A Guided Inquiry Approach to Teaching the Humanities Research Project
By (Author) Randell K. Schmidt
Foreword by Carol C. Kuhlthau
By (author) Emilia N. Giordano
By (author) Geoffrey M. Schmidt
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Libraries Unlimited Inc
26th August 2015
United States
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Educational: Social sciences, social studies
Educational: History
Library and information services
907.1
Paperback
216
Width 216mm, Height 279mm
624g
Aligned with the Common Core, this book enables teachers and librarians to develop lessons and workshops as well as to teach high school students how to research and write a humanities paper using a guided inquiry approach. Being able to use the inquiry process to successfully research, write, and prepare papers and others types of presentations is not only necessary for a student's preparation for collegiate work, but is truly a requisite life skill. This book provides a solid guided inquiry curriculum for cultivating the skills needed to properly investigate a subject in the humanities, interrogate both textual and non-textual sources, interpret the information, develop an understanding of the topic, and effectively communicate one's findings. It is a powerful and practical guide for high school humanities teachers, school librarians, community college humanities teachers and librarians, and early college-level humanities instructors as well as for high school and college students who want to learn how to conduct and write up humanities research. Part one comprises a teacher's practicum that explains the power of guided inquiry. Part two contains student's workshops with instructions and materials to conduct a guided humanities project and paper on the high school level. The third part provides materials for a professional development session for this assignment as well as assessment tools and other supplementary materials such as student handouts. Based on the authors' 15 years' experience in teaching guided inquiry, the 20 workshops in the book use a step-by-step, constructivist strategy for teaching a sophisticated humanities project that enables college readiness.
It could be useful for those of you working closely with first-year composition instructors. Hopefully more high school students will experience these types of projects and come to college ready to push even further. * The Ubiquitous Librian *
[C]learly explained. Emphasis is placed on the collaboration of students, teachers, and school librarians; and on the role of the school library as the 'hub of an information network.' This is a valuable tool for preparing high school students for research projects in high school and college. * VOYA *
Randell K. Schmidt is head librarian at Gill St. Bernard's School in Gladstone, NJ. Emilia N. Giordano is assistant librarian at Gill St. Bernard's School in Gladstone, NJ. Geoffrey M. Schmidt is director of curriculum and instruction at Phoenix Charter School in Springfield, MA.