Outschool
Abrir configuración de moneda, zona horaria e idioma
Iniciar sesión

Estudios sociales de quinto grado: Unidad 1 de Estudios sociales de quinto grado (flexible)

Esta clase es la Unidad 1 de cuatro unidades de Estudios Sociales de quinto grado, donde exploramos la historia de los Estados Unidos desde el período precolonial hasta el comienzo de la Guerra de la Independencia.
Beth Foster | Humanities Educator
Puntuación media:
4.9
Número de reseñas:
(349)
Educador estrella
Popular
Clase

Qué está incluido

Tarea
4+ horas por semana. This flex class is for learners who just want to learn more about the topics, as well as students who want to get a letter of competition. For learners who are just practicing skills, homework is optional but highly recommended. For those learners seeking a letter of completion, there is about four hours of homework to be completed each week, including reading, quizzes, discussion questions, worksheets and writing assignments. There is also a final report. See the rubric below for how the learner will be evaluated. For those students seeking a letter of completion. I will provide an assessment each weekend of the previous week’s assignments.
Evaluación
For those students seeking a letter of completion. I will provide an assessment each weekend of the previous week’s assignments. Weekly Evaluation Rubric - Comprehension Quiz 20 Points - Classroom Discussion 20 Points - Writing Assignment 20 Points - Collaborative Classroom Project 40 Points Final Assessment for the class is based 50 percent on the weekly evaluation and 50 percent on the final research project.

Experiencia de clase

Nivel de inglés: desconocido
Grado de EE. UU. 5
Unit 1 of Fifth Grade Social Studies focuses on U.S. history with the lost colony at Roanoke, the Salem Witch Trials, the Plymouth Colony, and the New England, middle and southern colonies. We’ll go up to the beginning of the Revolutionary War. We’ll look at Native Americans and their struggle and treatment in the formation of the United States. We’ll also look at slavery in the formation of the United States. The unit ends with the student completing a research report.

Each week on Monday a new interactive lesson that includes lecture videos, discussion and activities will be posted. Also in the online classroom on Monday, students will find that week’s assignments and quiz. I will be available throughout the week to answer questions in the online classroom, to evaluate students’ work and to provide any additional support learners need. On Wednesday mornings, I will post that week’s discussion question about the assigned reading. 

INTERACTION: There will be a collaborative classroom project using Google JamBoard. This project will invite learners to put Columbus on trial. Was he an heroic explorer or a murderer? 

New sections of each of the fifth grade social studies units are offered eight times a year, beginning in January, February, March, April, May, August, September and October. Unit 1 focuses on early U.S. history including the lost colony of Roanoke, the Salem Witch Trials, the Plymouth Colony, and the New England, middle and southern colonies. It also looks at Native Americans and their struggle and treatment, as well as the institution of slavery, in the formation of the United States. Unit 2 focuses on the Revolutionary War, Constitution, Bill of Rights and branches of government. Unit 3 focuses on the Civil War, Reconstruction, the women’s suffrage movement, Indian Removal Act, and Jim Crow. Unit 4 focuses on U.S. history from the Civil Rights movement to the present, as well as U.S. geography. For students seeking a letter of completion, one will be provided following each unit of the class as well as a final letter of completion for those students who complete all four units. If your learner is seeking a letter of completion please message me to let me know so we can work together to ensure success.

This flex class is for learners who just want to learn more about the topics, as well as students who want to get a letter of competition. For learners who are just practicing skills, homework is optional but highly recommended. For those learners seeking a letter of completion, there is 2-3 hours of homework to be completed each week. See the rubric below for how the learner will be evaluated. For those students seeking a letter of completion.

Weekly Evaluation Rubric 
- Comprehension Quiz 20 Points
- Classroom Discussion 20 Points
- Writing Assignment 20 Points
- Collaborative Classroom Project 40 Points

Final Assessment for the class is based 50 percent on the weekly evaluation and 50 percent on the final research project.
Metas de aprendizaje
Unit 1 of Fifth Grade Social Studies focuses on U.S. history with the lost colony at Roanoke, the Salem Witch Trials, the Plymouth Colony, and the New England, middle and southern colonies. We’ll go up to the beginning of the Revolutionary War. We’ll look at Native Americans and their struggle and treatment in the formation of the United States. We’ll also look at slavery in the formation of the United States. The unit ends with the student completing a research report.
objetivo de aprendizaje

Otros detalles

Orientación para padres
Because fifth grade social studies teaches U.S. history, difficult content is inevitable. This includes colonization, slavery, genocide, war, death, disease, and oppression. The historical realities are disturbing to almost all students no matter their age, but may be particularly disturbing to younger learners. While I try to teach these historical realities in a way that shields younger learners from the worst of the historical horrors and in as age-appropriate manner as possible, we will explore these topics. My particular method of teaching history is to try to help my students see history through the eyes of everyday people. What this often looks like in class is reading accounts of these historical events by enslaved and indentured people, enlisted soldiers, or Native Americans who were forced from their lands. I also seek to use historical accounts to help students explore how oppressed people rebelled, revolted, and resisted oppression.
Recursos externos
Además del aula de Outschool, esta clase utiliza:
Fuentes
The fifth grade social studies courses pull from a myriad of sources. We explore the nation's founding documents: the Declaration of Independence, U.S. Constitution, and Bill of Rights. We will use many primary sources to explore historical events and periods through the eyes of people who were firsthand witnesses.These may include diary entries, letters, court testimonies, and other sources. As far as lecture development, I pull on several sources. The sources I use most often include Howard Zinn's "A People's History of the United States" and Eric Foner and Lisa McGirr's "American History Now."
Se unió el July, 2020
4.9
349reseñas
Educador estrella
Popular
Perfil
Experiencia y certificaciones del docente
Maestría en Historia desde Gettysburg College
Licenciatura en Inglés desde Campbellsville University
From ancient times, humans have used stories to better understand themselves and their place in the universe. Stories explain our past and how we can create a better time and world for ourselves and those who will come after us. This is the heart of humanities education. Humanities education within an ecosocial justice framework asks students to consider the stories they read, write, hear, and tell and how these stories impact all humans, the earth itself, and the creatures with whom they share the planet. We will consider stories of the past and of this moment, literature, poetry, theater, folklore, speeches, primary sources, and more.

Everyone we meet has something to teach us, and we have something to teach everyone we meet. Learning and teaching are as necessary to human life as breathing air, drinking water, and eating food. I teach English Language Arts, social studies, literature, and history classes at the third grade through high school levels. My role as an English Language Arts teacher is to help every student find their individual voice and learn to express it in written and spoken language. As a social studies and history teacher, my role is to help every student better understand the world that came before them, the moment in which they live, and a vision for a better future. 

A couple of notes about semester courses that apply for both live and flex sections.

✔️ INTERACTIVITY: Live semester classes are highly interactive and center around discussion and group activities. For students who prefer less interactivity, flex classes are suggested. 

✔️ STUDY HALL: Students enrolled in any of my semester courses, live and flex, are invited to attend study hall, which is held on most Monday and Wednesday evenings during the fall and spring semesters, at no additional cost. This is when students can get extra help with assignments, ask questions, work with classmates on group projects, or log in and work on homework with other learners. 

✔️ WORKBOOK:  Students enrolled in elementary and middle school courses, live and flex, will receive a virtual interactive workbook before the course begins. The workbook is created using Google Slides. Students will complete homework in the workbook, and the teacher will provide feedback on homework in the workbook. Students enrolled in high school courses will receive a link to a Google Drive where they will complete homework, and the teacher will provide feedback. 

✔️ LETTERS OF COMPLETION: At the end of courses, I provide a letter of completion and final grade for all students who have earned a C or better in the course. My goal is for every student to successfully complete the course. Learning is not about doing every assignment perfectly every time. We will work together to improve throughout the course. Students who engage and complete homework will earn an A.  

✔️ FINANCIAL BARRIERS: If the class fee is a barrier to your student’s enrollment, please message me for more information about payment plan options and scholarship opportunities. I will most likely respond by asking you what fee would make the course accessible for your student. We will work together from that point to find a way to make the course financially accessible. 

 
⬇️		⬇️		⬇️		⬇️


In addition to the classes I teach, I organize two online clubs. ACT: Animal Club for Tweens & Teens focuses on animal welfare and rights. The EcoSocial Justice Club: A Current Events Discussion Club for Young Historians is for middle and high school social studies and history students to continue conversations that began in class. While all learners are invited to join ACT, the EcoSocial Justice Club’s prerequisite is that students are enrolled in or have completed one of the Foster Woods Folk School’s middle or high school social studies or history courses.  


⬇️		⬇️		⬇️		⬇️


I invite learners to call me by my first name, Beth. My pronouns are she or they. I am lead teacher at the Foster Woods Folk School, an Appalachian school dedicated to teaching the humanities within an ecosocial justice framework. I was a newspaper reporter and editor for many years before directing a nonprofit center focused on social justice. I have a master of arts degree in American history, and bachelor of arts degrees in political science, English, and communications with a journalism emphasis. I am also a Gaelic language learner.  When I am not teaching or learning, I care for the 30 dogs and cats living at The Foster Woods Folk School animal sanctuary. I enjoy visits from the many birds, opossums, deer, and other wild creatures who stop to say hello, as well as learning gardening, canning, and preserving from my parents.


⬇️		⬇️		⬇️		⬇️


🛑 Plagiarism and AI Policy

Homework is assigned to encourage learners to think more deeply and critically about what we are learning and reading. The point of homework is not to just fill the page. The point of homework is for learners to practice expressing their thoughts, ideas, opinions, analysis, and research in their own language. Because of that the Foster Woods Folk School has instituted a strict policy regarding students submitting plagiarized content and AI-generated content as their own work. 

All homework submitted for assignments is checked using software designed to detect plagiarized and AI-generated content. If a submitted assignment returns a score of being plagiarized or AI-generated, the teacher assessing the assignment will further investigate by submitting the assignment to additional plagiarism and AI detection software, and further investigating the results. If  the teacher determines that the assignment was plagiarized or AI-generated, the following policy will apply. 

1. On the first instance, the teacher will provide their determination to the student and their adult in writing. The teacher will invite the student and their adult to attend an office hours meeting to discuss the incident. The student will receive an F on the assignment with no opportunity to re-submit the assignment. 

2. On the second instance, the teacher will provide their determination to the student and their adult in writing. The teacher will invite the student and their adult to attend an office hours meeting to discuss the incident. The student will automatically fail the course with no opportunity to re-submit the assignment. The student may continue to attend class meetings, but no letter of completion or certificate of completion will be issued to students who have committed two acts of submitting plagiarized or AI-generated content. 

Refunds will not be issued for class fees for students who fail a course because of submitting plagiarized or AI-generated assignments.

Appeals Process: If a student believes that the teacher’s assessment of their work being plagiarized or AI-generated is wrong, the student may appeal by requesting a meeting with the Foster Woods Folk School board president, Will York. In the case of an appeal, York will meet through Outschool Zoom with the student, the student’s adult, and the teacher. York’s decision is final.

Reseñas

Clase grupal
Compartir

13 US$

semanalmente o 100 US$ por 8 semanas
8 semanas

Completado por 51 alumnos
No hay videoconferencias en vivo
Edades: 9-13

Esta clase ya no se ofrece
Acerca de
Apoyo
SeguridadPrivacidadPrivacidad de CAPrivacidad del alumnoAdministrar preferencias de datosTérminos
Obtener la aplicación
Descargar en la App StoreDescargar en Google Play
© 2024 Outschool