Stances in 'Introduction': Education - Introduction 3 - Stances in move 2
(1) Select an 'Introduction' right arrow (2) Select a move in that 'Introduction' (What is this?)


Learning Objectives & Strategies:
Explore stances used (A) to make move (B) to support move-making in Move 2
1. Understand what the 3 moves are? ('Introduction' & 3 Moves).
2. Look at the sentences that make move and the stances used.
3. Look at the supporting sentences and the stances used.
4.
Compare why supporting sentences are differnt from move-making sentences.
5. Check out the ratios of stances used (A) to make move only & (B) overall in Move 2.


Title: "They Thought the World Was Flat?" Applying the Principles of How People Learn in Teaching High School History
Author: Robert B. Bain
Book: How Students Learn: History, Mathematics, and Science in the Classroom (2005)
Clause
Making Move?
(Y/N)
Stances
Move 2, "Establish a Territory," Introduction 3 (*green = Stance Keywords)
5 (N) support Move 1 and anticipate the gap to be indicated in C6

Med Argumentative: to show higher number of

Most subsequent educational critics have shared Hallˇ¦s concerns about the quality of history instruction
5.1 (N) support Move 1 and anticipate the gap to be indicated in C6

Med Argumentative: to show higher number of

and (Most) embraced the recommendation that teachers reform history teaching to make it more effective and engaging.
6 (Y) indicate the gap: the disagreement between the importance of history education reform and the goals to attain it.

High Argumentative

However, critics have disagreed vigorously about the goals of an improved pedagogy.
7 (N) support C6 NonArgumentative: to present fact The language of reform reflects these disagreements, often urging history teachers to choose either student-centered or teacher centered pedagogies.
8 (N) build on C7

High Argumentative: to proclaim ="we" (History teachers) know

History teachers know that the choices are neither so dichotomous nor so simple.
9 (N) support C8 NonArgumentative: to present fact Framing the instructional situation as a set of either-or choices, such as substituting student inquiry projects for teachersˇ¦ lectures, ignores the challenges that history students and teachers face.
10 (N) support C9 NonArgumentative: to present fact History is a vast and constantly expanding storehouse of information about people and events in the past.
11 (N) support C10 NonArgumentative: to present fact For students, learning history leads to encounters with thousands of unfamiliar and distant names, dates, people, places, events, and stories.
12 (N) support C11

High Argumentative: to proclaim

Working with such content is a complex enterprise not easily reduced to choices between learning facts and mastering historical thinking processes.
13 (N) support C12

High Argumentative: to proclaim

Indeed, attention to one is necessary to foster the other.
14 (N) support C13

Tentative: mental verb to suggest

As How People Learn suggests,
14.1 (N) support C13 NonArgumentative: to present fact storing information in memory in a way that allows it to be retrieved effectively depends on the thoughtful organization of content,
14.2 (N) elaborate on C14.1

High Argumentative: to proclaim by contrasting

while core historical concepts ˇ§such as stability and changeˇ¨ require familiarity with the sequence of events to give them meaning.
15 (N) support C10 NonArgumentative: to present fact Moreover, learning history entails teaching students to think quite differently than their ˇ§naturalˇ¨ inclinations.
16 (N) support C15 Tentative: mental verb to suggest As Wineburg suggests,
16.1 (N) support C15

Med Argumentative: to show higher possibility of

historical thinking may often be an ˇ§unnaturalˇ¨ act, requiring us to think outside familiar and comfortable assumptions and world views.
17 (N) support C15

High Argumentative: to proclaim by emphasizing

Such work, then, requires both substantial knowledge and skill on the part of the teacher to help students learn historical content.