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YANESSA L. MILLER, MAT, JD SOCIAL STUDIES INSTRUCTIONAL FACILITATOR NORTH CAROLINA DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC INSTRUCTION Interactive Notebooks

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Page 1: YANESSA L. MILLER, MAT, JD SOCIAL STUDIES INSTRUCTIONAL FACILITATOR NORTH CAROLINA DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC INSTRUCTION Interactive Notebooks

YANESSA L. MILLER, MAT, JDSOCIAL STUDIES INSTRUCTIONAL FACILITATOR

NORTH CAROLINA DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC INSTRUCTION

Interactive Notebooks

Page 2: YANESSA L. MILLER, MAT, JD SOCIAL STUDIES INSTRUCTIONAL FACILITATOR NORTH CAROLINA DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC INSTRUCTION Interactive Notebooks

The Theory:

Interactive Notebooks allow students to record information about history in an engaging way. Students use several types of writing and innovative graphic

techniques to record and process.Students organize information and ponder historical

questions. This promotes creative and independent thinking.

Students develop graphical thinking skills and are often more motivated to explore and express high-level concepts. Key ideas are underlined in color or highlighted; Venn diagrams

show relationships; cartoon sketches show people and events; timelines illustrate chronology; indentations and bullets indicate subordination; arrows show cause-and-effect relationships.

Page 3: YANESSA L. MILLER, MAT, JD SOCIAL STUDIES INSTRUCTIONAL FACILITATOR NORTH CAROLINA DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC INSTRUCTION Interactive Notebooks

1. This year I felt the notebook really

helped me stay organized. 3. Even though the left-right thing was confusing, once I got it I

liked it! 8. I like having all of my work

where I can see it.

Some Research:

9. We should have two notebooks, one for the first half of the year and another for the second half.

10. I liked the notebook because it made me feel like I accomplished something.

11. I liked the notebook because it was really easy to study for tests/quizzes.

Page 4: YANESSA L. MILLER, MAT, JD SOCIAL STUDIES INSTRUCTIONAL FACILITATOR NORTH CAROLINA DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC INSTRUCTION Interactive Notebooks

The Basics:

The right side—the “input” side—is where the teacher organizes a common set of information that all students must know.

The left side—the “output” side—is primarily used for processing new ideas.

Page 5: YANESSA L. MILLER, MAT, JD SOCIAL STUDIES INSTRUCTIONAL FACILITATOR NORTH CAROLINA DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC INSTRUCTION Interactive Notebooks

The Setup:

Page 6: YANESSA L. MILLER, MAT, JD SOCIAL STUDIES INSTRUCTIONAL FACILITATOR NORTH CAROLINA DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC INSTRUCTION Interactive Notebooks

Evidence of Understanding: Left Side Processing

StoryboardPostcards from the

pastTrading cardsAdmissions GameClassifieds section AdvertisementsEulogiesReport CardsTextbook pagesThinking maps

Create journal entries in the voices of immigrants as they partake in the great European migration.

Arrange nine foreign policy actions along a spectrum ranging from isolation to imperialism.

Write a fictional dialogue reflecting Martin Luther King Jr.’s and Malcolm X’s differing viewpoints.

Page 7: YANESSA L. MILLER, MAT, JD SOCIAL STUDIES INSTRUCTIONAL FACILITATOR NORTH CAROLINA DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC INSTRUCTION Interactive Notebooks

Elementary Sample

Page 8: YANESSA L. MILLER, MAT, JD SOCIAL STUDIES INSTRUCTIONAL FACILITATOR NORTH CAROLINA DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC INSTRUCTION Interactive Notebooks

Middle School Sample

Page 9: YANESSA L. MILLER, MAT, JD SOCIAL STUDIES INSTRUCTIONAL FACILITATOR NORTH CAROLINA DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC INSTRUCTION Interactive Notebooks

High School Sample

Page 10: YANESSA L. MILLER, MAT, JD SOCIAL STUDIES INSTRUCTIONAL FACILITATOR NORTH CAROLINA DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC INSTRUCTION Interactive Notebooks

The Process: Student Ownership

Let students create their own covers. Require what you will (his/her name, your name,

class, period, etc.), but allow and encourage creativity.

This is a Social Studies notebook, NOT to be used in other classes.

Encourage students to personalize their notebooks with an author page. This could include a portrait or photograph, as

well as personal information or favorite quotes.

Page 11: YANESSA L. MILLER, MAT, JD SOCIAL STUDIES INSTRUCTIONAL FACILITATOR NORTH CAROLINA DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC INSTRUCTION Interactive Notebooks

The Process: Set up

Leave several pages at the beginning of the notebook for the Table of Contents. This is not a random art portfolio; there shouldn’t

be doodling for the sake of doodling. Number the pages --- odd numbers on the right and

even numbers on the left. Students should never continue a right-side page

onto the back but should rather staple, tape, or glue on an extra sheet to extend a page.

Date each page.

Page 12: YANESSA L. MILLER, MAT, JD SOCIAL STUDIES INSTRUCTIONAL FACILITATOR NORTH CAROLINA DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC INSTRUCTION Interactive Notebooks

The Process: Rubrics

Attach a rubric to the inside cover of the notebook.

Using a rubric, check notebooks every 3-4 weeks (except for the first few weeks of class when they should be checked more regularly).

Page 13: YANESSA L. MILLER, MAT, JD SOCIAL STUDIES INSTRUCTIONAL FACILITATOR NORTH CAROLINA DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC INSTRUCTION Interactive Notebooks

A Rubric

Category 3 2 1Teacher InputRight-Hand Pages

Notes, charts, maps, etc. are complete and accurate. All assignments are present. Student has made an effort to interact with the material.

One or two assignments, notes, charts, maps, etc. are missing, but otherwise the content is accurate. Student has made little effort to interact with the material.

Three or more assignments, notes, etc. are missing, incomplete, or some errors may not have been corrected. Student has made no effort to interact with the material.

StudentProcessingLeft-Hand Pages

Student application of concepts is appropriate and shows depth of understanding by creating original work and making clear connections to the teacher input page.

Student application of concepts is mostly appropriate and shows a general understanding of the concepts .

Student application of concepts may be superficial or random .

Organization &Presentation

Pictures are complete and show an understanding of the content and context. The notebook is neat.

Few pictures are complete and show an understanding of the text. The notebook is relatively neat.

No pictures or pictures show a lack of understanding of the text. The notebook is not neat.

Student Corrections

Student has responded in writing and in a timely fashion to the teacher’s comments and suggestions for improvement. Content and processing are now accurate and effective for study purposes.

Student is late in responding in writing to the teacher’s comments and suggestions for improvement. Content and processing are now more or less accurate and may be effective for study purposes.

Student has not responded to the teacher’s comments and suggestions for improvement. Content and processing are still incomplete and/or inaccurate.

Page 14: YANESSA L. MILLER, MAT, JD SOCIAL STUDIES INSTRUCTIONAL FACILITATOR NORTH CAROLINA DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC INSTRUCTION Interactive Notebooks

Contact

Yanessa L. Miller, MAT, JD Social Studies Instructional Facilitator

[email protected] 919.218.8550