- Increased knowledge of scholarship on the history of the struggle for democracy in America.
- Increased ability to teach students (including English language learners) to read historical documents and to write coherent and thoughtful historical essays, papers, and accounts.
- Increased use of primary and secondary sources.
- Use of the textbook as part of the curriculum, not as the curriculum.
- The development and teaching of lessons, units, and assessments, focused on democracy, that incorporate state and district standards.
- Sharing, critiquing, and building upon classroom practice.
- Increased engagement in the study of American History.
- Improved ability to read and write history.
- Increased numbers of student choosing to take and then succeeding on tests that measure historical knowledge and understanding. (i.e. Golden State and AP)
- Greater understanding of how individuals and groups have struggled for a more democratic society and a greater understanding of how they and their classmates connect to that history.
- Work that will inform and assist teachers of American History beyond the ninety that will participate during the three years of the grant.
- Participating teachers work with colleagues, in a variety of settings, to improve the teaching and learning of American History both within and beyond the district.
- Learning how the teaching of a concept can be articulated forstudents at different developmental levels.
- Development of a body of classroom lessons, units, and assessments that pull together the OUSD historical thinking standards and instruction about democracy in American History in grades 5, 8, and 11.
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