NotesFAQContact Us
Collection
Advanced
Search Tips
Showing all 9 results Save | Export
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Shaver, James P. – Social Studies Review, 1975
A discussion of the current position of social studies in relation to teaching technique and method leads to advocating a social studies curriculum that provides for relevance to students' lives, examination of social issues, and strategies to help students deal with values and value conflicts. (Author/ND)
Descriptors: Citizenship, Curriculum Enrichment, Elementary Secondary Education, Relevance (Education)
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Shaver, James P. – Social Education, 1985
The authors take issue with the Shermis and Barth position that indoctrination in American education is wrong (Social Education, March 1985), arguing that they have misunderstood the issue and that the imposition of certain democratic values and processes does not conflict with the goals of reflective inquiry. (RM)
Descriptors: Citizenship Education, Democratic Values, Educational History, Educational Objectives
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Curtis, Charles K.; Shaver, James P. – Social Education, 1980
Suggests that investigation of contemporary problems be included in social studies/citizenship education programs and stresses the relevance of contemporary problems to social studies curricula for slow learners. Literature pertaining to citizenship education is reviewed, and research to determine effects of a study of contemporary issues on…
Descriptors: Citizenship Education, Educational Needs, Educational Objectives, Literature Reviews
Shaver, James P.; Oliver, Donald W. – 1965
Can a structure be created that provides a broader and more valid base for the general education curriculum in the social studies than would the structure of social science disciplines? One alternative would be to focus on the making of decisions about public issues as the crucial element of citizenship behavior in a democracy. Using the common…
Descriptors: Citizenship, Citizenship Education, Curriculum Development, Decision Making Skills
Shaver, James P.; Curtis, Charles K. – 1981
The reference text is designed to help junior and senior high school teachers to integrate teaching about the handicapped into their social studies curriculum. An initial chapter distinguishes between handicaps and disabilities. Chapter 2 gives the major reasons for including handicapism in the social study curriculum: to understand the potential…
Descriptors: Attitude Change, Attitudes toward Disabilities, Community Resources, Disabilities
Shaver, James P. – 1967
This paper defines, inquires into the relationships, and analyzes the terms social sciences and social studies. Too often social studies are a simplified instructional adaptation from the social sciences in which curricular decisions are made on the basis of dictates of the social science disciplines and of college prerequisites. A social studies…
Descriptors: Citizenship, Comparative Analysis, Course Objectives, Curriculum Development
Shaver, James P. – 1967
Traditionally, the social studies have been defined as the social sciences adapted and simplified for pedagogical purposes. This definition assumes that the criteria for curriculum selection and development in social studies should come from the social sciences and not from an independent view of what the social sciences should be about. Hence,…
Descriptors: Citizenship, Controversial Issues (Course Content), Definitions, Democratic Values
Shaver, James P.; Larkins, A. Guy – 1969
Part I of this social studies report presents the results of curricular research, at Utah State University, to develop a set of "critical thinking" concepts appropriate for the analysis of political-ethical public issues, and to prepare materials and suggestions for teaching those concepts. The analytic concepts, presented in both outline and…
Descriptors: Concept Teaching, Critical Thinking, Curriculum Development, Decision Making
Shaver, James P. – 1970
Given the general recognition that what we do is influenced as much or more by our value commitments as by our factual knowledge, it is ironic that social studies, the area of the curriculum supposedly focused on citizenship education, has paid so little attention to values. There are many reasons for this, but one of them, the author believes, is…
Descriptors: Citizenship, Controversial Issues (Course Content), Critical Thinking, Democratic Values