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Baildon, Mark C.; Damico, James – Social Education, 2006
What distinguishes students' sense-making of the past from historians' thinking is that historians know how to determine the validity of competing truth claims, a rather complex intellectual skill that requires a sophisticated set of heuristics and strategies. One way to help students learn how to determine the validity of competing truth claims…
Descriptors: Validity, United States History, Evaluative Thinking, Interpretive Skills

Rivers, Larry E. – Social Education, 1979
Presents a two-day lesson integrating the basic skills of reading, writing, and critical thinking with social studies content at the secondary level. The lesson on indentured servitude in colonial America requires students to list information they have gathered, write a main idea, and then write a well-structured paragraph based on prewriting…
Descriptors: Basic Skills, Colonial History (United States), Interpretive Skills, Reading Skills

Wilen, William W.; Phillips, John Arul – Social Education, 1995
Asserts that a primary goal of social studies is to prepare students to make informed decisions on public and political issues. Maintains that the most effective approach to teaching critical thinking is through infusion--teaching thinking skills in the context of subject matter. (CFR)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Comprehension, Critical Thinking, Curriculum Development

Kirman, Joseph M. – Social Education, 1991
Argues that exposing children to some of Lawrence Kohlberg's moral dilemmas, such as Helga's dilemma, may be pedagogically unsound at the elementary-school level. States sample responses provided are inappropriate, rigid, and self-righteous. Provides 10 reasons why this dilemma and its designated responses are of questionable morality. Claims…
Descriptors: Critical Thinking, Decision Making Skills, Developmental Stages, Educational Theories