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2009 Winter Conference Social Justice, Critical Thinking & the New Social Studies Curriculum
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Social Justice and the Ontario Social Studies Curriculum

Dec 03, 2014

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This is the powerpoint that introduced some of the issues around the renewal of the Ontario Social Studies curriculum. For over a decade the curriculum has tried undergone many changes, sometimes encouraging the development of social responsibilities and sometimes not. Currently, we can decide whether we should focus on social justice or not. Either way we must enter a discussion of why and how.
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Page 1: Social Justice and the Ontario Social Studies Curriculum

2009 Winter Conference

Social Justice, Critical Thinking

& the New Social Studies Curriculum

Page 2: Social Justice and the Ontario Social Studies Curriculum

Evolution of the Curriculum

• During the early 90s the Common Curriculum was written aiming to develop equity, environmental awareness, citizenship, etc.

• By the latter half of 90s Mike Harris’ Common Sense Revolution was in full swing & values were stripped in favour of promoting our military, entrepreneurship, and our American ties

• 2004 curriculum review resulted in compromised changes which preserved much of the old while including more global perspectives

• 2004 also promoted more diverse aspects of learning through the Achievement Chart, the Overall E’s and the Fundamental Concepts

Page 3: Social Justice and the Ontario Social Studies Curriculum

What does this have to do with finding Social Justice in

the Curriculum?

• Find the Big Ideas in the introduction relating to Social Justice & Citizenship

• Option to read the Curriculum with a Social Justice and Environmental lense

• Interpret the Overall Expectations with a Social Justice and Environmental lense

Page 4: Social Justice and the Ontario Social Studies Curriculum

Canada and World Connections Strand, Grade 6 :

Canada’s Links to the World• identify and describe Canada’s economic, political, social, and physical [environmental] links with the United States and other regions of the world;

• use a variety of resources and tools to gather, process, and communicate information about the domestic and international effects of Canada’s links with the United States and other areas of the world;

• explain the relevance to Canada of current global issues and influences.

Page 5: Social Justice and the Ontario Social Studies Curriculum

Big Ideas are imbedded in the Overall Expectations

• Third OE [the application] is the main idea• Specific expectations help to develop

understanding of OE’s• Specific expectations may or may not do a good

job at getting to Big Ideas, depending on how students use them

• E.g. listing trade goods does not help understanding the relevance to Canada of current global issues

Page 6: Social Justice and the Ontario Social Studies Curriculum

Not all Parts of the Curriculum are created Equal

• Large gaps in the document

• No clear Social Justice issue in some units

• The Fundamental Concepts are supposed to be the organizing Ideas of the units, but Social Justice may not apparent

If you were rewriting the curriculum, how would you modify it to make

Social Justice more clear?

Page 7: Social Justice and the Ontario Social Studies Curriculum

Global Education & Social Activist centred curriculum

Which end of the spectrum do you think The Ontario Curriculum presently lies?

InclusionInclusion

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*

* *

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*(“other peoples and other cultures”)(“other peoples and other cultures”)(“we/some of us”)(“we/some of us”)

Page 8: Social Justice and the Ontario Social Studies Curriculum

Heritage and Citizenship: Grade 4 – Medieval TimesOverviewStudents discover the major features of daily life in medieval European societies. Students investigate the major events and influences of the era and determine how they shaped medieval society. Students apply their understandings to compare communities in medieval times with their own communities today.

Overall ExpectationsBy the end of Grade 4, students will:• identify and describe major features of daily life and social organization in medieval European societies from about 500 to 1500 C.E. (Common Era);• use a variety of resources and tools to investigate the major events and influences of the era and determine how they shaped medieval society;• relate significant elements of medieval societies to comparable aspects of contemporary Canadian communities.

Page 9: Social Justice and the Ontario Social Studies Curriculum

Fundamental Concepts

Environment: The natural and built elements of which the earth is composed, and the complex web they form.

• human and naturalsystems• human and naturalpatterns• exploitation andutilization of resources• regions• ecosystems• urbanization

Gd 2 • explain how the environment affects people’s lives and the ways in which their needs are met.

Gd3 • explain how communities interact with each other and the environment to meet human needs.

Gd 4 • use a variety of resources and tools to determine the influence of physical factors on the economies and cultures of Ontario and the other provinces and territories;

Page 10: Social Justice and the Ontario Social Studies Curriculum

Evaluating Students Beyond Transmission & Regurgitation

of Facts• We want students to know about issues

and injustices• Being on one side of issues is usually a

foregone conclusion• Knowing the causes of and solutions to

issues is complex

• So how do we prepare students for complex thinking?

Page 11: Social Justice and the Ontario Social Studies Curriculum

Critical Thinking Scenario: The students are hired as Anthropologists to return artefacts that were “confiscated" by the government from their rightful owners. First students do research on different Aboriginal groups. Then they examine the artefacts and infer who the artefacts belong to. In writing, they contact the communities, apologize and ask if the artefact belongs to them and ask them what should be done with them. Some of the communities want them back. The owners of the others cannot be identified. Students decide what to do next.

• Research the Potlatch laws• Create a visual display• Create a memorial• Decide on a message/apology• Decide why it is important for the public to know

Page 12: Social Justice and the Ontario Social Studies Curriculum

How are Aboriginal cultures and ways of life unique in each of

the western, northern, central and eastern regions of Canada?

Critical Thinking Consortiumwww.TC2.ca

Repatriate this maskMake careful observations of the artefact to help you decide which of the Aboriginal groups we have studied would likely have produced this artefact?

Page 13: Social Justice and the Ontario Social Studies Curriculum

We also want students to be able to entertain Ambiguity

& make Judgments based on Evidence

Page 14: Social Justice and the Ontario Social Studies Curriculum

Who was Mathieu Da Costa?Where might he have come from?When was he in Canada?How did he gain his skills?What did he do?Could he have been enslaved or was he a free man?Was he a valuable person to the French and Dutch and why?What business activities might Da Costa’s skills be important for?

Page 15: Social Justice and the Ontario Social Studies Curriculum

Systems Thinking

Systems Thinking