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  1. Social studies aims to train students for informed, responsible participation in a diverse democratic society. The content of social studies provides the necessary background knowledge in order to develop values and reasoned opinions, and the objective of the field is civic competence.

  2. Jul 20, 1998 · Social science, any branch of academic study or science that deals with human behavior in its social and cultural aspects. Usually included within the social sciences are cultural (or social) anthropology, sociology, psychology, political science, and economics.

  3. This flexible-all-inclusive-eclectic nature of social studies stems from its first “official definition” issued in 1916. The social studies are understood to be those whose subject matter relate to the organization and development of human society, and to man as a member of social groups.1.

  4. www.socialstudies.org › about › aboutAbout | Social Studies

    Social studies educators teach students the content knowledge, intellectual skills, and civic values necessary for fulfilling the duties of citizenship in a participatory democracy. The mission of National Council for the Social Studies is to provide leadership, service, and support for all social studies educators.

  5. Social science is the study of people: as individuals, communities and societies; their behaviours and interactions with each other and with their built, technological and natural environments.

  6. At all levels, however, the goals of social studies have been characterized by Peter Martorella (1985) as: (1) transmission of the cultural heritage; (2) methods of inquiry; (3) reflective inquiry; (4) informed social criticism; and (5) personal development.

  7. To provide a. context for subsequent articles in this issue, a brief overview of the history of social studies follows. The article is concluded with ques- tions which could serve as organizers for studying the remaining. articles. The Past as Prologue. Social studies, as a field of study, is relatively young. Granted,

  8. The subjects that comprise social studies—i.e., history, econom-ics, geography, civics, sociology, anthropology, archaeology and psychology—are rich, interrelated disciplines, each critical to the background of thoughtful citizens.

  9. History of the social sciences. Appearance. The history of the social sciences has origin in the common stock of Western philosophy and shares various precursors, but began most intentionally in the early 18th century with the positivist philosophy of science.

  10. The aim of social studies is the promotion of civic competence—the knowledge, intellectual processes, and democratic dispositions required of students to be active and engaged participants in public life.