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Barth, James L. – Social Studies Teacher, 1988
Notes that social studies is a phenomena of the twentieth century, a field created as a response by educators to the crisis and chaos they perceived at the turn of the century. States that social studies has, since its founding, reflected concern for how change will occur and how it will be controlled. (JDH)
Descriptors: Citizenship Education, Curriculum Development, Educational History, Educational Philosophy
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Barth, James L.; Spencer, James, M. – Social Education, 1990
Traces early twentieth-century educational reforms that created the social studies as a field to restructure information into knowledge and promote citizenship. Presents the National Council for the Social Studies' skill objectives. Argues the social studies, although firmly based in social criticism, must still evolve to adequately address the…
Descriptors: Alienation, Citizenship Education, Curriculum Development, Educational Change
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Barth, James L. – International Journal of Social Education, 1991
Discusses the nature of social studies as a discipline. Defines it as citizenship education for teaching students how to deal with change and conflict in society. Suggests that social studies teachers believe that content should be interdisciplinary, emphasize themes and concepts dealing with social and personal issues, and teach the process of…
Descriptors: Citizenship Education, Civics, Conflict, Decision Making
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Brady, H. Robert; Barth, James L. – Social Education, 1995
Discusses the origins and development of social studies education from the Populist/Progressive era to the present. Contends that, because of the influence of politics on programs of study in schools, the social studies curriculum has been affected by the rise and fall of ideological and political trends. (CFR)
Descriptors: Citizen Role, Citizenship Education, Critical Thinking, Curriculum Development
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Spencer, James M.; Barth, James L. – Social Education, 1991
Posits the need to totally revamp social studies education, implicitly criticizing recent curriculum reform reports. Identifies five ways in which students define themselves that radically differ from teachers' and past students' points of view. Outlines resulting classroom communication problems. Questions how best to make social studies relevant…
Descriptors: Citizenship Education, Classroom Communication, Communication Problems, Curriculum Development