Historical Thinking, Reading, and Writing about the World’s Newest Nation, South Sudan
Social Studies Research and Practice
ISSN: 1933-5415
Article publication date: 1 July 2015
Issue publication date: 1 July 2015
Abstract
State and national education initiatives have significantly increased expectations of students’ non-fiction reading and writing. These initiatives provide the space for potential interdisciplinary units in English/language arts and social studies/history centered on content area reading and writing. To do so, teachers must locate age-appropriate, historically representative curricular materials and implement discipline-specific writing prompts. To guide elementary teachers’ instruction, we select a novel, underused topic: the birth of the Republic of South Sudan. Age-appropriate children’s trade books are coupled with diverse informational texts—oral histories, current event news articles, and artwork—to extend the trade books’ narratives into the realm of current events. We suggest content area literacy strategies, share anecdotes from their application in the classroom, and recommend engaging, inquiry-based writing prompts that induce students to revisit understandings derived from close readings of the trade books and informational texts. In doing so, all texts and tasks explicitly are connected to different elements of the state and national initiatives in order to help teachers meet the rigorous standards.
Keywords
Citation
Bickford III, J.H. and Bickford, M.S. (2015), "Historical Thinking, Reading, and Writing about the World’s Newest Nation, South Sudan", Social Studies Research and Practice, Vol. 10 No. 2, pp. 111-123. https://doi.org/10.1108/SSRP-02-2015-B0010
Publisher
:Emerald Publishing Limited
Copyright © 2015, Emerald Publishing Limited