A Note on Links: When reading back posts, please be aware that links have a short half-life. You can find working links to all of the MHS resources on our Educator Resources Page.

Thursday, October 31, 2024

Link Roundup and Upcoming PD

 

Teaching with Maps

The second of our Second Tuesday PDs is coming this November 12, from 4:30-5:30 p.m. "Teaching with Maps" will feature ideas from MTHS Teacher Leaders in History Hali Richmond (grade 4, Sunburst) and Jennifer Hall (grades 7-8, Eureka) along with your ideas! Register.  

Interesting Links

Sometimes, there's no theme, except for "noteworthy things we saw on the internet or in our inboxes (or through our attendance at MFPE).

President Biden apologized to victims of the US government’s 150-year Indian Boarding School system at a ceremonial gathering at Arizona's Gila River Indian Community. View the video.

Life in the Land is a documentary film and podcast series that shares stories of those who interact with the complexities of Montana’s land, waters, and communities, looking at the success and value in collaborative & locally led initiatives. Full disclosure: I haven't yet watched these films or listened to their podcasts, but they seem worth noting, particularly ones that focus on the Blackfeet, Crow, and the Confederated Salish and Kootenai Tribes.

The Montana Free Press has a four-part series on The Future of Coal Country: Landscape on the Brink of Change.

  • Part I takes readers across the landscape shared by the Northern Cheyenne, Crow and Colstrip residents who live above the United States’ largest coal reserve, and lays out the challenges and uncertainties entangled in envisioning a new energy economy.
  • Part II catalogs the unprecedented flood of tax dollars flowing into Montana’s coal country, and the reactions of residents presented with these opportunities in an election year. Billions of dollars in tax incentives, loan guarantees and direct aid to families await takers, but many in southeast Montana feel leery of the complicated processes.
  • Part III explores the distinctive cultures and aspirations of the Crow, Colstrip and Northern Cheyenne communities as waves of change buffet traditional coal jobs and introduce new but untested opportunities to join a renewable energy transition.
  • Part IV presents a visual tour of Montana’s coal country and the people and places that have grown up around it.

 If you have an interesting link you think is worth sharing, let me know! In the meantime, happy exploring.

Connections

Is anyone besides me obsessed with the New York Times game Connections

The rules are simple. The game is not:

Anyway, I found a site where you can make your own Connections-style puzzle, so I had to try it. Can you solve this Montana history-themed puzzle without making any mistakes? 

Thursday, October 24, 2024

Free PD on Digital Literacy

The Digital Inquiry Group (DIG, formerly Stanford History Education Group, or SHEG) has developed a really good method for teaching kids how to effectively evaluate online information for bias and accuracy. I can't speak highly enough about it. And it is offering two free asynchronous courses this fall. Each course will include: 

  • Evidence-based approaches to teaching digital literacy  
  • Instructional videos
  • Instructional simulations
  • Discussion boards
  • Optional webinars

The courses will run over four weeks to allow participants to complete them independently. Upon successful course completion, participants may request certificates of attendance indicating the number of hours of professional learning they completed. Email me your certificate of completion to earn OPI renewal units. 

Civic Online Reasoning 

In this 10-hour course, participants will learn about research-backed strategies for effectively evaluating online information and explore free curricular resources developed by the Digital Inquiry Group for teaching students these vital skills. The course will also address common student misconceptions and the pitfalls of outdated approaches to teaching digital literacy. The course will include three modules:  

  • Module 1: Search like a fact checker with lateral reading
  • Module 2: Verifying claims on social media and click restraint
  • Module 3: Evaluating different types of online sources.

This course will run October 15 to November 12. Click here to enroll in the course.
 

Basics of Evaluating Online Sources

In this 3-hour course, participants will learn about research-based strategies for evaluating online information, with an emphasis on the skill of lateral reading. Participants will also explore free, research-backed curricular resources developed by the Digital Inquiry Group for teaching students these vital skills. The course will include one module: Search like a fact checker with lateral reading. 
This course will run November 12 to December 6. Click here to enroll in the course. 

Please note: The content of the two asynchronous courses will overlap, so educators should enroll in either the 3-hour or the 10-hour option, but not both. 

 

Wednesday, October 23, 2024

National History Day

What is National History Day? 

National History Day is a project-based learning experience that aligns with numerous state standards for social studies and ELA. Students grades 6-12 research topics related to an annual theme, then present their findings as documentaries, exhibit boards, papers, performances, or websites. NEW this year, students grades 4-5 research Montana history topics related to the annual theme and create posters to show their research. The 2024-2025 theme is Rights & Responsibilities in History.

Students grades 4-5 can share projects with their school and community. Students grades 6-12 can also compete with their projects in regional, state, or even national competitions. This year, regional competitions take place in Kalispell (February 8), Miles City (February 8), and Helena (February 15, tent.) and the state competition takes place in Bozeman (April 12).

 

How Can I Get Involved?  

Teachers grades 4-12 can get started by filling out the teacher interest form and signing up for professional development. Twice a month, NHD-MT co-coordinator, MTHS historian, and former classroom teacher Dr. Melissa Hibbard guides teachers through the steps of the History Day process with ready-to-use classroom resources.

Anyone who likes history and supporting students can sign up to judge at one of the regional or state competitions.

Librarians & research specialists can sign up to help Montana students conduct research (email Melissa directly at nationalhistorydaymt@gmail.com).

 

Ready to Dive Deeper? 

Thanks to support from the Montana 250th Commission, teachers grades 4-5 can apply to join a cohort of elementary educators doing the History Day Poster Contest. Selected teachers will receive training in historical research, primary source analysis, and poster construction, as well as a $250 stipend and 3 renewal units.  Apply by November 1.

To learn more, visit www.nationalhistorydaymt.org or follow NHD MT on Facebook.

 

 


Monday, October 21, 2024

Engage Your Students with Civics Education

 

Get in Touch!

How else can we help? Let us know. Or maybe you have other ideas you want to share? Email MT 250 Coordinator Devon Malizia at devon.malizia@mt.gov.

Thursday, October 17, 2024

Literacy and Social Studies Part 2, Chunking

 In my recent post on literacy and social studies I reviewed why teaching social studies improves literacy and talked about the "Write Your Way In/Out" strategy. I also promised to share some other strategies for imbedding literacy activities into your social studies units.  

Chunking

According to Edutopia, "Chunking information—breaking it down into manageable units and scaffolding it with activities—makes learning more accessible." Station activities are a great way to implement this strategy. In one of the lessons in Montana: A History of Our Home, students to "write their way in": "Would you have wanted to be a cowboy/girl on the open range?" Then they visit six different stations. Each station has a photograph or a short chunk of text for students to read and answer questions about. They use the information they've gathered at the stations to write a short essay about why they would, or would not, want to have been a cowhand.

You can easily set up a similar station activity using short excerpts of primary and secondary sources for any topic you are studying.

Chunking, another definition

According to Facing History & Ourselves, "the chunking reading strategy involves breaking down a difficult text into more manageable pieces and having students rewrite these “chunks” in their own words. You can use this strategy with challenging texts of any length. Chunking helps students identify key words and ideas, develops their ability to paraphrase, and makes it easier for them to organize and synthesize information."

This is a great strategy to use with legal documents, like treaties or constitutions. 

Here's one lesson that Salish Kootenai College Professor Tammy Elser created that uses chunking with treaties. In this lesson, students:

1. read the treaty by themselves highlighting words and phrases they don't know or understand.

2. read in small groups, defining words they don't know. 

3. read a third time, paraphrasing the treaty, article by article, in everyday language. 

4. Read the treaty (and their paraphrases) again, stopping at each article to answer the following questions: 

  • What's in it for the Tribe? 
  • What's in it for the non-Indian settlers? 
  • What's in it for the US government.

At a workshop I attended with Tammy, we did an even easier version of this exercise: Each group only analyzed and summarized *one* article. After she checked to make sure our summaries accurately reflected the article, we shared our summaries to one another. 

Stay tuned for future posts featuring additional ways to imbed literacy and social studies. 

Monday, October 14, 2024

Free Series of Online Book Club Meetings with Native Authors

 We've missed the first two sessions, but these free California IEFA online book club series looks fabulous. The meetings are live online from 3:30-5 Pacific (so 4:30-6 Mountain). 

Find more information at American Indians in Children's Literature.

Or you can sign up here.

Below is a preview of the schedule. If you attend a session and email me a brief summary, I'll send you a form for 1 renewal credit. 
 
Oct 24 - Christine Day, We Still BelongThe Sea in Winter, and I Can Make This Promise
 
Oct 31 - Debbie Reese, Children's Books about Native Youth and their Hair

Nov 7 - Laurel Goodluck, Forever Cousins, Rock Your Mocs and She Persisted: Deb Haaland
 
Dec 19 - Cynthia Leitich Smith, Hearts Unbroken, Jingle Dancer, and Sisters of the Neversea
 
Jan 16 - Michaela Goade, Berry Song, Remember, We Are Water Protectors, and Being Home
 
Jan 23 - Deborah Miranda, Bad Indians: A Tribal Memoir
 
Feb 13 - Cutcha Risling-Baldy, We are Dancing for You: Native Feminisms and the Revitalization of Women's Coming-of-Age Ceremonies
 
Feb 20 - William Bauer, California Through Native Eyes: Reclaiming History
 
Feb 27 - William Bauer, We Are the Land: A History of Native California
 
Mar 13 - Debbie Reese, Children's Books about Native People in the Sciences

Mar 20 - Dina Gilio-Whitaker, Understanding Stereotypes and Native Americans, Part One: Master Narratives and Root Myths
 
Mar 27 - Dina Gilio-Whitaker, Understanding Stereotypes about Native Americans, Part Two: Modern Myths
 
Apr 17 - Carole Lindstrom, We Are Water Protectors, My Powerful Hair, and Autumn Peletier: Water Warrior
 
April 24 - Monique Gray Smith, My Heart Fills with Happiness, When We are Kind, and You Hold Me Up
 
May 8 - Laurel Goodluck, Fierce Aunties and Too Much: My Great Big Native Family
 
June 5 - Debbie Reese, Learn about New Children's Books by Native People

Thursday, October 10, 2024

See you at MFPE

 Are you coming to Bozeman to MFPE? If so, make sure to stop by the Montana Historical Society booth and say hi!

There are an abundance of great-looking sessions this year. Check them out!

Special Events

If you get into town on Wednesday, head over to the Gallatin History Museum, 317 W Main, from 5:30-7:30 p.m. for light appetizers, a tour of the museum at 5:30, and a talk by The Extreme History Project founder Crystal Alegria at 6:30. (Earn two renewal units). If you are attending, Sandra would appreciate an RSVP so she knows how much food to order: sandra.oldendorf@montana.edu.  

Montana Council on Social Studies Featured Speakers 

Thursday

  • 11-12 p.m. Mark Johnson, Montana's Historic Chinese Communities (room A377)
  • 12-1 p.m. Issues in Social Studies and MCSS Business Meeting: join for lunch (rooms A330-31)
    • Bring your own lunch or enjoy pizza/salad and drinks from MCSS
  • 1-2 p.m. Dr. Dale Martin, The Monstrous Anger of Guns, (room A382)

Friday

  • 10-11 a.m. Dr. Walter Fleming, The Seven Most Important Indian Battles in Montana History: (room A377)
  • 11-12 p.m. Megan Torgerson, Changing Perspectives on Rural (room A377)

Montana Historical Society Staff and Teacher Leader-led Sessions

Thursday

  • 8-9 a.m. Centering Indigenous Voices in Historical Narratives, Dylan Huisken
  • 8-10 a.m. Exploring Indian Education for All through Primary Sources from the Library of Congress, Melissa Hibbard
  • 1-2 p.m. Western Displacement "Done Wrong by 'The Man'?" Gallery Walk, Mary Zuchowski

Friday

  • 9-10 a.m. MTHS Resources Scavenger Hunt, Laurie Enebo
  • 10-12 p.m. National History Day 101, Melissa Hibbard
  • 1-2 p.m. Montana History Projects Make-It-And-Take It, Laurie Enebo

Other Sessions of Interest

Thursday

  • 9-10 a.m. Tsistsistas & Suhtaio: Expressions of the Northern Cheyenne People, Ancient Times - 1875, Heather Torrence
  • 9-10 a.m. 1972 Montana Constitution - History & Threats, Mae Nan Ellingson and Evan Barrett
  • 10-11 a.m. 1776-2026: A Semiquincentennial Roundtable, Senator Shannon O'Brien and Marietta Croft
  • 10-11 a.m. Art & Adaptation: Transforming Art among the Apsáalooke (Crow Nation), Heather Torrence
  • 11-12 a.m. To Bleed or Not to Bleed (about Lewis and Clark medicine), Cortney Reedy
  • 12-1 p.m. Educator Resources from the Western Heritage Center, Heather Torrence
  • 1-2 p.m. Forts and Trading Posts, Matthew Schertz
  • 1-2 p.m. Mann Gulch Curriculum, Mari Carroll
  • 2-3 p.m. Montanan PBS Presents: The American Buffalo, Nikki Vradenburg
  • 2-3 p.m. MT STOY Keynote: Kevin KickingWoman
  • 2-5 p.m. Teaching Federal Indian Policy Periods, Jacie Jeffers
  • 2-4 p.m. Women in the Heart of Battle - Female Participation at the Little Bighorn, Cheyenne Aldrich
  • 3-4 p.m. Montana League of Women Voters Suffrage Timeline and Nitty Gritty of Voting Presentations, Rebecca Johnson
  • 3-4 p.m. Beadwork in the Classroom, Sunny Gardner
  • 4-5 p.m. Indian Education for All resources for Music, Mike Jetty

Friday

  • 8 a.m-5 p.m. Butte's Superfund: Place-Based Scientific Literacy, Chris Pavlovich, Rayelynn Brandl et al
  • 9-10 a.m. Speakers in the Schools (A free program from Humanities Montana), John Knight
  • 9-10 a.m. Introducing Native Art: Winter Count Workshop, Jennifer Woodcock Medicine-horse and Autumn Elliot
  • 10-11 a.m. Introducing Native Art: Winter Count Workshop II, Jennifer Woodcock Medicine-horse and Autumn Elliot  
  • 11-12 p.m. Game On: Montana Athletes Who Changed History, Heather Torrence
  • 9-10 a.m. Traditional Games and Fire Starting, Cortney Reedy and Dusty Rixford
  • 1-2 p.m. Indian Education for All Resources for ELA and Social Studies, Mike Jetty
  • 2-3 p.m. Pandemonium on the Prairie: Crime and Conflict on the Montana Plains, 1831 - 1899, Heather Torrence
  • 2-3 p.m. The State of Social Studies in 2024, Lawrence Paska
  • 2-5 p.m. “It Opened my Mind and my Heart”: Applying the Rs Framework to Indigenize Professional Development, Christine Stanton, Jordann Lankford et al

Monday, October 7, 2024

Literacy and Social Studies

 

Social Studies Improves Reading Comprehension

I've been reading about how kids learn to read and it's fascinating! It turns out reading requires two things: 

  1. Understanding how letters come together to form words (phonics)
  2. Understanding how words come together to create meaning (comprehension).

Traditional literacy instruction is great for #1, but it turns out that social studies is better for #2. It's true! A longitudinal study of K-5 students found that "Social studies is the only subject with a clear, positive, and statistically significant effect on reading improvement."

I was curious why that might be, so I started reading articles by literacy experts and educational psychologists. It turns out that comprehension requires that you know words (vocabulary) and that you have enough background knowledge in a subject to fill in the blanks that every piece of writing leaves. 

There is lots of data that background knowledge (including domain-specific vocabulary) is essential for comprehension. For example, a couple of elegantly designed studies demonstrated that poorer readers who know more about baseball do better at comprehending a reading passage about baseball than students with higher reading scores.

There's probably no subject that can do more for students' general background knowledge (and for the development of vocabulary) than social studies. I suspect that's why spending more time on studying social studies improved reading scores.

Embedding Literacy Strategies into Social Studies Improves Literacy Even More

There's something even better than simply adding more time for social studies (which is tremendously short-changed in elementary school). That's embedding literacy activities/strategies into your social studies instruction. That's what we did with the Montana: A History of Our Home, so if you are teaching Montana history in grades 4-6, you are in luck! The work is done for you. If you teach other topics, there are some simple strategies you can use. I'll feature one below and others in future posts.

Write Your Way In and Write Your Way Out  

Salish Kootenai College education professor Tammy Elser introduced me to this simple but powerful technique, and we use it over and over in our lesson plans.

When you are about to study a new topic:

  • Ask students to take out a pencil and their writing journals, or a sheet of paper, and date it.  
  • Tell students: You will be thinking hard and writing for the next five minutes. I will run a timer and you will keep writing the whole time, not lifting your pencils until the timer stops. If you get stuck, just write “I’m thinking, I’m thinking” until you get a new idea. Don’t worry about spelling or grammar. The goal is to just keep thinking and pouring your thoughts onto the paper. (Let them know they can use their imaginations. Create a sense of excitement/urgency.)
  • Read the prompt and start the timer. Here are some sample prompts: 
    • What do you think it would be like to live [Insert Era]? 
    • "Do you think you would have liked to ... [worked as a cowboy/girl on the open range? come to Montana to prospect gold?]
  • Have students write for the full five minutes, and then draw a line where they stop writing.
  • Study the topic.
  • Return the initial "Write Your Way Ins" to your students.
  • Under the line they drew on their initial quick rights, have them repeat the process with a new prompt asking, "now what do you know/think?"

Why Write Your Way In/Out?

  • It activates background knowledge (important for reading comprehension).
  • It provides a reason for reading (also important for reading comprehension).
  • It gives you a quick sense of what your students do and don’t know about a topic. 
  • It helps students cement what they learned by reflecting on it in writing (in a very low stakes way) at the end of the unit. 
  • It provides students an opportunity to use new vocabulary in their "Write You Way Outs." (Again, low stakes practice is good!) 
  • It gets students writing. (I've had one teacher tell me she got a page out of a student who had never written more than a sentence previously.)

I'll be featuring some of the other literacy strategies we've integrated into Montana: A History of Our Home and other lesson plans in future posts. If you have a favorite you use, drop me a line.

 

Thursday, October 3, 2024

National History Day

 

What is National History Day?

R&R

National History Day is a project-based learning experience that aligns with numerous state standards for social studies and ELA. Students grades 6-12 research topics related to an annual theme, then present their findings as documentaries, exhibit boards, papers, performances, or websites. NEW this year, students grades 4-5 research Montana history topics related to the annual theme and create posters to show their research. The 2024-2025 theme is Rights & Responsibilities in History.

 

 

NHD

Students grades 4-5 can share projects with their school and community. Students grades 6-12 can also compete with their projects in regional, state, or even national competitions. This year, regional competitions take place in Kalispell (February 8), Miles City (February 8), and Helena (February 15, tent.) and the state competition takes place in Bozeman (April 12).

How can I get involved?

NHD Judging

Teachers grades 4-12 can get started by filling out the teacher interest form and signing up for professional development. Twice a month, NHD-MT co-coordinator, MTHS historian, and former classroom teacher Dr. Melissa Hibbard guides teachers through the steps of the History Day process with ready-to-use classroom resources.

Anyone who likes history and supporting students can sign up to judge at one of the regional or state competitions.

Librarians & research specialists can sign up to help Montana students conduct research (email Melissa directly at nationalhistorydaymt@gmail.com)

Ready to Dive Deeper?

LOC

Thanks to a grant from the Library of Congress, teachers grades 6-12 can apply to become an NHD Teacher Fellow. Selected teachers will receive training in historical research, primary source analysis, Library of Congress resources, Indian Education for All, as well as a $500 stipend, up to 48 renewal units, and travel support to in-person events. Apply by October 14.

 

MT250

Thanks to support from the Montana 250th Commission, teachers grades 4-5 can apply to join a cohort of elementary educators doing the History Day Poster Contest. Selected teachers will receive training in historical research, primary source analysis, and poster construction, as well as a $250 stipend and 3 renewal units.  Apply by November 1.