The world around us is changing each and every day and those decisions greatly affect our lives. It is important for us to be aware of the events that are going on around us locally and nationally. You are responsible this semester for completing nine (9) current event articles due on the dates listed below.
Goals:
Communicate all the main ideas of an article (current event) that is at least 35 lines long.
Express the significance of the topic as it applies to society and clearly state why the article was chosen (personal attachment to the topic)
The written portion contains all required parts and all work is properly cited
The writing is properly punctuated and the grammar and spelling is correct.
The presentation (podcast, flipgrid video, Narrated Canva or Slides presentation) is well organized with a clear topic
Student speaks clearly and can be heard and understood.
The presentation is understandable and proper grammar and language choices are used.
High School History and Social Sciences Standards:
Connections to Middle and High School History and Social Science
Students were introduced to concepts of media literacy in the grade 8 civics class. These high school standards are designed to inspire reflection on how current events are reported and to give students ways of determining the purpose, point of view, and accuracy of the reports they see, hear, and view on social media, online, and in print.
Guiding Principle 8
An effective history and social science education incorporates the study of current events and news/media literacy. When teaching history and social science, teachers have a unique responsibility to help students consider events – including current events – in a broad historical, geographical, social, or economic context.
The Framework’s News/Media Literacy standards for grade 8 and high school are designed to help students take a critical stance toward what they read, hear, and view in newspapers and on websites, television, and social media. Applying these standards, students learn to evaluate information, question and verify its source, distinguish fact from inference, and reasoned judgment supported by evidence from varying degrees of bias.
•Exploring what it means to be a good digital citizen
•Observing and describing how technology can influence people.
•Evaluating digital media bias and media messaging
•Developing research skills to create artifacts and attribute credit, including using advanced research, searches, digital source evaluation, and synthesis of information.
•Understanding databases and organizing and transforming data.
ISTE Tech Standards:
1.3 Knowledge Constructor
Students critically curate a variety of resources using digital tools to construct knowledge, produce creative artifacts and make meaningful learning experiences for themselves and others.
1.3.a
Students plan and employ effective research strategies to locate information and other resources for their intellectual or creative pursuits.
1.3.b
Students evaluate the accuracy, perspective, credibility and relevance of information, media, data or other resources.
1.3.c
Students curate information from digital resources using a variety of tools and methods to create collections of artifacts that demonstrate meaningful connections or conclusions.
1.3.d
Students build knowledge by actively exploring real-world issues and problems, developing ideas and theories and pursuing answers and solutions.
September 23--- Article #1 Due
October 21--- Article #2 Due
November 18--- Article #3 Due
December 16--- Article #4 Due
January 20--- Article #5 Due
February 17--- Article #6 Due
March 24--- Article #7 Due
April 28--- Article #8 Due
May 26--- Article #9 Due
You are restricted to articles that deal with politics, government, society, economics, etc. related to the United States.
You MAY NOT submit articles related to sports, entertainment, etc.
You may choose your article from a number of sources.
They may come from Newspapers (News and Observer, USA Today, etc.), weekly news magazines such as Time, History Magazines or professional news sources located on the internet.
If you have Internet access, I have listed a number of sites to assist you.
The article you choose must not have been published more than 2 weeks ago and be a minimum of seven paragraphs (35-40 sentences.)
* You may not use the same source that you used for the previous current event assignment.
To further develop your ability to verbally communicate information, you will be required to present your article to the class via one of the media listed below:
Podcast
FlipGrid Newscast
Narrated and Recorded Presentation
For the article you choose, you should type your summary:
using MLA format
12 pt Font Times New Roman
as well as using the following format:
Article Title (5): Write the title at the top of your page.
Summary(40): Write a summary paragraph, in your own words, about the article. It needs to be at least SIX to EIGHT SENTENCES LONG.
You can’t copy verbatim from the article. Doing so will result in a grade of “0.” Only two quotes may be used in your summary. This is called plagiarism.
Significance(40): Write at least 3-4 sentences discussing why you chose the article and how it is important to society. Think about who this event impacts and how. Explain why it is significant or you may provide your opinion about the topic.
Two Questions(10): You will need to write 2 relevant questions about the article that you can ask/discuss with the class.
Reference(5): Cite the article and include the following: Title article; author; source (where you got it from); date retrieved or published. Attach a copy of the article or a link to the article with your summary.
They may come from Newspapers (News and Observer, USA Today, etc.), weekly news magazines such as Time, History Magazines or professional news sources located on the internet. If you have Internet access, I have listed a number of sites to assist you. The article you choose must not have been published more than 2 weeks ago and be a minimum of seven paragraphs (35-40 sentences.)
Fox News Boston Globe National Geographic News
MSNBC News American History AP
Rubrics for the Assignment:
Flip Grid
Audio PodCast
Narrated Presentation