TEACHING AMERICAN HISTORY
TRAINING OBSERVATION SUMMARY
Summer, 2009
Training Overview
Grantee:
City, State:
Location of training: Date(s) of visit:
Title of session:
Length of session (minutes):
Provider of session:____________________________________________
Part of a series: Y / N Total number of sessions in series:
Total duration of activity (in hours):
Observation times: Start: End:________
Format: _____ summer institute _____ conference/symposium
_____ workshop _____ on-campus college/university course
_____ distance learning
_____ other (please describe):
Site (school, college campus, etc):
Materials used:
Collected artifacts:
Documents analyzed:
About the participants
Number of participants:
Grade levels taught by teacher participants: K, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12
Other characteristics observed about teacher participants:
Observed activity in each category (record approximate minutes)
_____ Whole-class, provider-led activity (please indicate):
_____ Professor _____ Master teacher
_____ Curriculum expert _____ Historical association representative
_____ Librarian _____ Museum educator or curator
_____ Technical assistance center representative
_____ Whole-class, participant-led activity
_____ Small group or pair activity
_____ Individual activity
Other characteristics of observed activity:
Level of engagement of teachers: ____ low _____ medium _____high _____very high
Characteristics of Training Content
| 
			 | Observed | Not observed | Insufficient evidence | 
| NAEP Chronological Periods | 
			 | 
			 | 
			 | 
| Three Worlds and Their Meeting In The Americas (Beginnings to 1607) | 
			 | 
			 | 
			 | 
| Colonization, Settlement, and Communities (1607 to 1763) | 
			 | 
			 | 
			 | 
| The Revolution and the New Nation (1763-1815) | 
			 | 
			 | 
			 | 
| Expansion and Reform (1801 to 1861) | 
			 | 
			 | 
			 | 
| Crisis of the Union: Civil War and Reconstruction (1850 to 1877) | 
			 | 
			 | 
			 | 
| The Development of Modern America (1865 to 1920) | 
			 | 
			 | 
			 | 
| Modern America and the World Wars (1914 to 1945) | 
			 | 
			 | 
			 | 
| Contemporary America (1945 to Present) | 
			 | 
			 | 
			 | 
| Cross-Cutting Themes (Presented Chronologically) | 
			 | 
			 | 
			 | 
| Immigration in the Growth of America | 
			 | 
			 | 
			 | 
| Technological Changes that have Impacted Society | 
			 | 
			 | 
			 | 
| The Constitution in a Changing America | 
			 | 
			 | 
			 | 
| America Foreign Policy in a Changing World | 
			 | 
			 | 
			 | 
| Other: 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 | 
			 | 
			 | 
			 | 
Characteristics of Professional Development Observed
| 
			 | Observed | Not observed | Insufficient evidence | |
| Activity emphasizes collective participation… | ||||
| …of groups of teachers from same school | 
			 | 
			 | 
			 | |
| …of groups of teachers from same grade level | 
			 | 
			 | 
			 | |
| … in other ways (specify) 
 
 | 
			 | 
			 | 
			 | |
| Activity is content-focused | ||||
| ...through lecture based on trainer notes or textbook | 
			 | 
			 | 
			 | |
| …through examination of source/authentic documents | 
			 | 
			 | 
			 | |
| …through use of multi-media (video, internet, etc.) | 
			 | 
			 | 
			 | |
| …through examination of multiple materials | 
			 | 
			 | 
			 | |
| …by modeling or discussing historical thinking | 
			 | 
			 | 
			 | |
| …in other ways (specify) 
 
 | 
			 | 
			 | 
			 | |
| Activity offers opportunities for active learning (i.e., meaningful analysis of teaching and learning) | ||||
| … by engaging teachers in the discussion of complex issues or use of historical thinking in large groups | 
			 | 
			 | 
			 | |
| …by engaging teachers in the discussion of complex issues, or use of historical thinking in small groups | 
			 | 
			 | 
			 | |
| …through teacher-developed historical presentations | 
			 | 
			 | 
			 | |
| …through teacher-led discussions | 
			 | 
			 | 
			 | |
| ….by including discussion of classroom implementation | 
			 | 
			 | ||
| …by providing teachers with the opportunity to plan how new curriculum materials and teaching methods will be used in the classroom. | 
			 | 
			 | 
			 | |
| …through the opportunity to observe expert teachers | 
			 | 
			 | 
			 | |
| …by providing teachers with the opportunity to be observed teaching/presenting model lessons | 
			 | 
			 | 
			 | |
| … through review of student work in the topic areas | 
			 | 
			 | 
			 | |
| …through discussion of ways to create lesson plans from the content material being presented … in other ways (specify) 
 | 
			 | 
			 | 
			 | |
| Activity promotes coherence in professional development | ||||
| … by actively encouraging follow-up communication among teachers | 
			 | 
			 | 
			 | |
| … by incorporating experiences that are consistent with teachers’ expressed goals and student needs | 
			 | 
			 | 
			 | |
| … by aligning with state standards | 
			 | 
			 | 
			 | |
| … by recognizing and building on individual teachers’ knowledge and experience | 
			 | 
			 | 
			 | |
| … by sustaining training over time, with ample participant follow-up and teacher support | 
			 | 
			 | 
			 | |
| … by providing the resources needed by teachers to make changes in the classroom (e.g., time and materials) | 
			 | 
			 | 
			 | |
| … by providing classroom-based follow-up (e.g., in-class coaching, observation, model lessons) | 
			 | 
			 | 
			 | |
| … in other ways (specify) 
 
 | 
			 | 
			 | 
			 | |
Other observations and notes:
	 
		
	
| File Type | application/msword | 
| File Title | TEACHING AMERICAN HISTORY | 
| Author | mgillespie | 
| Last Modified By | Katrina.Ingalls | 
| File Modified | 2009-05-14 | 
| File Created | 2009-05-14 |