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E-grāmata: Research on Technology in Social Studies Education

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Despite technologys presence in virtually every public school, its documented familiarity and use by youth outside of school, and the wealth of resources it provides for teaching social studies, there has been relatively little empirical research on its effectiveness for the teaching and learning of social studies. In an effort to begin to fill this gap in research literature, this book focuses on research on technology in social studies education. The objectives of this volume are threefold: to describe research frameworks, provide examples of empirical research, and chart a course for future research endeavors. Accordingly, the volume is divided into three overarching sections: research constructs and contexts, research reports, and research reviews.

The need for research is particularly acute within the field of social studies and technology. As the primary purpose of social studies is to prepare the young people of today to be the citizens of tomorrow, it is necessary to examine how technology tools impact, improve, and otherwise affect teaching and learning in social studies. Given these circumstances, we have prepared this collection of research conceptualizations, reports, and reviews to achieve three goals.

1. Put forward reports on how research is being conducted in the field

2. Present findings from well-designed research studies that provide evidence of how specific applications of technology are affecting teaching and learning in social studies.

3. Showcase reviews of research in social studies

It is with this framework that we edited this volume, Research on Technology and Social Studies Education, as an effort to address emerging concerns related to theorizing about the field and reporting research in social studies and technology. The book is divided into four sections. The first section of the book includes three descriptions of research constructs and contexts in social studies and technology. The second section is focused on research reports from studies of student learning in social studies with technology. The third section contains research reports on teachers pedagogical considerations for using technology in social studies. In the fourth and final section, we present work that broadly reviews and critiques research in focused areas of social studies and technology. This volume contains twelve chapters, each of which focuses on social studies content and pedagogy and how the field is affected and enhanced with technology. The volume includes research and theoretical works on various topics, including digital history, digital video, geography, technology use in the K-12 social studies classroom, and artificial intelligence.
Section 1 Research Constructs And Contexts
1 More to Follow: The Untapped Research Agenda in Social Studies and Technology
3(16)
John K. Lee
Adam M. Friedman
2 Using the Affordances of Technology to Develop Teacher Expertise in Historical Inquiry
19(20)
John W. Saye
Thomas Brush
3 Student-Created Digital Documentaries in the History Classroom: Outcomes, Assessment, and Research Design
39(28)
Thomas Hammond
Bill Ferster
4 Conceptual Change and the Process of Becoming a Digital History Teacher
67(34)
Philip E. Molebash
Rosemary Capps
Kelly Glassett
Section 2 Research On Students' Learning In Social Studies With Technology
5 Student and Teacher Perceptions of the WebQuest Model in Social Studies: A Preliminary Study
101(26)
Phillip J. VanFossen
6 Multimedia-Based Historical Inquiry Strategy Instruction: Do Size and Form Really Matter?
127(28)
David Hicks
Peter E. Doolittle
Section 3 Research On Teachers Using Technology In Social Studies
7 If You Build It, Should I Run?: A Teacher's Perspective on Implementing a Student-Centered, Digital Technology Project in His Ninth-Grade Geography Classroom
155(18)
Sonja Heer Yow
Kathleen Owings Swan
8 Technology Integration: The Trojan Horse for School Reform
173(16)
Cheryl Mason Bolick
9 The Effect of Teachers' Conceptions of Student Abilities and Historical Thinking on Digital Primary Source Use
189(18)
Adam M. Friedman
Section 4 Research Reviews
10 Utilizing the Power of Technology for Teaching with Geography
207(24)
Tina L. Heafner
11 Artificial Intelligence in the Social Studies
231(22)
Daniel W. Stuckart
Michael J. Berson
12 Digital History: Researching, Presenting, and Teaching History in a Digital Age
253
Fred Koehl
John K. Lee
JOHN LEE LONGEWAY is associate professor of philosophy at University of Wisconsin, Parkside. He is the author of William Heytesbury: On Maxima and Minima.