HASS Sem 2 Exam Active Recall PDF

Summary

This document appears to be an outline or summary of a HASS exam, covering various topics including, but not limited to, HASS, excursions, geography, and human rights. It provides information on key concepts and aims, and includes questions about the subject content. The details of the document's origin, such as exam board and year, are not included.

Full Transcript

**HASS SEM 2 EXAM ACTIVE RECALL** **WHAT IS HASS** - Introduce students to new worlds of knowledge and new ways of thinking. - Address personal, social, economic, political, cultural and environmental issues across time and place **HASS ENABLES** - Actively be involved in making c...

**HASS SEM 2 EXAM ACTIVE RECALL** **WHAT IS HASS** - Introduce students to new worlds of knowledge and new ways of thinking. - Address personal, social, economic, political, cultural and environmental issues across time and place **HASS ENABLES** - Actively be involved in making choices and decisions. - Deal with issues - Participate in a democratic society as an active and informed citizen. **HASS EQUIPS** - Address social and environmental issues at a global or individual level. - Analyse and understand problems - Suggest solutions and appropriate action **WHAT IS AN EXCURSION** - Any student learning that is off site to the school that the student is enrolled in. - Managed and organised by the teaching staff. - Compulsory and optional excursions. **BENEFITS** - Explore surroundings - Hazards in the environment - Relationship between caring for themselves and the environment. - Investigate local places. - Engage with real issues **THINGS TO CONSIDER** - Pricing - Pre and post activities - Purpose of excursion **GEOGRPAHY** **KNOWLEDGE AND UNDERSTANDING** - Developing an understanding and appreciation for the world around them. **SKILLS** - Learn and deepen their understandings. - Techniques used in investigations during fieldwork in the classroom. **CONCEPTS** - Space: significance of location and ways people manage the spaces that we live in. - Place: significance of places, shape, opportunity, security and culture. - Environment: significance of environment in human life and the important interrelations between humans and the environment. - Interconnection: nothing can be analysed in isolation. - Scale: ways things can be examined at different spatial levels. - Sustainability: the environments capacity to care for our lives and future lives. - Change: how things develop over time. **TOPICS** - People live in places - Places have distinctive features - People are connected to many places - Places are both similar and different - Earth's environment sustains all life. - Factors that shape the environment characteristics of places. - A diverse and connected world. **IN THE CLASSROOM** - Fieldwork - Mapping - Literature - Pictures **WHAT IS CIVICS** - Knowledge and understanding of civic institutions and processes. - Understanding key concepts relating to processes in AUS democracy. **WHAT IS CITIZENSHIP** - Learning about their legal rights and responsibilities. - Notions of social citizenships **AIMS** - Sense of belonging and engagement with civic life. - Understanding, knowledge and appreciation of values in AUS gov. - Role of citizens in AUS. - How to participate in civic life. - Analysis, collaboration, decision making, reflection, and communication to undertake an enquiry. - Foster responsible participation in AUS democracy. **TOPICS** - Communities, government and society. - Roles - Responsibilities and participation - AUS system of government and citizenship **CONCEPTS** - Democracy - Democratic values - Justice - Participation - Westminster System - Rights and responsibilities **AIMS OF HISTORY** - Appreciation for the past and forces that shape society. - Thinking critically, solve problems and make informed decisions. - Propose action to real world events and issues. **CONCEPTS** - Empathy - Evidence - Source - Perspective - Significance - Cause and effect - Community and change - Contestability **WHAT IT IS NOT ABOUT** - Giving the students the facts for them to regenerate. - Shallow enquiries - Letting students work individually. **WHAT IT IS ABOUT** - Collaboration (student and teacher) - Supporting students through the investigation process - Recording info and note taking skills. - Presenting info in a variety of ways. **WHAT ARE HUMAN RIGHTS** Rights that enable people to live fully human lives. - Right to vote - Right to work - Right to education - Freedom of speech - Right to an adequate standard of living. **CHILDREN AND HUMAN RIGHTS** - Children have the same rights as adults. - Special protection as they are vulnerable to exploitation and abuse. **SOCIAL JUSTICE\ **An ideal in which people's basic needs are met in which they have equal rights to. - Equality and dignity - Pursue opportunities and access services in which are they accorded. **HUMAN RIGHTS IN THE CURRICULUM** **HISTORY** - Movement from when human rights were not articulated. **CIVICS AND CITIZENSHIP** - Appreciation for diversity - Promote actions with moral integrity. - Value indigenous cultures. - Responsible global and local citizenship **GEOGRAPHY** - Engage in human rights, social justice and peace. - Culture, custodial, human wellbeing, responsibility, environmental worldview. **GLOBAL EDUCATION** - 1930s -- world study programs in the UK - 1960s-1970s -- development education taught learning about global issues. - 1980s -- integration of human rights into the curriculum **WHAT IS ECONOMICS AND BUISNESS** Students need to understand areas such as: - Wants and needs - Scarcity - Production of goods and services - Consumerism - Globalisation - Economic links between the developed and developing world. **AIMS** - Enables students to make sense of the complex world. - Emerge naturally with many aspects of study within history and geography. **CONCEPTS** - **Scarcity** - **Making choices** - **Specialisation and trade** - **Interdependence** - **Allocation and markets** - **Economic performance and living standards.** **INQUIRY TEACHER** - Sees the light in students - Ask more than tells - Know the curriculum well that they can adapt it to the students. - Prepared to share the journey - No worksheets. **CHARACTERISTICS** - Teacher scaffolds students to process information on their own. - Multiple sources of relevant evidence. - Students are confronted with situations that need solving. - Children enquire on real-world matters. - Strong emphasises on collaboration. **PROJECT BASED LEARNING** - Extended process of inquiry in response to a complex questions, problem or challenge. - Learn key academic content - Practice 21^st^ century skills **BENEFITS** - Increased students' motivation - Fostering real-life skills. - Individual or collaborative - Develops the whole child. **PROBLEM BASED LEARNING** - Real life problems **CHARACTERISTICS** - Problem is the starting point. - Usually a real-world problem, unstructured and require several sources of knowledge. - Students assume major responsibility. - Collaborative learning. **BENEFITS** - Develop lifelong skills. - Acquire problem solving skills, communication skills and interpersonal skills. - Promotes active learning. - Acquire self-directed learning skills. **WHAT IS CRITICAL THINKING** Involves students in learning to recognise or develop an argument, use evidence in support of that argument, draw reasoned conclusions and use information to solve problems. **CRITICAL THINKING IN HASS** - Generate and evaluate knowledge - Clarify concepts and ideas. - Seek possibilities. - Consider alternatives. - Solve problems. **WHAT IS ASSESSMENT** - Integral part of teaching and learning - Window to student thinking - Compass for instruction **ASSESSMENT IN HASS** - No single right answer - Assessment must be authentic - Key ideas in HASS cannot be expressed in numbers or concrete materials. **PURPOSE** - Motivate students - Feedback to parents and students. - Diagnoses of teaching **WHAT WE ASSESS** - HASS knowledge and understanding - HASS skills - Cross curriculum priorities - Concepts and topics **WHO WE ASSESS FOR** - Parents - Teachers - Admin - Students **PRINCIPALS OF ASSESSMENT** - Educative - Fair - School wide evaluation - Integral part of teaching and learning - Designed to meet a specific purpose - Informative reporting **EFFECTIVE ASSESSMENT** **ASSESSMENT STRATEGIES IN HASS** - Self-assessment - Peer assessment - Journals - Observations and anecdotal notes - Concept mapping - Work samples **ASIAN LITERACY** - Asia literacy is about students engaging with Asia in the classroom to gain knowledge, understandings and skills needed for communication and participation as global citizens within our region - Asia literacy equips young Australians to make sense of their world. It is a core part of a future-focused Australian Curriculum for the 21st century. **WHY ASIA** - Migration - Globalisation - Increasing interaction with the people of Asia. - Biggest economy in the world. - Rich and diverse cultural heritage and includes many of the world important ideas, beliefs, systems and achievements. - Migration - Trade and business - Development of Australian culture and identity - International understanding.

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