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Social Studies | 6 |
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Evans, Ronald W. | 12 |
Avery, Patricia G. | 2 |
Pang, Valerie Ooka | 2 |
Pederson, Patricia Velde | 2 |
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Evans, Ronald W. – Social Studies, 1989
Critiques Diane Ravitch's suggestions for the revival of history in the school curriculum. Characterizes her arguments as conservative and compares her to the anti-progressives of the 1950s. Calls for less emphasis on traditional history and discusses alternative conceptions of history. Examines the California History Social Science Framework. (KO)
Descriptors: Course Content, Curriculum Development, Educational Trends, Elementary Secondary Education

Evans, Ronald W.; Pang, Valerie Ooka – Social Studies, 1992
Lists selected resources for issues centered education. Includes books about methods for issues centered education, reference and student materials for middle and high school students, and tradebooks for elementary classrooms. Lists criteria for the selection of materials that were included (presentation of alternative view, accuracy, and…
Descriptors: Controversial Issues (Course Content), Cultural Pluralism, Elementary Secondary Education, Instructional Materials

Evans, Ronald W.; Avery, Patricia G.; Pederson, Patricia Velde – Clearing House, 2000
Presents a cultural analysis of the process by which controversial subject matter in social studies remains deemphasized or omitted. Examines research related to taboo topics in schools. Notes that the closer and more meaningful a topic is to students' lives, the more likely it is to be taboo. Offers practical suggestions for teachers to explore…
Descriptors: Controversial Issues (Course Content), Cultural Background, Cultural Context, Curriculum

Evans, Ronald W. – International Journal of Social Education, 1992
Discusses the nature of social studies. Suggests that the National Council for the Social Studies seems dysfunctional because it aspires to be apolitical in a field that is inherently political. Concludes that social education will continue to reflect the structure of society and the values of people who control the educational process. (DK)
Descriptors: Course Content, Critical Thinking, Curriculum Development, Elementary Secondary Education

Evans, Ronald W. – Social Studies Review, 1998
Proposes an alternative way of addressing the California Framework through an issues-centered approach to teaching social studies. Describes issues-centered education as instruction infused with reflection on problematic questions related to social issues. Discusses ways of implementing issues-centered social studies curricula and note resources…
Descriptors: Academic Standards, Controversial Issues (Course Content), Critical Thinking, Decision Making
Evans, Ronald W. – 1987
This study is a history of the societal-problems approach in social studies education as revealed in secondary school social studies textbooks used in Problems of Democracy courses from 1895 to 1985. The central thesis is that the definition of the problems approach and the problems selected for study by educators as illustrated by the textbooks…
Descriptors: Controversial Issues (Course Content), Elementary Secondary Education, Ideology, Political Influences

Evans, Ronald W. – Social Studies, 1989
Notes the current attempt to replace social studies with U.S. history and geography. Delineates the two strands of thought in the social studies reform movement and argues that there is a strong tradition of the social studies as a unified, issue-centered field of study. (SLM)
Descriptors: Controversial Issues (Course Content), Educational Change, Educational Trends, Elementary Secondary Education

Evans, Ronald W. – Social Studies, 1989
Reviews the history of social studies as an integrated, issue-centered field of study from its inception within the progressive movement to the present. Summarizes major curricular development projects within the issues-centered orientation and speculates on the decline of the problems approach in social studies education. (SLM)
Descriptors: Controversial Issues (Course Content), Curriculum Development, Educational Change, Educational History

Evans, Ronald W.; Avery, Patricia G.; Pederson, Patricia Velde – Social Studies, 1999
Considers the taboo topics that social studies teachers avoid or de-emphasize, such as topics that tend to provoke strong emotional reactions. Addresses the reasons for the stifling of taboo topics and finds that the closer a topic is to students' lives the more likely the topic is labeled as taboo. (CMK)
Descriptors: Academic Freedom, Agenda Setting, Controversial Issues (Course Content), Curriculum

Evans, Ronald W. – Social Education, 1989
Addresses the problems of the U.S. history course structure from two vantage points: (1) agreement with instructional goals; and (2) agreement between current issues and the content of the established curriculum. Outlines an approach for structuring historical content around current problems and issues. Suggests several curricular models for an…
Descriptors: Course Content, Course Organization, Current Events, Curriculum Design

Evans, Ronald W.; Pang, Valerie Ooka – Social Studies, 1995
Defends the history National Standards as an excellent and inclusive guide to the broad topics and themes appropriate to a U. S. history course. Nonetheless, characterizes the Standards as pedagogically conservative. Recommends an alternative approach emphasizing critical thinking and interdisciplinary instruction. (MJP)
Descriptors: Academic Freedom, Conservatism, Controversial Issues (Course Content), Critical Thinking
Evans, Ronald W. – Louisiana Social Studies Journal, 1990
Traces historical trends in social studies education, examining pressures that have both produced and inhibited change. Analyzes differences between discipline-based and issue-centered approaches. Presents pessimistic, optimistic, and realistic scenarios of the next 100 years of social studies education. Advocates developing issue-centered social…
Descriptors: Citizenship Education, Computer Uses in Education, Controversial Issues (Course Content), Curriculum Development