TITLE 23: EDUCATION AND CULTURAL RESOURCES
SUBTITLE A: EDUCATION CHAPTER I: STATE BOARD OF EDUCATION SUBCHAPTER b: PERSONNEL PART 26 STANDARDS FOR ENDORSEMENTS IN EARLY CHILDHOOD EDUCATION AND IN ELEMENTARY EDUCATION SECTION 26.150 CURRICULUM: SOCIAL SCIENCE
Section 26.150 Curriculum: Social Science
The competent early childhood teacher understands the interrelationships among the social sciences; uses historical, geographical, economic and political concepts and modes of inquiry; and promotes the abilities of children as they begin to experience, think about and make informed decisions as members of a culturally diverse, democratic society and interdependent world.
a) Knowledge Indicators – The competent early childhood teacher:
1) understands the basic concepts of and interrelationships among the social sciences and the ways in which geography, history, civics and economics relate to everyday situations and experiences;
2) understands geographic concepts and phenomena;
3) understands the major ideas, eras, themes, developments and turning points in the history of Illinois, the United States and the world;
4) understands the rights and responsibilities of citizenship in the United States;
5) understands the basic concepts of economic systems, with emphasis on the United States;
6) understands concepts related to the structure and organization of human societies and relationships among social, economic, cultural and political activities and institutions; and
7) incorporates the Illinois Early Learning and Development Standards – Children Age 3 to Kindergarten Enrollment Age set forth in 23 Ill. Adm. Code 235.Appendix A, the Illinois Early Learning Guidelines – Children from Birth to Age 3 set forth in 23 Ill. Adm. Code 235.Appendix C, and the Illinois Learning Standards for Social Science set forth in 23 Ill. Adm. Code 1.Appendix D.
b) Performance Indicators – The competent early childhood teacher:
1) provides opportunities for children to develop beginning concepts, skills and dispositions that focus on how geography, history, civics (participation and citizenship) and economics relate to everyday situations and experiences;
2) provides opportunities for children to use maps and symbols, observe and describe physical characteristics of local communities, and explain the interdependence of people, places and regions;
3) creates opportunities for children to develop beginning historical concepts involving people, cultures, families, folklore and related events;
4) provides opportunities for children to explore the interrelationships among people and the roles of individuals and groups in the world in which they live;
5) provides opportunities for children to gather, organize, map and interpret data and to use technology to communicate concepts, information and procedures; and
6) creates opportunities for children to understand the relationship of self to others and to social, economic, cultural and political activities and institutions.
(Source: Amended at 39 Ill. Reg. 2413, effective February 2, 2015) |