7th - Grade Instructional Guide
7th - Grade Instructional Guide
7th - Grade Instructional Guide
7th Grade
World History
Medieval and
Early Modern
Times
B INDER T ITLE
7TH GRADE
W O R L D H I S T O RY
M E D I E VA L AND E A R LY M O D E R N T I M E S
th
7 Grade
World History
Medieval and
Early Modern
Times
Instructional
Guide
Table of Contents
Preface Page
A. Acknowledgements iii
B. Mission/Vision Statement vi
C. Goals of the Instructional Guide vii
D. History/Social Science Instructional Guide Overview viii
E. Graphic Organizer of History/Social Science Instructional Guide x
i
Section VIII. Instructional Component Two
A. Introduction to the Curricular Map 8-1
B. Curricular Map 8-2
C. Textbook Correlation 8-5
Appendices
A. Opening Activities A-1
B. Meeting the Needs of All Students B-1
C. Essential Questions and Focus Questions C-1
D. The Writing Process D-1
E. The Use of Summary E-1
F. The Use of Primary Sources F-1
G. National Standards for Civics and Government G-1
For further information and resources, please visit the History/Social Science webpage at:
www.lausdhss.org
ii
Acknowledgements
This publication reflects the collaborative efforts of many educators. Completion of this
Instructional Guide included central office, and local district personnel, working with teachers to
develop a common understanding of best classroom practices to support student academic
performance. Appreciation is extended to the following educators who have worked on past and
present publications:
We would also like to thank the following former Local District personnel: Steve Stienberg,
Shanna Sarris, Sandra Gephart, Chuck Burdick, and Carlotta Redish-Dixon.
Additionally, we would like to thank all of the teachers who participated in the development process by
completing surveys and faithfully providing feedback. It is through the collaboration of these dedicated
individuals that this Instructional Guide was completed.
iii
Local District Focus Group Participants
iv
Daniel Steiner
Joseph Stersino
Gayane Ter-Saakyan
Brian Thompson
Bruce Thompson
Michelle Thrapp
Mary Tuizer
Ester Tyler-Aikens
Rob Urkofsky
Rosy Valiente
Tiffany Ward
Curtis Ward
Michael West
Terry West
Matt White
Percell Williams
Neil Williamson
April Wilson
Elisa Wingate
John Wood
Mike Wulf
Pat Zanger
v
Mission
It is the mission of History/Social Science professionals in LAUSD to establish high standards of
thinking and to foster learning that prepares each student to become a responsible and
productive citizen in our democratic society.
“The curricular goal of democratic understanding and civic values is centered on an essential
understanding of our nation’s identity and constitutional heritage; the civic values that form the
foundation of the nation’s constitutional order and promote cohesion between all groups in a
pluralistic society; and the rights and responsibilities of all citizens.” (History-Social Science
Framework for California Public Schools, 2001 Update, p.20)
Vision
To create a universally accessible, culturally relevant learning environment grounded in
research and collaboration that promotes disciplinary literacy and the habits of mind of
History/Social Science, and thereby supports high levels of meaningful participation in the local
and global community.
vi
Goals of the Instructional Guide
Student Learning District/School
vii
History/Social Science Instructional Guide Overview
The History/Social Science Instructional to provide teachers with the support needed
Guide for Grade 7 provides a contextual to ensure that students have received the
map for teaching all of the California history content specified by the California
History/Social Standards. The Guide Academic Content Standards, and to
provides the foundation for building a provide direction for instruction or additional
classroom curriculum and instructional resources that students may require in order
program that engages all students in for students to become proficient in history
rigorous and dynamic learning. Aligned to at their particular grade level. This Guide is
the California History/Social Science intended to be the foundation of a
Standards Framework for California Public standards-based instructional program in
Schools, the instructional resources in the history, from which the local district, school,
Guide support District initiatives to close the and classroom will further enrich and
achievement gap and raise all students to expand based on the local expertise and
proficient performance in History/Social available resources.
Science. The History/Social Science
Instructional Guide is one part of a systemic The Role of the Instructional Guide to
approach to the teaching of history that Support Instruction
involves instruction, professional
development, and assessment. The Instructional Guide is a foundation for
the teaching of history in Grade 7 and is
Background designed to provide teachers with
instructional resources to assist them in
In order to evaluate programs and their implementation of a standards-based
determine students’ proficiency in knowing program. The Guide is also designed as a
the content called for by the California resource to support the implementation of a
Academic Content Standards, the state has balanced instructional program.
established the Standardized Testing and
Reporting (STAR) Program, of which the In implementing this Guide, it is suggested
California Standards Tests (criterion- that teachers work together to select the
referenced assessments aligned to the best combination of resources to meet their
California Standards in history/social instructional goals and the specific learning
science, English, mathematics, and needs of their students.
science) are a component. California
Standards Tests (CSTs) have been given
annually since 1999 in history/social science
(grades 8, 10, and 11) English and
mathematics (grades 2-11) science (grades
9-11). The STAR Program is designed to
meet some of the requirements of the No
Child Left Behind (NCLB) Act (PL 1-7-110),
signed into law on January 2002.
viii
Organization of the History/Social Science programs. Each writing task sets clear
Instructional Guide expectations for student performance and
includes scaffolding strategies that teachers
The History/Social Science Instructional might use in designing instruction that will
Guide for Grade 7 is organized into three provide students with the skills, knowledge,
instructional components that map out the and conceptual understanding to perform
academic year. Included in each successfully on the task.
instructional component for Grade 7 are the
following: Textbook References
Content Standards
ix
History/Social Science Instructional Guide Overview
I. Major District Initiatives
o Secondary Literacy Plan
o Institute For Learning’s Nine PrinciplesHistory/Social
of Learning Science Instructional Guide Graphic Organizer
o Culturally Relevant Teaching Methods to Close the Achievement Gap
Overview For Grade 8
II. State of California Documents
o The California Content Standards
o History/Social Science Framework for California
o California Standards for the Teaching Profession
7.1, 7.2, 7.4, 7.7 7.3, 7.5, 7.6 7.8, 7.9, 7.10, 7.11
Appendices
• Opening Activities
• Meeting the Needs of All Students
• Essential Questions and Focus Questions
• The Writing Process
x • The Use of Summary
• The Use of Primary Sources
• National Standards for Civics and Government
Major District Initiatives
The 7th Grade History/Social Science school year. The following changes in
Instructional Guide and periodic institutional and school structures must
assessments are part of the larger district occur as the plan is implemented:
periodic assessment system that will
support the major Los Angeles Unified • Students must be taught and acquire
School District initiatives: Secondary new skills at the secondary level. Skills
Literacy Plan, Institute For Learning (IFL) that students are taught in elementary
Nine Principles of Learning, Closing the school do not suffice for the complex
Achievement Gap: Improving Educational reading tasks and cognitive processing
Outcomes for Under-Achieving Students that is required in the secondary
Initiative, and Small Learning Communities. curriculum.
• Literacy development must be an
A. Secondary Literacy Plan ongoing process whereby students
learn to read, write and reason in the
The goal of the Los Angeles Unified School specific ways that are needed for
District's Secondary Literacy Plan is to different content areas and purposes.
enhance the District's efforts to provide • Secondary students need explicit
learning opportunities and instruction to instruction in reading and writing in
enable all middle and high school students order to develop deep conceptual
to perform rigorous work and meet or understanding and to apply reading and
exceed content standards in each content writing strategies effectively in all
area. The plan is designed to address content areas.
student and teacher needs and overcome • Teachers must be equipped with the
challenges commonly faced in middle and expertise that will enable them to help
high school today. The plan contains the all students solve problems as readers
following: and writers instead of labeling certain
groups of students as problem readers
• Address literacy in all content areas. and writers or ignoring low achieving
• Help secondary teachers define their students.
role in teaching reading and writing in • Students must master the critical ideas
their content area. in various content areas and learn to
• Help struggling students with basic use reading, writing, speaking and
reading and writing skills and provide thinking skills in each content area.
differentiated support.
• Provide training for secondary content In order to meet the challenges of the
area teachers to develop skills and Secondary Literacy Plan, some action items
strategies to provide additional, are:
differentiated support for students who
lack basic reading and writing skills. • Develop an instructional disciplinary
• Change the institutional culture and literacy framework, and support
school structures of traditional middle standards-based instruction related to a
and high schools that often isolate specific content area. Content literacy
teachers and students and act as addresses the development of literacy
barriers to learning and change. and content knowledge simultaneously.
• Organize instruction at the secondary
Under the direction of the Superintendent, level to create and support learning
Local District Superintendents, and Central conditions that will help all students
Office, implementation of the Secondary succeed.
Literacy Plan began in the 2000-2001
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• Implement a coherent, ongoing accelerated instruction in decoding,
professional development plan that will encoding, and reading fluency.
provide content area teachers with • Strengthen curricular and instructional
content-specific knowledge and alignment with the content standards
expertise in order to meet the varied through the adoption of standards-based
learning and literacy needs of all textbooks in History/Social Science.
students.
• Structure an organizational design that Figure 1 illustrates an overview of the
will enhance a school's capacity to Secondary Literacy Plan components and
address the teaching and varied shows the content connections between the
learning needs of students in grades disciplines of Science, English/Language
6-12. Create infrastructure that will Arts, Mathematics, and Social Studies. The
include instructional models to support interaction of the standards, professional
expert teaching of content aligned to the development, assessment, and evaluation
standards. combine to form an interactive system that
• Differentiate instructional programs to promotes content literacy.
meet the varied needs of all students,
particularly those who need extensive
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B. The Nine Principles of Learning Fair and Credible Evaluations
The Nine Principles of Learning from the We need to use assessments that students
Institute for Learning provide the theoretical find fair and that parents, community, and
foundation of research-based instructional employers find credible. Fair evaluations
practices that provide the foundation for the are ones for which students can prepare;
Secondary Redesign Comprehensive Plan. therefore, tests, exams, classroom
These nine principles are embedded assessments, and curriculum must be
throughout the Instructional Guide and aligned to the standards. Fair assessment
underscore the guiding beliefs common in also means that grading must be performed
the Los Angeles Unified School District. in relation to absolute standards rather than
on a curve, so that students clearly see the
Organizing for Effort results of their learning efforts.
Assessments that meet these criteria
An effort-based school replaces the provide parents, colleges, and employers
assumption that aptitude determines what with credible evaluations of what individual
and how much students learn with the students know and can do.
assumption that sustained and directed
effort can yield high achievement for all Recognition of Accomplishment
students. Everything is organized to evoke
and support this effort and to send the We must motivate students by regularly
message that effort is expected and that recognizing their accomplishments. Clear
difficult problems lead to sustained work. recognition of authentic accomplishment is
High minimum standards are set and the hallmark of an effort-based school. This
assessments are geared to these recognition can take the form of
standards. All students are taught a celebrations of work that meets standards
rigorous curriculum matched to the or intermediate progress benchmarks en
standards, along with as much time and route to the standards. Progress points
expert instruction as they need to meet or should be articulated so that, regardless of
exceed expectations. This principle is one entering performance level, every student
of the guiding beliefs common in every can meet real accomplishment criteria often
school in the Los Angeles Unified School enough to be recognized frequently.
District. Recognition of accomplishment can be tied
to an opportunity to participate in events
Clear Expectations that matter to students and their families.
Student accomplishment is also recognized
If we expect all students to achieve at high when student performance on
levels, then we need to define explicitly standards-based assessments is related to
what we expect students to learn. These opportunities at work and in higher
expectations need to be communicated to education.
professionals, parents, the community and,
above all, students themselves. Descriptive Academic Rigor in a Thinking Curriculum
criteria and models of work that meets
standards should be publicly displayed, and Thinking and problem solving are the new
students should refer to these displays to basics of the 21st century, but the common
help them analyze and discuss their work. idea that we can teach thinking without a
With visible accomplishment targets to aim solid foundation of knowledge must be
toward at each stage of learning, students abandoned. So must the idea that we can
can participate in evaluating their own work teach knowledge without engaging students
and setting goals for their own effort. in thinking. Knowledge and thinking are
intimately joined.
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This implies a curriculum organized around from whom they expect much; it should be
major concepts that students are expected standard practice with all students.
to know deeply. Teaching must engage
students in active reasoning about these Self-management of Learning
concepts. In every subject, at every grade
level, instruction and learning must include If students are going to be responsible for
a commitment to a knowledge core, high the quality of their thinking and learning,
demand thinking, and active use of they need to develop and regularly use an
knowledge. array of self-monitoring and
self-management strategies. These
Accountable Talk metacognitive skills include noticing when
one doesn't understand something and
Talking with others about ideas and work is taking steps to remedy the situation, as well
fundamental to learning, but not all talk as formulating questions and inquiries that
sustains learning. For classroom talk to let one explore deep levels of meaning.
promote learning it must be accountable to Students also manage their own learning by
the learning community, to accurate and evaluating the feedback they get from
appropriate knowledge, and to rigorous others; bringing their background
thinking. Accountable talk seriously knowledge to bear on new learning;
responds to and further develops what anticipating learning difficulties and
others in the group have said. It puts forth apportioning their time accordingly and
and demands knowledge that is accurate judging their progress toward a learning
and relevant to the issue under discussion. goal. These are strategies that good
Accountable talk uses evidence appropriate learners use spontaneously and all students
to the discipline (e.g., proofs in can learn through appropriate instruction
mathematics, data from investigations in and socialization. Learning environments
science, textual details in literature, primary should be designed to model and
and secondary sources in history) and encourage the regular use of
follows established norms of good self-management strategies.
reasoning. Teachers should intentionally
create the norms and skills of accountable Learning as Apprenticeship
talk in their classrooms.
For many centuries, most people learned by
Socializing Intelligence working alongside an expert who modeled
skilled practice and guided novices as they
Intelligence is much more than an innate created authentic products or performances
ability to think quickly and stockpile bits of for interested and critical audiences. This
knowledge. Intelligence is a set of kind of apprenticeship allowed learners to
problem-solving and reasoning capabilities acquire complex interdisciplinary
along with the habits of mind that lead one knowledge, practical abilities, and
to use those capabilities regularly. appropriate forms of social behavior. Much
Intelligence is equally a set of beliefs about of the power of apprenticeship learning can
one's rights and obligation to understand be brought into schooling by organizing
and make sense of the world, and one's learning environments so that complex
capacity to figure things out over time. thinking is modeled and analyzed and by
Intelligent habits of mind are learned providing mentoring and coaching as
through the daily expectations placed on the students undertake extended projects and
learner by calling on students to use the develop presentations of finished work, both
skills of intelligent thinking. By holding in and beyond the classroom.
students responsible for doing so,
educators can "teach" intelligence. This is
what teachers normally do with students
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C. Culturally Relevant Teaching Methods to Tenet 4
Close the Achievement Gap Engage African American and Latino
Parents and Community in the Education of
In June of 2000, the LAUSD Board of African American and Latino Students
Education approved a resolution that called
for an action plan to eliminate the disparities Parents should be given the opportunity and
in educational outcomes for African tools to be the effective educational
American, Latino, and other underachieving advocates for their children. The District will
students. Five major tenets, along with their continue to support the efforts of its schools
recommendations, performance goals, and to engage parents in the education of their
evaluations, are to be embedded into all children through improved communication
District instructional programs. The between schools, teachers, and parents.
History/Social Science Instructional Guide
for Grade 7 supports these tenets listed Tenet 5
below: Ongoing Planning, Systematic Monitoring,
and Reporting
Tenet 1
Students’ Opportunity to Learn The disparities in educational outcomes for
African American, Latino, and other
Comprehensive professional development underachieving students will be systemically
for administrators, teachers, counselors, monitored and ongoing reflection and
and coaches on Culturally Responsive and planning will occur at all levels in the
Culturally Contextualized Teaching will District.
ensure that instruction for African American
and Latino students is relevant and
responsive to their learning needs. The following are basic assumptions upon
which culturally relevant and responsive
instruction and learning is built.
Tenet 2
Students' Opportunity to Learn (Adult Basic Assumptions
Focused)
Comprehensible: Culturally Responsive
The District will provide professional Teaching teaches the whole child. Culturally
development in the Academic English responsive teachers develop intellectual,
Mastery Program (AEMP) to promote social, emotional and political learning by
language acquisition and improve student using cultural referents to impart knowledge,
achievement. skills, and attitudes.
The District will make every effort to ensure Empowering: Culturally Responsive
that its staff (Central, Local District, and Teaching enables students to be more
School Site) and their external support successful learners. Empowering translates
providers are adequately trained and have into academic competence, personal
the pedagogical knowledge and skill to confidence, courage, and the will to act.
effectively enhance the academic
achievement of African American and Latino
students.
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Transformative: Culturally Responsive • Accountability for students, parents, and
Teaching defies conventions of traditional teachers
educational practices with respect to ethnic • Increased communication and
students of color. It uses the cultures and collaboration
experiences of students of color as • Flexibility and innovation for students,
worthwhile resources for teaching and parents, and teachers
learning, recognizes the strengths of these
students and enhances them further in the The LAUSD is committed to the redesign of
instructional process. Culturally Responsive its schools. That commitment includes the
Teaching transforms teachers and students. willingness to treat students as individuals
It is in the interactions with individual and the willingness to allow each school to
educators that students are either fulfill the goals of the Small Learning
empowered, or alternately, disabled, Community ideals in the uniqueness of its
personally and academically. own setting.
• Personalized instruction
• Respectful and supportive learning
environments
• Focused curriculum
• Rigorous academic performance
standards
• Continuity of instruction
• Continuity of student-teacher
relationships
• Community-based partnerships
• Joint use of facilities
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State of California Documents
The History/Social Science Instructional Guide for Grade 7 is built upon the framework
provided by the History-Social Science Framework for California Public Schools© 2001,
the California Standards for the Teaching Profession, and the History-Social Science
Content Standards for California Public Schools©1998. Each of these California
documents has overarching implications for every grade level from K to 12.
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models, coaching, tools, practice and Standard 1: Engaging and Supporting All
feedback. Students in Learning
• History/Social Science educators have a
unique and essential responsibility in the Teachers build on students' prior
preparation of an educated, engaged knowledge, life experience, and interests to
citizenry. achieve learning goals for all students.
• Educators need the adequate time, Teachers use a variety of instructional
training, collaboration, resources and strategies and resources that respond to
tools to implement inquiry and students' diverse needs. Teachers facilitate
standards-based history instruction. challenging learning experiences for all
students in environments that promote
C. California Standards for the Teaching autonomy, interaction and choice.
Profession
Teachers actively engage all students in
The California Standards for the Teaching problem solving and critical thinking within
Profession provide the foundation for and across subject matter areas. Concepts
teaching. These standards offer a common and skills are taught in ways that encourage
language and create a vision that enables students to apply them in real-life contexts
teachers to define and develop their that make subject matter meaningful.
practice. Reflected in these standards is a Teachers assist all students to become self-
critical need for all teachers to be directed learners who are able to
responsive to the diverse cultural, linguistic, demonstrate, articulate, and evaluate what
and socio-economic backgrounds of their they learn.
students. The California Standards for the
Teaching Profession provide a framework of Standard 2: Creating and Maintaining
six standards with thirty-two key elements Effective Environments for Student Learning
that represent a developmental, holistic
view of teaching, and are intended to meet Teachers create physical environments that
the needs of diverse teachers and students. engage all students in purposeful learning
These standards are designed to help activities and encourage constructive
educators do the following: interactions among students. Teachers
maintain safe learning environments in
• Reflect about student learning and which all students are treated fairly and
practice , respectfully as they assume responsibility
• Formulate professional goals to improve for themselves and one another. Teachers
their teaching practice, encourage all students to participate in
• Guide, monitor and assess the progress making decisions and in working
of a teacher's practice toward independently and collaboratively.
professional goals and professionally Expectations for student behavior are
accepted benchmarks. established early, clearly understood, and
consistently maintained. Teachers make
The teaching standards are summarized effective use of instructional time as they
below. Further expansion and explanation implement class procedures and routines.
of the key elements are presented in the
complete text, California Standards for the Standard 3: Understanding and Organizing
Teaching Profession, which can be obtained Subject Matter for Student Understanding
from the California Commission on Teacher
Credentialing or the California Department Teachers exhibit strong working knowledge
of Education. of subject matter and student development.
Teachers organize curriculum to facilitate
students' understanding of the central
themes, concepts, and skills in the subject
area.
2-2
Teachers interrelate ideas and information pursue opportunities to develop professional
within and across curricular areas to extend knowledge and skill, and participate in the
students' understanding. Teachers use extended professional community.
their knowledge of student development, Teachers learn about and work with local
subject matter, instructional resources and communities to improve their professional
teaching strategies to make subject matter practice. Teachers communicate effectively
accessible to all students. with families and involve them in student
learning and the school community.
Standard 4: Planning Instruction and Teachers contribute to school activities,
Designing Learning Experiences for All promote school goals and improve
Students professional practice by working collegially
with all school staff. Teachers balance
Teachers plan instruction that draws on and professional responsibilities and maintain
values students' backgrounds, prior motivation and commitment to all students.
knowledge, and interests. Teachers
establish challenging learning goals for all These standards for the teaching
students based on student experience, profession, along with the content standards
language, development, and home and and the History-Social Science Framework,
school expectations, and include a provide guidance to achieve the objective
repertoire of instructional strategies. that all students achieve a high degree of
Teachers use instructional activities that history-social science literacy.
promote learning goals and connect with
student experiences and interests.
Teachers modify and adjust instructional
plans according to student engagement and
achievement.
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History/Social Science Pedagogy
Philosophy and these instructional strategies in the
classroom. Within that educational
The History/Social Science Instructional community, teachers use formative
Guide for Grade 7 supports the following: assessments, analyze the data, participate
in lesson study, and continually modify their
• Deepen the understanding of instruction to support the student mastery of
Disciplinary Literacy and standards- content knowledge and the acquisition of
based instruction. the historical habits of mind.
• Examine what it means to think, read
and write as a historian and how this Disciplinary Literacy
translates into day-to-day standards–
based lessons and formative The District initiative to advance literacy
assessments. across the four core content areas is termed
• Focus on the ability of teachers to use Disciplinary Literacy. Disciplinary Literacy
historical inquiry and primary source is defined "as the mastery of both the core
documents as an instructional strategy ideas and concepts and the habits of
to engage the learner and to apprentice thinking" of a particular discipline. The
student-historians. driving idea is that knowledge and thinking
• Utilize primary sources to model how must go hand in hand. As content
historians gather and interpret evidence knowledge grows, one needs to grow also
and generate and modify hypotheses. in the habits of thinking for that discipline.
• Consider our civic mission to educate a The role of the teacher is to ensure that all
thoughtful, informed citizenry capable of students learn on the diagonal. The
making informed choices. following chart, adapted from C. Giesler’s,
Academic Literacy (1994), illustrates the
The goal is to foster and promote an district Disciplinary Literacy goal for
educational community where history students to learn on the diagonal.
teachers apply this pedagogical knowledge
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For students to learn on the diagonal, it is of reflect on their learning, and to learn
utmost importance for our teachers to use from one another.
instructional methods that promote the • Teachers arrange environments,
mastery of conceptual and content use tools, and establish norms and
knowledge with analysis skills and habits of routines and communicate to all
mind unique to the discipline of History. students how to become better
thinkers in History/Social Science.
The following five design principles for
instruction support student learning along 5. Instruction is assessment-driven.
the diagonal:
• Teachers use multiple forms of
1. Students learn core concepts and habits formal and informal assessment,
of thinking within each discipline as formative and summative
defined by standards. assessment, and data to guide
instruction.
• All students are expected to inquire, • Throughout the year, teachers
investigate, read, write, reason, and assess students' grasp of
speak as historians. History/Social Science concepts,
• Students experience curricula their habits of inquiring,
characterized by depth and investigating, problem-solving, and
consistency. communicating.
• Teachers use these assessments to
2. Learning activities, curricula, tasks, text, tailor instructional opportunities to
and talk apprentice students within the the needs of their learners.
discipline of History/Social Science. • Students are engaged in self-
assessment to develop meta-
• Students learn by doing history, cognitive development and the
engaging in rigorous ongoing ability to manage their own learning.
investigations into the essential
issues of humanity, culture and
civilization.
• All lessons, assignments, materials,
and discussions serve as scaffolding
for students' emerging mastery of
History/Social Science content
knowledge and habits of thinking.
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Thinking Historically perspectives, conflicting motives, and
competing forces.
Thinking historically is best described as the
acquisition of core knowledge in Writing Historically
History/Social Science, which provides the
student with a foundation to develop the Facts are not the past, but the residue of
critical thinking skills needed by historians human action left behind for historians to
and social scientists to study the past and wade through, interpret, and fashion,
its relationship to the present. History is as through writing, in to history. Historians
much about asking questions as it is about analyze evidence and record their
answering questions, or questioning interpretations of the facts, constructing
answers. portrayals of the past. Each historian writes
with a purpose, targeting a specific
Reading Historically audience. Therefore, historical writing is the
process through which the historian
According to Ronald Takaki, a professor of constructs his/her argument. In essence,
ethnic studies at the University of California, historical writing allows the writer to present
Berkeley, “Experienced readers of history a version of events based on evidence and
read to make sense of the past, evaluate records. As Thomas Holt, a professor of
what they are reading based on historical history at the University of Chicago says,
evidence, and create their own historical “All historical writing is essentially
explanation or interpretation.” Reading of competing human narratives about the
history requires study beyond the initial past.”
facts and is characterized by differing
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Thinking/Reading/Writing/Speaking as a Historian
Thinking Reading
Historians . . . Historians . . .
• Understand and appreciate universal and • Seek to discover context.
cultural historical themes and dilemmas. • Ask what the purpose of the text is.
• Distinguish the important from the irrelevant. • Assume bias in text.
• Recognize vital connections between the past • Consider word choice and tone.
and present. • Read slowly, simulating a social exchange
• Speculate by making predictions about their between two readers, one who enters into
world and the future. the text wholeheartedly and reads it like a
• Effectively analyze and interpret evidence, both believer, and the other who then stands
primary and secondary. back and critically questions the text.
• Identify relationships between cause and effect. • Compare texts to gather different, perhaps
• Distinguish main events from secondary events. divergent, accounts of the same event or
• Research history (documents, artifacts, etc.) to topic.
gather evidence. • Get interested in contradictions and
• Interpret evidence to construct an account or ambiguity.
portrayal of the past. • Check sources of documents.
• Consider all the evidence and interpretations • Read like witnesses to living, evolving
and formulate hypotheses about what is events.
happening and why. • Read like lawyers, who make cases.
• Verify hypotheses through research.
Writing Speaking
Historians . . . Historians . . .
• Use historical narrative to summarize and • Present their findings in a variety of formats,
explain the past. including:
• Write with purpose, targeting specific audiences. o Lectures.
• Construct historical arguments presenting their o Scholarly debates.
version of events based on evidence and record. o Film documentary narration or
• Use a variety of formats, including: commentary.
o Scholarly articles. o Presentations of scholarly articles.
o Textbooks o Giving commentary on museum
o Biographies. exhibits.
o Scripts for documentaries. Historians also . . .
o Descriptions for museum exhibits. • Hold interviews.
• Write in varying styles. • Advise politicians.
• Comment on current events.
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The Use of Primary Sources resolved complex issues. For example, an
examination of Meso American codices
Using primary sources is essential to reveals the rich cultural development of
developing the habits of mind integral to language in Meso America. It is through
historical thinking. Teaching students to evaluating and analyzing documents that
analyze primary sources successfully students will be able to arrive at deep levels
begins with modeling effective questioning of historical knowledge and understanding.
in order to understand content and
significance. The ability to comprehend and analyze
primary sources is a complex skill that must
Primary sources include written documents, be scaffolded for students. Many documents
maps, photographs, cartoons, artwork, contain abstract and unfamiliar terminology
artifacts, photographs, sound recordings, and can prove to be challenging for
motion pictures, and posters. They allow students. The instructional strategies
students to analyze events from the provided in this guide demonstrate several
perspective of those who were witnesses to practical uses for primary sources. For
history. It is through this work that students example, students analyze quotes and
learn how to analyze and interpret history, visuals to practice determining historical
leading them to draw their own conclusions, significance. (See Appendix F on primary
based on evidence. Additionally, primary sources)
sources allow students to grasp how people
3-5
Strategies Used in the Instructional Guide
Each concept lesson is designed to incorporate a variety of techniques and strategies to support
all students. The chart below indicates the strategies found in the concept lessons and the ways
these strategies support students.
EL Support
Vocabulary Support1
Listening/Speaking
Reading/Writing
Pre-writing activity
Visuals
Graphic Organizers
Question variety2
Variety of Assessment3
Cooperative Activity
Personalized Content4
Strategies
in the
Model
Lessons
Categorizing √ √ √ √ √
Cooperative Groups √ √ √ √ √ √ √ √ √ √
Gallery Walk √ √ √ √ √ √
Graphic Organizers √ √ √ √ √ √
Scaffolded Writing √ √ √ √ √
Schema Building √ √ √ √ √
Skit Presentations √ √ √ √ √ √
Summarizing √ √ √ √ √
Think/Pair/Share √ √ √ √
Visual Analysis √ √ √ √ √
Vocabulary Map √ √ √ √ √
Key:
1
Vocabulary Support: The strategy contains tools to help students understand key and
support vocabulary.
2
Question Variety: The strategy involves a variety of questions, building on multiple levels of
Bloom’s Taxonomy.
3
Variety of Assessment: The strategy provides students multiple ways to demonstrate
mastery of content.
4
Personalized Content: The strategy allows students to relate content to their own lives.
3-6
Student Engagement Arc of Skills Grades 6 – 8
There has been extensive literature written The Instructional Guide builds upon four
on ways to engage students in learning. In distinct skill sets: Conceptual Analysis,
general, much of the literature finds that Historical Analysis, Reading, and Writing.
students more actively engage in classroom For ease of use and readability, these skills
activities that are meaningful, motivational, have been have been divided into four
and experiential. separate arcs. While the Conceptual
Analysis and Historical Analysis arcs are
Meaningful activities are those to which the based on the California State History/Social
students can relate their own lives or past Science Framework and Standards, the
learning. Students understand why they are reading and writing skills are directly
engaged in the activity and see connections connected to the English Language Arts
across curricula or how they might use the Standards.
information in their lives. These activities
give students opportunities to personalize
the information, ultimately validating who
they are and that what they bring to the
classroom is valuable.
3-7
7th Grade
torical themes across time a
re c u rring his nd pla
entify ce. (C
ST 1
I d a n understa n d in g of chronolo )
e ve lo p g y . (CS
D T 2)
nd analytical map skill
op basic a s. (CST
Devel 3)
st ing ui s h f ac t f r o m o p in i on. (REP 2)
Di Ide
nt
ify
redibility of primary and sec
s s e s s the c ound conclusions from theondary sou De r
A raw s m. (REP rces
ec lop
De
and d 4) As D
2)
ur an sic
an tect
rin
ST
Ex d t se
3)
ev
d distinguish cause, effe
. (C
g h de
pl de h
tand an lation in historical even ct, sequence
P3 n
ST
ss m p nt h con and
8th
(RE tio
s
e
r
gy
ist
d corr e ts. (HI 2
. (C
Un , a nd
e mi tra
un and of an ndary
ol o
d i ne
ec a
s
f
l
th
ca
l
ron
ski
Gra
e
primary sources using strat
rs ana
f
l th
Analyze
s. ( en
n
de and
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P4
e
ap
ch
we
nt
rst c
such S
em of chr p skills.
a s
RE
lm
of
6th
rpose, Significanc n,
s a eva
an orr
tor
de
2) ,
t
(HI use
y co
i
Audience, Pu
e
l is
n
es a
o r i t in
ing
ica
An ch udie
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sb
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g
s
l
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ce. ca
cts
nd
su A
aly as nce
urc
t
nd tion
da nce
p la
nd
cro
r
y
e
i
uen ish
ifa
nal
s
ze S.O , Pu
d d so
rom
dis in
sta
in con
e
ss ti gy. (CST
art
s
l
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pr .A.P rpo
sec differ
da
the tin
m
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ono
ra
tin hist
der
im .S.
rica vant f
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a
i
me a
pro
n
rrat
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sou uity.
ary (Sp se, Si
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of v y we
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is
lo
on
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asic
ct, a nd d
ble
a ls
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l na
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urc
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rce (HI 3
h c l ev
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al
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Arc of Historical
iew
a
n
b
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so )
aus ents
a
a
lop
prim erstan
nd
(CST
elop
c
ls in
o
a nd
a
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onclu
ace. (CS
an d
n
isto
e, ef . (HI 2
s us ccas ).
Deve
ngu
2)
Analysis Skills
histo
ary
re m
s k il
stor
erst
Dev
3
Und
effe
ing
fect,
)
4)
the p
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sions
elop
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a
rical e EP 5)
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strat n,
d
se q u e
e
a
Dev
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s
(R
io
egies
t. (HI 1)
vents
)
nce,
KEY (Source: Historical and Social Science Analysis Skills - California Department of Education)
CST = Chronological and Spatial Thinking
REP = Historical Research, Evidence, and Point of View
HI = Historical Interpretation
3-8
7th Grade
s, Economics and S
igion, Politic
rap hy, Rel m G.R.A.P.E.S. with Achievem ocial Struc
g y ents in tu
Geo The acron serte res sha
h ow ( d) pe c
d ivili
rstan d s pre a d of ideas in religion, po zat
de nt a n lit ic s, cultu ion
Un l o p me re s.
ev e , an
es ed d te
t ur ). ce th
interact io n s a n d e x c h anges betw c hno
c ed Tra tigate een cu log
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ns u
t
s.
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t i d e a s,
nt al S
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g
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ersta influence of geography on histor phy and
dp
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ith ic
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inte
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5
idea over
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lyze
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ang
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re ch
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gniz
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Understand
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ory.
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its re
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in
3-9
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elem that rec
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partic nts of ounts
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t r
with
6th
in EL
supp s, chron ical ex expla
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G
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the
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t
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le a rel r c e p l ve
desc 2.2: W nd ate of ev ace, s nts
ript rite sec s w en itu (in
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year hasis ers, nclu
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and
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supp
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ort the
7th Grade
nd expository text, inclu
n a rrative a di n
t w ee n
( s t r u c ture and features of expos g how to
e ok itory
u ish b textbo o r t an c e of context and so text) read a
g p . his
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urce w
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porta (R 2.4) varie
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r
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e (e
liter rically
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ant
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a
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.
be t w
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wor (R 3.0)
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KEY
R = English Language Arts Framework
Overview of Assessment
The Role of Assessment Why Common Assessments?
As an integral element of the Secondary There are numerous reasons for using
Periodic Assessment Program, the common assessments. Common
History/Social Science assessments are assessments promote equity and access for
designed to measure student learning and all students. They enable teachers to
inform instruction. The intent of the Periodic collaborate as well as to identify and
Assessments is to provide teachers with the address problem areas. Common
diagnostic information needed to ensure assessments are tools to be used to hone
that students have received the instruction and share best practices in the teaching
in the History/Social Science content profession. They also provide opportunities
specified by the California History/Social for a collective-response to help schools
Science Framework and Content Standards create timely, systemic intervention for
and to provide direction for instruction. They students.
are specifically designed to:
Results from the assessments should be
• Focus classroom instruction on the used to specify immediate adjustments and
California Content Standards. guide modifications in instruction to assist
• Ensure that all students are provided all students in meeting or exceeding the
access to the required content. state History/Social Science standards.
• Provide a coherent system for linking With these results, teachers can make
assessment of standards to district immediate decisions about instruction,
programs and adopted materials. including extensions and interventions.
• Be administered to all students in core
History/Social Science classes on a The Instructional Guide includes five Model
periodic basis. Lessons with built-in assessment
• Guide instruction by providing regular components. These classroom level
feedback that will help teachers assessments, along with other teacher
collaboratively target the specific designed assessments, student evaluations,
standards-based knowledge and skills and student and teacher reflections, can be
that students need to acquire. used to create a complete classroom
assessment plan.
• Assist teachers in determining
appropriate extensions and
The Periodic Assessments are a regularly
interventions.
scheduled assessment of the student’s
• Motivate students to be responsible for
mastery of the standards within the
their own learning.
History/Social Science discipline and should
• Provide useful information to parents not be considered the sole method of
regarding their child’s progress toward assessing students’ content knowledge.
proficiency of standards. The assessment is designed to measure a
• Link professional development to range of skills and knowledge.
standards-specific data.
Each Periodic Assessment will consist of
fifteen multiple-choice questions and one
short constructed response item (SCR). The
multiple choice items reflect the California
Standards Test in structure, content and
skills.
4-1
The short constructed response items are Intervention
designed to assess student’s historical,
analytical, and writing skills. The content in Intervention should be part of daily
the SCRs will connect to the content in the classroom instruction. As teachers assess
model lessons. student understanding and learning of the
standards, they will make decisions about
The periodic assessment is designed to be when to simply review content and when to
given within a single 50 minute classroom incorporate researched-based practices
period. History/Social Science test booklets designed to assist students in acquiring the
will be available in both English and knowledge and skills.
Spanish.
Following each periodic assessment, time
Scoring should be set aside for students and
teachers to review assessment scores and
The 15-question multiple choice portion of establish a clearly defined course of action.
the Periodic Assessment will be scored At this point, strategic teaching is the
electronically by The Princeton Review. intervention. Common student
The classroom teacher will score the SCR misconceptions can be addressed as similar
based on content and salient ideas, not concepts and topics are covered in
language and conventions. Teachers will be subsequent units providing opportunities for
trained during professional development in comparing and contrasting past and present
scoring the SCR writing tasks. content.
4-2
Sample Periodic Assessment
1 In what ways do Muslims believe Islam 3 Use the excerpt below to answer the
is similar to Judaism and Christianity? following question.
√A the Byzantine Emperor was the head of A the conflict between the middle class and
the Eastern Orthodox Church. the Church during the Medieval period.
B the Roman Emperor was the head of the √B the conflict between the monarchy and
Roman Catholic Church. the Church during the Medieval period.
C Christians were persecuted by the C a declaration of war on the Church by the
Byzantine Empire. monarchy of England.
D the Eastern Orthodox Church was ruled D a request for cooperation by the monarchy
by the Pope in Rome. to the Church.
4-3
Sample Short Constructed Response
Base your answers to the following questions on the quotes below and on your knowledge of
history.
3. Explain how both of the quotes would impact a person’s daily life.
Both of the quotes explain set expectations of what Muslim’s should in their lives.
For example, the first quote says they are supposed to fast during important
times and the second says that they should not believe in any other God. These
are directions that help Muslim’s in their daily lives.
4-4
Introduction to the Curricular Map
The curricular maps are a plan that allocates the time needed to teach all of the content standards
adequately in one instructional year. They were created to assist teachers with instructional planning
as well as to develop a unified yet flexible instructional approach to History/Social Science within the
Los Angeles Unified School District.
The maps are divided into three instructional components consisting of the standard sets to be
taught, with each component comprising roughly 1/3 of the time in a year–long course. Within each
instructional component, there are specified standards and days allocated for each standard; within
that component, the sequence of standards and the number of instructional days may be adjusted to
best fit the needs of your students before the Periodic Assessment window. The number of
instructional days for each standard was determined by the number of “A” and “B” substandards and
the content within the standard, as well as the time needed to prepare for and take the California
Standards Test (ten days). The maps also build in nine flexible days to account for other activities
that may impact classroom time (fire drills, assemblies, minimum days).
5-1
GRADE 7 WORLD HISTORY GEOGRAPHY: MEDIEVAL /EARLY MODERN TIMES
Instructional Component 1: Fall of Rome, Islam, Africa, and Mesoamerica (Standards 7.1, 7.2,
7.4, and 7.7)
Blue Print Focus Standards:
First 9 days (traditional) and 6 days (year-round) of the Fall Semester: “A” indicates high emphasis
• Building classroom community “B” indicates medium emphasis
• Thinking as an historian “C” indicates low emphasis
• Review of the Five Themes of Geography “*” not ranked for emphasis
o Location, Region, Movement, Place, Human-Environment Interaction
• Review of G.R.A.P.E.S.
o Geography, Religion, Achievements, Politics, Economics, and Social Structures
Blue Print
Instructional
Standards Focus Concepts
Days
Standards
7.1 Students analyze the causes and effects of the vast • decline Traditional
1 Question
expansion and ultimate disintegration of the Roman Empire. • internal weakness Calendar
1. Study the early strengths and lasting contributions of Rome • corruption 10 Days
(e.g., significance of Roman citizenship; rights under Roman • urbanization
law; Roman art, architecture, engineering, and philosophy; • citizenship Concept 6
preservation and transmission of Christianity) and its ultimate Calendar
A • empire
internal weaknesses (e.g., rise of autonomous military A-Track
• expansion
powers within the empire, undermining of citizenship by the 7 Days
growth of corruption and slavery, lack of education, and B-Track
distribution of news). 6 Days
2. Discuss the geographic borders of the empire at its height C-Track
C 7 Days
and the factors that threatened its territorial cohesion.
3. Describe the establishment by Constantine of the new capital D-Track
in Constantinople and the development of the Byzantine 10 Days
Empire, with an emphasis on the consequences of the
B Four by Four
development of two distinct European civilizations, Eastern
Orthodox and Roman Catholic, and their two distinct views on Calendar
church-state relations. 3 Days
Chapters: Chapters:
7.1
2 1,2,3,4,5,6
Chapters: Chapters:
7.2
3,4 7,8,9,10,11
Chapters: Chapters:
7.3
7 16,17,18
Chapters: Chapters:
7.4
5 12,13,14
Chapters: Chapters:
7.5
8 20,21,22
Chapters: Chapters:
7.6
9,10 1,2,3,4,5,6
Chapters: Chapters:
7.7
11,12 23,24,25,26,27
Chapters: Chapters:
7.8
13 28,29,30,31,32
Chapters: Chapters:
7.9
14 28,29,30,31,32
Chapters: Chapters:
7.10
15 33,34,35
Chapters: Chapters:
7.11
15,16 33,34,35
5-6
HISTORY-SOCIAL SCIENCE
Explain the significance of the Qur’an and Sunnah as the primary sources of Islamic beliefs, practice,
and law, and their influence on Muslim’s daily life.
This lesson covers the The culminating task for this lesson
Analyze a short quote and determine
impact of the Qur’an and how belief influences action.
is a one paragraph response to the
Sunnah on the daily lives of following prompt:
Introduction of Lesson.
Muslims. Students should Compare the three major monotheistic
have already learned about religions.
the origins of Islam Read summaries of the Qur’an and
Sunnah.
including the life of Read a primary source connecting that
Muhammad and the Five source to a visual.
Pillars as outlined in Student Handouts 1-4,
Standard 7.2.2. Transparencies 1 and 2, Teacher Guide 1
Guiding Inquiries:
1. What is contained in the Qur’an and in the Sunnah?
2. How do the Qur’an and Sunnah differ?
3. How do the Qur’an and Sunnah influence Muslims’ daily lives?
Materials
Student Handout 1: Primary Source Response Page
Student Handout 2: Comparing Religions
Student Handout 3: Qur’an and Sunnah Summary
Student Handout 4: Visual Analysis Tool
Student Handout 5: Vocabulary Development
Student Handout 6: Prompt Page
Student Handout 7: Brainstorming Sheet
Student Handout 8: Writing Organizer (5, 6, 8 sentence paragraphs)
Document 1: Model Primary Source
Document 2: Primary Source
Document 3: Primary Source
Document 4: Primary Source
Document 5: Primary Source
Transparency 1: Comparing Religions Guide
Transparency 2: Visual Analysis
Transparency 3: Vocabulary Development
Transparency 4: Document 1
Transparency 5: Sample Paragraph
Placards 1-5: Visual Representation of Primary Sources
Teacher Guide 1: Background Essay
Teacher Guide 2: Document 1 Key
Teacher Guide 3: Key for Placard Matching Activity
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5. Are students able to determine how beliefs influence actions?
Lesson Overview
In this lesson, students will learn about the impact of the Qur’an and Sunnah on the daily lives of
Muslims. Students should have already learned about the origins of Islam as outlined in
standard 7.2.2 (e.g. the life of Muhammad, the Five Pillars). Students begin by reading a
summary explanation of the Qur’an and Sunnah. Next, students will connect an image to an
excerpt from the Sunnah. Students will then work in groups to analyze excerpts from either the
Qur’an or Sunnah with the purpose of determining how these passages would impact a person’s
daily life. The groups will then match the placards to the excerpts they represent. Finally,
students will write one paragraph that explains how a passage from the Qur’an or Sunnah might
influence daily lives of Muslims. This lesson has been crafted to fit the structure of a 50 minute
instructional period and will take 4 days to complete.
The Qur’an and Sunnah greatly influence the lives of Muslims. In one paragraph,
explain what the Qur’an and Sunnah are, why they are significant, and how they
influence the daily lives of Muslims.
Day 1
Teacher/Student Activities Helpful Hints
Hook: Primary Source Response Time Suggestion:
Before students arrive, write on the board, on an overhead transparency, 10 minutes
or project on a PowerPoint slide, “Feed the hungry, visit the sick, and free The teacher should
the [prisoner] if he be [wrongly in prison]” (Sunnah), followed by the verify that the
questions: students understand
the journal topic
• What would a person say if they held this belief? before allowing them
• What actions would a person take if they held this belief? to begin writing.
The teacher should guide students towards writing about how actions Students may also
demonstrate beliefs. draw their response
to the question.
Students will respond to the question in on Student Handout 1. The
teacher should select a few students to share their responses. The teacher may
have students act out
Responses may include: their answers to the
• They treat people equally questions.
• They don’t judge people
• They don’t say mean things
• They treat everyone the same
• They’re nice to everyone
• They stand up for other people
Introduction of Lesson 5 minutes
The teacher should begin the lesson by outlining the goals for the next four
days. Goals should include:
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• Understanding the importance of the Qur’an and Sunnah’s,
• Exploring the significance of the Qur’an and Sunnah on the daily
lives of Muslims,
• Writing an expository paragraph.
The teacher may introduce additional goals as needed.
Comparing Religions 10 minutes
Students will take a few moments to review what they have already
learned about Islam and compare that to what they remember about Students may
Judaism and Christianity to help them understand the common framework supplement their
between the three. work with a visual
representation within
Each student will take 3 minutes and fill in as much as they can on Student the boxes of the
Handout 2. Students should then turn to a partner and share their graphic organizer.
responses.
Consider covering
The teacher will lead a class discussion centered around the content of each box with a Post-
Student Handout 2, ensuring that all students have correct information. It note and reveal the
Transparency 1 has been provided to facilitate discussion. boxes as students
give their answers.
Qur’an/Sunnah Summary 15 minutes
Students will work with a partner to read Student Handout 3 and share the
information.
Please refer to
Before beginning, the teacher should remind students that the Arabic word Teacher Guide 1 for
for God is Allah (like Dios in Spanish) and that in this lesson, the word is more detailed
written as God and not Allah. information about the
documents.
The teacher should place students into pairs and ask students to read the
information on Student Handout 3. Students will hold a brief discussion Remind students that
about the text, starring what they believe to be the two most important when writing
facts for each document. Each pair will write a one sentence summary of summaries, they are
the information. The partners will then explain why they have chosen these choosing more
facts. important facts over
less important facts.
Ask a few partners to share their responses and the rationale for their
choices. Point out to students the key concepts in summarizing by asking
questions such as: “Why did you choose that fact over another?”
Visual Analysis 10 minutes
This activity is designed to assist students in developing an understanding
of how belief influences action. Additionally, this will help students in
preparing for the gallery walk.
The teacher should assist students in making the connection between the
excerpt and the visual.
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Day 2
Teacher/Student Activities Helpful Hints
Primary Source Response 2 Time Suggestion:
Students will continue to link belief and action by looking at an excerpt 10 minutes
from the Qur’an and determining how that would affect action.
The teacher should
Before students arrive, write on the board, on an overhead transparency, verify that the
or project on a PowerPoint slide, "None of you [truly] believes until he students understand
wishes for his brother what he wishes for himself,” (Number 13 of “Imam the quote before
Al-Nawawi's Forty Hadiths”) followed by the questions: allowing them to
begin writing.
• What would a person say if they held this belief?
• What actions would a person take if they held this belief? Students may draw
their response.
Students will respond to the questions on Student Handout 1. The teacher
should select a few students to share their responses.
Vocabulary Development 10 minutes
Understanding the significance of historical events and documents is at
the heart of historical thinking. The teacher will lead students through a Transparency 3 has
brief analysis of the term significant, using Student Handout 5. been provided for
whole class review.
This task has been designed to introduce and reinforce the concept of
significance. Students have been provided a definition map to assist their
understanding. The term’s definition and one explanation has been
provided. Other explanations might include: something that changes
people’s lives, or something that influences people.
As a class, fill in the remainder of the explanation boxes and the examples.
Introduction of Analysis Task/ Whole Group Practice 10 minutes
The teacher should review Document 1 with students. Then the teacher
should model Part 1, by thinking aloud “What does this quote mean?” and Interpretations may
completing the chart. Then the teacher will ask him/herself “How would this vary.
belief be significant in the life of a Muslim?”
Instruct students to
The teacher should record all answers on Transparency 4 while students look for the overall
record the answers on Document 1. meaning of the quote.
Teacher Guide 2 has
been provided for
those teachers as a
possible model.
Small Group Analysis Work 20 minutes
Split the class into triads. Groups will analyze and interpret four excerpts
from the Qur’an and the Sunnah. Students must be able to explain the
quote and the significance of the quotation. Students will
continue to work on
Remind students only to complete Part 1 of Documents 2-5 at this time. excerpt analysis in
the next class
When students finish the first excerpt, the teacher should check their work. session.
Circulate throughout the room and answer questions as they arise,
checking student analysis and understanding of the content.
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Day 3
Teacher/Student Activities Helpful Hints
Primary Source Response 3 Time Suggestion:
Before students arrive, write on the board, on an overhead transparency, 10 minutes
or project on a PowerPoint slide, “He who is not loving to God’s creatures
and to his own children, God will not be loving to him” (Sunnah), followed The teacher should
by the questions: verify that the
students understand
• What would a person say if they held this belief? the question before
• What actions would a person take if they held this belief? allowing them to
begin writing.
Students will respond to the question on Student Handout 1. The teacher
should select a few students to share their responses. Students may draw
their response.
The teacher should also have students complete the summary section of
Student Handout 1 and lead a small discussion on the connection between
the excerpts.
Small Group Analysis Work 10 minutes
Groups will continue to review and analyze their excerpts.
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Day 4
Teacher/Student Activities Helpful Hints
Introduction of the Writing Prompt/Brainstorming 15 minutes
The teacher should review Student Handout 6 with students, taking time to
review the criteria chart. A sample response
has been provided on
Allow students time to work with Student Handout 7, the brainstorming Transparency 5.
sheet. Students should select one quote from Documents 2 – 5 or the
journals. Provide students five minutes to quickly brainstorm on their
response.
Topic Sentences 10 minutes
As a class, hold a quick discussion about the importance of topic
sentences (e.g., they present the paragraph’s main idea, they help the
reader understand what points the paragraph will contain, they may grab
the reader’s attention).
Read the prompt together with the class. Help students identify the three
main points their paragraphs will need to address by having them
underline or highlight “what the Qur’an and Sunnah are, why they are
significant, and how they influence the daily lives of Muslims.”
Explain that topic sentences can sometimes be crafted using the same
wording as the writing prompt. As a class, write a sample sentence
together. For example, your sentence might be:
After writing a common topic sentence, have students work with a partner
and craft a topic sentence of their own that contains the same idea as the
class sentence, but one that uses their own wording or rearranges the
sentence without changing the sense (e.g., “Two important Islamic texts,
the Qur’an and Sunnah, have a great influence on Muslims’ lives.”)
The Writing Task 20 minutes
Students will write one paragraph in response to the prompt.
Three different
The teacher should then have students complete one of the paragraph organizers have been
organizers on Student Handout 8 in response to the prompt. Allow provided to
students the remainder of the class period to finalize the paragraph differentiate
organizer and write their paragraphs. paragraph length,
based on student
need.
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Reflective Journal 5 minutes
Students will complete a reflective journal on the material learned and the
writing process.
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Student Handout 1
Primary Source Response
Directions: Read the quote and think carefully about what it says. Then, answer the
questions using complete sentences.
Day One:
“Feed the hungry, visit the sick, and free the [prisoner] if he be [wrongly in prison].”
What would a person say if he or she held What actions would a person take if he or
this belief? she held this belief?
Day Two:
“None of you [truly] believes until he wishes for his brother what he wishes for himself.”
What would a person say if he or she held What actions would a person take if he or
this belief? she held this belief?
Day Three:
“He who is not loving to God’s creatures and to his own children, God will not be loving to
him.”
What would a person say if he or she held What actions would a person take if he or
this belief? she held this belief?
Summary: What are some ideas that these three texts have in common?
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Student Handout 2
Comparing Religions
Directions: Use your knowledge about world religions to fill in the missing sections of the chart.
Judaism Torah
Bible Church
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Student Handout 3
Directions: With a partner, read over the bulleted lists on the Qur’an and the Sunnah. Discuss which facts you feel are important and put a
star next to the two you feel are most important. Finally, write one sentence summaries of the Qur’an and the Sunnah, using the important
information.
Restate in your own words the two most important Restate in your own words the two most important
facts. facts.
Two important facts about the Qur’an are Two important facts about the Sunnah are
_______________________________________ _______________________________________
_______________________________________ _______________________________________
_______________________________________ _______________________________________
Explain why you feel the two facts you chose are the Summarize the information in one sentence, using
most important. your most important facts.
These facts are important because These facts are important because
_______________________________________ _______________________________________
_______________________________________ _______________________________________
_______________________________________ _______________________________________
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Student Handout 4
Visual Analysis Tool
Read the following quote:
What does the quote mean? How would this belief be important in the life of
a Muslim?
Describe what is happening in the picture. How are the ideas in the quote linked to the
action in the image?
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Student Handout 5
Vocabulary Development
Explain
significant
Term: Definition:
significant important
War
Objective:
Students will be able to explain the impact of the Qur’an and Sunnah on the daily lives
of Muslims.
Writing Task:
The Qur’an and Sunnah greatly influence the lives of Muslims. In one paragraph, explain
what the Qur’an and Sunnah are, why they are significant, and how they influence the daily
lives of Muslims.
Directions:
Choose one quotation from Documents 2-5. After explaining what the Qur’an and
Sunnah are, and why they are important to Muslims. Explain how the quotation you
chose would impact Muslims’ lives.
Use the graphic organizer to plan your paragraph. When you are writing, use the criteria
checklist below to ensure you have completed all aspects of the writing task.
Criteria Checklist:
Content Format