1 / 15

Welcome t o History class

Welcome t o History class. Please be in your seat when the bell rings ☺. It’s not what you know. It’s what you do with what you know. In this history class, it’s not as much about what you can memoriz e, as it is about what you can do with information.

leane
Télécharger la présentation

Welcome t o History class

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Welcome to History class Please be in your seat when the bell rings ☺

  2. It’s not what you know. It’s what you do with what you know. • In this history class, it’s not as much about what you can memorize, as it is about what you can do with information. • Can you research and find support for the arguments you want to make about what you believe or how your see history?

  3. Start thinking about how history affects your life. • What you learn here will make you a better citizen and voter • It will help you understand the world you live in • You will improve your learning skills in all areas

  4. Start thinking about possible answers to these questions: • How much should the Government be allowed to invade our privacy? • What or who really caused the death of Trayvon Martin? • How did the city of Detroit go bankrupt? Are we next?

  5. Start thinking about possible answers to these questions: • Should the Federal Government stop some states from restricting abortion? • Should the US Government stay such close friends with the government of Israel?

  6. Answering these questions will mean using your Social Studies Skills! • Gathering information and evaluating it for validity • Interpreting charts, maps and political cartoons • Expressing your opinion or interpretation according to your observations

  7. About this class • Mr. Rees has taught in Westerville for 19 years • He grew up in Huber Ridge

  8. Restroom use Go during class change, but don’t be late Don’t ask me during class change, you won’t get permission to be late Don’t ask at the start of class Ask during changes in activity, when it won’t disrupt About this class • Food and Drink • No Glass • If you’re too messy, it won’t be allowed • Be on time • In the room before the bell • 3rd time means detention

  9. Silence it when you enter a situation where you need to be quiet (like the start of class). Don’t be on it – Don’t even look at it – when someone is talking to you. About this class • Be prepared • Don’t bug class- mates for materials • Ask me • Phones • If you want to be treated like an adult with your phone, use it maturely and politely

  10. Phones • If the class hears it go off, silence it quickly and quietly without saying anything (to draw less attention). • Don’t Sneak – if it’s an emergency and you need to reply, ask the teacher if you may. • Check it during changes in activity in a way that won’t disrupt – (we all know that 99% of the time it’s not important and can wait). • Practice these and you might not get your phone taken away (by Mr. Rees, anyway) ☺

  11. Grades • Grades will be from scores only • No attendance, behavior, or extra credit included • From Quizzes, Tests, and Projects • About 8 quizzes each quarter • 1 or 2 tests each quarter • 1 project each quarter

  12. Grades • The Scores of These Assessments will be weighted at grade card time to reflect each student’s strength • for example: if the project grade was high, but the test grade was low, the project grade can be made 30% and the test grade 10% of the 9 weeks grade, instead of totaling scores according to points possible.

  13. Homework • Not for points, but for learning! • They will contain the quiz and test questions • So doing the assignments will mean points for you later • Homework will be short writing or reading assignments of many types, meant to take no more than 20 minutes, occurring no more than four times a week.

  14. Projects • 2 page papers or projects • meant to be the student’s opportunity to learn about a topic of their own interest at greater depth • Students will be guided through the writing process in small steps • Completing the assignment should feel like a few homework assignments that create a larger project

  15. Questions? • Contact Matt Rees • Voicemail: 614-797-8624 • Email: reesm@wcsoh.org • To receive reminders of assignments and grade postings • like HistoryWithReeson Facebook • Follow HistoryWithRees on Twitter • For Help Online, visit HistoryWithRees.webs.com All interaction is for study purposes only, and will only be for announcing homework, due dates, and assessment reminders, which will always be done in class - not connecting will not put students at a disadvantage; students may not use lack of communication from these media as an excuse for being uninformed.

More Related