Transcript Concept

6th Grade World History
Kelly Barber – STEM Coordinator
Angela Orr – Social Studies Coordinator
Rationale for Teaching Concepts
Concepts are the “furniture” of our
minds. A well-furnished mind is a source
of joy, academic success, citizenship,
career satisfaction, and lifelong learning.
When a student forms a concept from its
examples, he or she knows more than
the definition of a term (e.g., river: he or
she also knows some vivid examples of
the concept that add flesh to a barebones definition, such as the Mississippi,
the Amazon, the Yangtze, and the
Volga). This is deep conceptual learning
rather than superficial knowledge of a
vocabulary word.
Description of “Concept”
A concept is defined by critical
characteristics shared by all
examples of the concept. For
something to be an example of a
concept, it must contain all these
critical characteristics. To help
students form the concept, the
teacher helps them first to see these
critical characteristics across
different examples and, then to
summarize those characteristics in a
definition that students themselves
write.
Important Concepts in 6th Grade
Social Studies:
• Religion
• Government
• Technology
• Culture
• Economics
• Law
Why would an in-depth
understanding of concepts like
these be important to teaching
world history?
Steps in Lesson
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Concept
Development
90-120 minute lesson
SNAPSHOT
Experience (today –
20 minutes)
1.
2.
3.
4.
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6.
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8.
Activate Prior Knowledge
Individual Brainstorm
Small Group Brainstorm
Whole Group Brainstorm
Small Group
Categorization
Whole Group Consensus &
Gallery Walk Notetaking
Defining the Concept
Applying the Concept
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Read through the sentences at
the top of your handout.
Work in a small group to
brainstorm as many words and
phrases as possible that come to
mind when you think of the term
culture.
Share with another group and
add to your list.
What we’re leaving out of
this snapshot…
• Individual brainstorm
• Whole group
brainstorm (rather than
two groups)
• (Remember when
brainstorming with
students, no idea is
wrong until
categorization begins.
Keep the conversation
open and honor all
ideas. Deleting words is
a later step.)
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Back in your small group,
use the PERSIA Method to
categorize all of the words
and phrases that you
associate with culture. All
words must either be
deleted by consensus (“This
isn’t a word related to
culture.”) or fit into one of
the categories.
How this differs from a traditional
concept lesson…
Traditionally, you would allow
students to define their own
categories and then come back
together as a whole class and
decide on the BEST five
categories. These categories
become your critical
characteristics of the concept. In
this case, we are giving you some
critical characteristics that you
can use all year long for
categorization.
So what are the PERSIA categories?
P
Political
 Leaders & Leadership Style
 Government System
 Military/War
 Constitution/Documents
 Individual Participation
 Laws/Courts
 Structure of Gov’t
 Treaties
E
Economic
•Currency/Money
•Resources
•Trade
•Industry
•Technology
•Agriculture/Farming
•Infrastructure
•Labor & Production
R
Religion
 Importance day to day
 Belief/Teachings
 Religious Leader(s)
 Worship Practices
 Holy book and sites
 Values
 Who & what is worshiped
 Relationship to Government
S
Social
•Family
•Roles of different genders
•Class Structure
•Language
•Education
•Lifestyles
•Entertainment
I
Intellectual/Artistic
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Art & Music
Writing & Literature
Philosophy
Math & Science
Inventions & Innovations
Education
Technology
Fashion
Discoveries & Exploration
Architecture
A
Area
Geography
 Physical characteristics of
location (land, waterways,
natural borders, types of soil,
etc.)
 Movement of people, goods,
and services
 Human Environment
Interaction
 Region
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After categorizing your
terms, work as individuals
or small groups to complete
the final steps in defining
and revising your definition
of culture.
These steps are highly
important, and having an
agreed upon definition of
an important concept is
essential. We are skipping
this step today, but you
never should. Instead, for
important concepts, write
the student composed and
agreed upon definition on a
large poster to hang in your
class for the entire year as a
reference point.
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ESSENTIAL QUESTION:
 How can the PERSIA Method help my students to
better understand ancient civilizations and
organize their understanding so that they can
more effectively discuss and write about their
learning?
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SMALL GROUP PRACTICE WITH THE
TEXTBOOK
 In your groups (Egypt, China, India), use the
textbook to take notes using the PERSIA Method.
PERSIAN
Consider Text Coding
P (leader)
P (law)
The President signed a bill today
E (money)
approving millions of dollars to
I (scientific discovery)
fund immunizations to protect
S (health)
S (health)
Americans from the flu virus.
Should be used regularly for different purposes…
 Note Taking
 Asking Great Questions
 Analyzing Readings
 Primary Source Analysis and Annotation
 Review of Chapters
 Comparisons of Cultures
 Ranking of Important Cultural Characteristics in a
Civilization (within categories and across
categories)
 Preparation for writing
PERSIA
Vocab
Key Terms
monarchy
Rule by a king or a
queen
P
Type of government
King Henry VII
PERSIA
Comparison Chart
Egyptians
Romans
P Pharaoh
Caesar
E Nile - trade
Roman Road
R polytheism
polytheism
S hieroglyphics
Latin
I astronomy
concrete
A Pyramids
Coliseum
PERSIA
Writing Prompts
Informative Essay Comparative Essay
P
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R
S
I
A
We hope to work with you again soon. Contact us with any questions.
Kelly Barber
Angela Orr
[email protected]
[email protected]