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Developing Quantitative Literacy Skills in History and the Social Sciences: A Web-Based Common Core Standards Approach [Pehme köide]

  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 208 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 228x156x13 mm, kaal: 299 g
  • Ilmumisaeg: 22-Jul-2014
  • Kirjastus: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
  • ISBN-10: 1475810512
  • ISBN-13: 9781475810516
  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 208 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 228x156x13 mm, kaal: 299 g
  • Ilmumisaeg: 22-Jul-2014
  • Kirjastus: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
  • ISBN-10: 1475810512
  • ISBN-13: 9781475810516
History and social sciences educators have been charged with ensuring that our students are quantitatively literate. Being able to integrate research data in the form of graphs, charts, and tables and deconstruct quantitative evidence to address questions and solve problems is no longer the domain of mathematicians. Being quantitatively literate is considered an educational imperative in a data-drenched world that holds so many employment challenges. The internet contains a treasure trove of valid and reliable sources of quantitative data that history and social sciences teachers can easily use to satisfy the quantitative literacy requirements of the National Common Core Standards.

This book features 85 interesting and exciting multi-century and multicultural web sites that are accompanied by numerical critical thinking questions and activities. Teachers can pose the questions to their entire class or individually assign them. It also contains lists of best practices and examples for interpreting, visualizing, and displaying quantitative data. History and social sciences educators will find this book an indispensable tool for incorporating numerical literacy skills into their class activities and assignments.

Arvustused

Craver uses a Webbased approach to transform the national common core standards requirement for quantitative literacy in the humanities into a powerful instrument for teachers. She provides history and social science educators with resource sites for lesson plans, educational activities, and opportunities to use the search software that accompanies these sites. Many teachers and their students avoid using numbers as evidence in history and the social sciences due to their own math anxiety. Craver addresses the fear of numbers in the first two chapters of this book, and provides basic instructions for how to use, interpret, display, and visualize quantitative sources. The remaining chapters contain a variety of quantitative websites that include relevant topics for high school students such as piracy or natural disasters, plus site-related critical thinking questions. Educators may want to recommend this book to their secondary students as a potential term paper resource book. Summing Up: Highly recommended. All readership levels. * CHOICE * It is far more important that high-school graduates understand standard deviations than derivatives. The Common Core requirement that students acquire basic skills in quantitative analysis is a small but important and long overdue step in preparing our graduates for a world of Big Data. This book by itself can reduce pedagogic math anxiety by making it easier for teachers to integrate these quantitative skills into their History and Social Science courses. -- Ian Ayres, author of The Super-Crunchers: Why Thinking-by-Numbers is the New Way to be Smart and is William K. Townsend Professor & Anne Urowsky Professorial Fellow in Law, Yale Law School With the current excitement and energy involving the Common Core State Standards, 'reading like a historian,' and historical literacy, Dr. Cravers work is extremely timely. The 85 web sites that she describes are wonderful resources for social studies teachers. The activities/questions that she provides require higher order thinking; promote high levels of engagement with historical data; incorporate questions that are interesting to young people and relevant to current events; and foster historical thinking skills. The web-based activities that are suggested require students to 'use diverse formats of media, including visually and quantitatively, as well as in words' (Common Core State Standards, 2010, 60), just as the standards suggest. The activities engage students in reading, analyzing, synthesizing, writing, and speaking about evidence in descriptive, narrative, and persuasive ways. By doing so they immerse students in authentic disciplinary literacies. Kudos to Dr. Craver for compiling this list of resources and for creating these activities. -- Jeffery Nokes, author of Building Students Historical Literacies: Learning to Read and Reason with Historical Texts and Evidence and assistant professor of history, Brigham Young University Educators looking to integrate technology and quantitative research into the humanities classroom will find this book to be a valuable resource. Dr. Craver has compiled an array of online resources and designed activities and questions that encourage student collaboration, development of critical-thinking skills, and appropriate use of technology. Using statistics in the classroom even a humanities classroom helps students identify cause-and-effect relationships. Here, Dr. Craver provides educators with accessible resources for statistics and methods for teaching quantitative literacy. -- Blair Parker, history teacher and dean of students, Riverdale Country School, Bronx, NY A valuable and important resource for history and social science teachers wanting to integrate quantitative evidence in the form of graphs, charts, and tables into class instruction and student assignments. Filled with multicentury and multicultural sources and offering critical thinking questions and activities, it is an indispensable tool for teachers aiming to meet National Common Core Standards regarding the use of quantitative data. -- Mary DiQuinzio, history and geography teacher, National Cathedral School, Washington, DC

Acknowledgments xi
Preface xiii
Introduction 1(10)
The Need for Instructional Change
1(1)
Responding to the Workplace
2(1)
Making the Connection
3(1)
Obtaining the Skills
4(1)
Rethinking the Textbook Approach
5(1)
Required Hardware, Software, and Expertise
6(1)
Book Arrangement and Recommended Use
7(1)
Site Selection Criteria
7(1)
Internet Idiosyncracies
8(3)
References
9(2)
1 Using Quantitative Sources
11(22)
An Overview of Quantitative Literacy
11(2)
Definitional Problems
13(1)
Quantitative Literacy Criteria
14(1)
Quantitative Literacy Research Results
15(2)
Applying Quantitative Literacy Skills to the Study of History and the Social Sciences
17(2)
What are Quantitative Sources?
19(1)
Quantitative Classification
20(4)
Quantitative Source Caveats
24(1)
Quantitative Source Preparations
24(1)
Instructor-Designed Quantitative Literacy Curriculum Activities
24(1)
Quantitative Literacy Curriculum Activities Sites
25(2)
Quantitative Instructional Strategies
27(1)
Team Up and Publicize It
28(1)
Quantitative Literacy Assessment Rubric
29(4)
References
29(4)
2 Interpreting, Displaying, and Visualizing Data
33(18)
Displaying Quantitative Data
35(5)
Chart Types
40(6)
Visualizing Quantitative Data
46(2)
Animation and-Video Data Displays
48(3)
References
49(2)
3 Social Sciences Sites
51(40)
Accidental Discharges of Oil
51(1)
Ancestry: U.S. Census Bureau
52(2)
Association of Religion Data Archives
54(2)
Children and Youth in History
56(1)
Children's Defense Fund
57(2)
City-Data.com
59(1)
Cost of War Calculator
60(1)
Critical Thinking Questions and Activities
61(1)
Death Penalty Information Center
61(2)
Economagic
63(2)
Economic Historical Data
65(1)
Harris Interactive Vault
66(2)
Homeland Data and Security Statistics
68(1)
Library of Congress Country Studies
69(2)
Literacy Rates of the World
71(1)
NationMaster.com
72(2)
Pew Global Attitudes Project
74(2)
Roper Center Public Opinion Archives
76(1)
Statistical Abstract of the United States
77(2)
Substance Abuse and Mental Health Administration
79(1)
Terrorism
80(2)
UN High Commission for Refugees
82(2)
Women Watch
84(1)
World Bank Data
85(2)
Youth Indicators
87(1)
ZIPskinny.com
88(3)
Note
90(1)
4 U.S. History Sites
91(46)
All About California and the Inducements to Settle There (1870)
91(1)
American Soldier Surveys of World War II
92(2)
BIOWAR
94(1)
The Bisbee Deportation (1917)
95(2)
Coal Mining in the Gilded Age and Progressive Era
97(1)
Cold War Air Defense Relied on Widespread Dispersal of Nuclear Weapons
98(2)
The Cyclopedia of Temperance, Prohibition, and Public Morals
100(1)
The Domestic Slave Trade
101(1)
The Drought of 1934
102(2)
Historical Census Data Browser 1790--1970
104(1)
How Many Nukes and Where are the Nukes?
105(1)
Illinois Central Railroad and Its Colonization Work
106(2)
In the Footsteps of Lewis and Clark, U.S. Population Growth
108(1)
The Influenza Epidemic of 1928 to 1929 with Comparative Data for 1918 to 1919
109(1)
Lend-Lease Shipments: World War II
110(2)
Lessons Learned from U.S. Humanitarian Intervention Abroad
112(1)
The Marshall Plan
113(2)
National Commission on Terrorist Attacks Upon the United States
115(2)
Native American Documents Project
117(1)
1929 Stock Market Crash
118(1)
The Peter G. Peterson Foundation
119(2)
Report of the Chicago Relief and Aid Society
121(1)
The Salem Witchcraft Site
122(1)
San Francisco Great Earthquake and the Fire of 1906
123(2)
The Southern Diaspora and the Urban Dispossessed: Demonstrating the Census Public Use Microdata Samples
125(1)
Statistical Information about Fatal Casualties of the Vietnam War
126(2)
The 1911 Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire
128(1)
Twenty-Fifth Anniversary of the 1973 Oil Embargo
129(2)
U.S. Strategic Bombing Survey: The Effects of the Atomic Bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, June 19, 1946
131(1)
The Wealthiest Americans Ever
132(2)
Yellow Fever Epidemic of 1793
134(3)
5 World History Sites
137(44)
African Activist Archive
137(1)
Argonaut Conference, January-February 1945: Papers and Minutes of Meetings
138(2)
The Berlin Airlift 1948--1949: Facts and Figures
140(1)
Bosnia's Civil War Origin and Violence Dynamics
141(2)
Census of India Reports 1871--1901
143(2)
The Chernobyl Catastrophe---Consequences on Human Health
145(1)
The Chiquita Papers
146(2)
Colonial Reports Annual No. 1504 Gold Coast Report for 1929 to 1930
148(1)
The Death Toll of the Rwandan Genocide: A Detailed Analysis for Gikongoro Province
149(2)
East India Company Ships
151(1)
The Famine in Ireland: Statistics
152(1)
Guns-for-Slaves: The Eighteenth Century British Slave Trade in Africa
153(2)
The History of the Present State of the Ottoman Empire
155(1)
Iranian Production of 19.75 Percent Enriched Uranium: Beyond Its Realistic Needs
156(2)
Jewish Emigration from Germany 1933 to 1939
158(1)
Lenin: The Development of Capitalism in Russia
159(2)
Migration Information Source---Global Data Center
161(1)
The Nanking Massacre Project
162(2)
The Normandy Invasion: D-Day, 1944
164(1)
On the Mode of the Communication of Cholera
165(2)
Palestinian Central Bureau of Statistics
167(1)
Piracy and Maritime Crime: Historical and Modern Case Studies
168(1)
Statistical Materials for Learning about Japan
169(2)
Statistics Canada
171(1)
The Survey of Scottish Witchcraft 1563 to 1736
172(2)
Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade Database
174(1)
Trenches on the Web (1914 to 1918) Casualty Figures
175(1)
U.S. and Allied Efforts to Recover and Restore Gold and Other Assets Stolen or Hidden by Germany during World War II
176(2)
A Vision of Britain Through Time
178(3)
References 181(6)
Index 187(4)
About the Author 191
Kathleen W. Craver, Ph.D., is Head Librarian at National Cathedral School in Washington, D.C. She is the author of five books, including School Library Media Centers in the 21st Century (1994), Teaching Electronic Literacy (1997), Using Internet Primary Sources to Teach Critical Thinking Skills in History (1999), Creating Cyber Libraries: An Instructional Guide for School Library Media Specialists (2002), and Term Paper Resource Guide to Nineteenth-Century U.S. History (2008).