    . . .
  • Instructor Resources
  • Item Samplers
  • Includes complete answer explanations of the CR
    items with selected examples
  • Assessment Guide for Educators
  • Includes the official rubrics with
    annotations
  • ER and SA Resource Guides
  • Provide example responses at all score levels
    and score explanations
  • ER and SA Scoring Tools
  • Walk you step-by-step through the evaluation of
    a student response
  •  
  • GEDtestingservice.com GED.com

68
http//abspd.appstate.edu/teaching-resources
69
You Tube Video
70
teachingcivics.org
71

72
Hopefully you have endured our discussion.
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