Unit Outline
EPR360
Advanced Humanities and Social Sciences Education
Semester 1, 2024
Peter Brett
Faculty of Education
College of Arts, Law and Education
CRICOS Provider Code: 00586B

Unit Coordinator
Peter Brett
Email: Peter.Brett@utas.edu.au
 

What is the Unit About?
Unit Description
EPR360: Advanced Humanities and Social Sciences [HASS] Education will extend your understanding of disciplinary content and pedagogy beyond that which you learned in the introductory unit, EPR260. The Australian Curriculum learning area of Humanities and Social Sciences requires children from Prep to Year 6 to think about and respond to key historical, geographical, political, economic and societal issues, and how these different factors interrelate. 

The focus of this unit is on deepening your understanding around engaging teaching and learning strategies to integrate HASS and to make connections with the Australian Curriculum’s Cross-curriculum Priorities and General Capabilities (notably Literacy, Critical and Creative Thinking, Ethical thinking and behaviour, Personal and Social competence and ICT). If you are planning Prep to Year 2 lessons you can use relevant HASS-related learning outcomes from the Early Years Learning Framework. 

Emphasis will be on developing discipline-specific skills, key organising concepts, and active teaching approaches. AT1 focuses especially on Civics and Citizenship education. AT2 has a particular focus upon developing your assessment skills in a HASS context. Both develop key professional skills. Assessment tasks aim to broaden your knowledge of research in HASS education, and to develop your skills of critical thinking. You will also be encouraged to use technologies that will re-imagine how History, Geography and Civics and Citizenship can be taught both in and beyond the classroom.
Intended Learning Outcomes
As per the Assessment and Results Policy 1.3, your results will reflect your achievement against specified learning outcomes.
On completion of this unit, you will be able to:
1.
integrate HASS content, concepts, and skills with cross-curriculum priorities and general capabilities for teaching, learning and assessment
2.
critically evaluate a range of HASS topics, skills and pedagogical approaches, including the work of peers
3.
reflect upon working collaboratively with peers and demonstrate adaption of planning and thinking in the light of on-line involvement and feedback
4.
plan an assessment instrument that integrates HASS knowledge and skills with cross-curricular elements
5.
communicate with parents/carers, learners and academic audiences using professional and academic writing conventions and technologies.
Requisites
REQUISITE TYPE
REQUISITES
Concurrent Pre-requisite
EPR260 or ESH260
Alterations as a result of student feedback
 
 
 

Teaching arrangements
ATTENDANCE MODE
TEACHING TYPE
LEARNING ACTIVITY
CONTACT HOURS
FREQUENCY
On Campus
Tutorial
On campus f2f tutorial. Range of interactive learning activities.
2
Weekly
Independent Learning
Engagement wioth MYLO resources.
8
Weekly
Online
Independent Learning
10 hours a week engagement with learning resources.
10
Weekly
Attendance / engagement expectations
If your unit is offered On campus, it is expected that you will attend all on-campus and onsite learning activities. This is to support your own learning and the development of a learning community within the unit. If you are unable to attend regularly, please discuss the situation with your course coordinator and/or our UConnect support team.

If your unit is offered Online, it is expected you will engage in all those activities as indicated in the Unit Outline, including any self-directed learning.

If you miss a learning activity for a legitimate reason (e.g., illness, carer responsibilities) teaching staff will attempt to provide alternative activities (e.g., make up readings) where it is possible.
 
 
 
 

How will I be Assessed?
 
For more detailed assessment information please see MyLO.
Assessment schedule
ASSESSMENT TASK #
ASSESSMENT TASK NAME
DATE DUE
WEIGHT
LINKS TO INTENDED LEARNING OUTCOMES
Assessment Task 1:
HASS vision for parents foregrounding active citizenship
Week 6
50 %
LO1, LO2, LO3, LO5
Assessment Task 2:
Assessing integrated HASS learning
Week 11
50 %
LO1, LO4, LO5
 
Assessment details
    
Assessment Task 1: HASS vision for parents foregrounding active citizenship
Task Description:
Scenario: The Principal and lead teachers in your school want to send a positive message and updates to parents/carers about HASS education by demonstrating the thinking and expertise of teachers and showcasing what the children will be learning in and out of the classroom. They are keen that you highlight active citizenship, education for sustainability and community involvement opportunities and links between the Civics and Citizenship curriculum and other elements of HASS and the General Capabilities/Cross-Curricular Priorities.

Part 1 – 3 x 500 word blog posts that inform parents/carers about:
• The focus of the children’s HASS learning (Australian Curriculum/EYLF topics);
• Why these topics matter? (Relevance/Purpose/Significance – knowledge and skills outcomes);
• How are they learning? (How they are doing it – engaging and active pedagogies);
• How it impacts their learning (e.g. Participation in ‘making a difference’ or a ‘change action’);
• How parents/carers might help and support?

Part 2: Peer Feedback (200 words equivalent)

Part 3: Critical Reflection (300 words)

Completion of this Assessment Task relates to Australian Professional Standards for Teachers (APST) 1.2, 2.1, 2.2, 3.2, 3.3, 3.4, 7.3.

Task Length:
2,000 words total
Due Date:
Week 6
Weight:
50 %
 
CRITERION #
CRITERION
MEASURES INTENDED
LEARNING OUTCOME(S)
1
Submits parent-friendly narrative of HASS learning for student engagement across three blog posts. Provides an analytical framework for curricular and pedagogical decisions
LO1
2
Critically appraises research and professional literature in articulating HASS education pedagogical approaches and curricula
LO2
3
Reflects upon the process of collaboration and the value of feedback in planning learning sequences. Submits evidence of responding to the work of peers and of adapting thinking and planning
LO3
4
Blog posts apply accurate use of APA referencing conventions, spelling, grammar and different formats as appropriate for the assignment and employ a structure that is easy to follow
LO5
 
Assessment Task 2: Assessing integrated HASS learning
Task Description:
Instructions: Choose any year group and any HASS sub-strand on which to assess children’s learning (noting that Early Childhood students MUST choose an age group within from Prep to Year 2).
The assessment should:
• Integrate two elements of HASS knowledge and skills with two Cross-curriculum Priorities OR two General Capabilities OR a combination of one of each (EC can refer to EYLF as well as the Australian Curriculum)
• Explicitly assess what students can do in relation to four Achievement Standards/learning outcomes
• Communicate instructions for the assessment in age-appropriate oral and written forms

Part 1: Video (600 words equivalent, 4 minutes minimum, 5 minutes maximum)
Part 2: Rubric for teachers (400 words equivalent)
Part 3: Justification (1000 words)

Completion of this Assessment Task relates to Australian Professional Standards for Teachers (APST) 1.2, 2.1, 2.3, 3.5, 4.1.

Task Length:
2,000 words
Due Date:
Week 11
Weight:
50 %
 
 

CRITERION #
CRITERION
MEASURES INTENDED
LEARNING OUTCOME(S)
1
Integrates HASS knowledge and skills with cross-curricular elements in an assessment task. Justifies assessment task (in an explanation to children) supported by relevant academic research
LO1
2
Explains how assessment explicitly tests what students know, understand and can do in HASS, and is equitable and inclusive of all learners
LO4
3
Designs an effective rubric that uses a hierarchy of descriptors for four learning outcomes to differentiate student responses
LO4
4
Uses appropriate modes of communication that are suited to audience and purpose and draws on relevant academic literature. Submits appropriately communicated, structured and referenced work.
LO5
 
 
 

How your final result is determined
To pass this unit, you need to demonstrate your attainment of each of the Intended Learning Outcomes, achieve a final unit grade of 50% or greater, and pass any hurdle tasks.
 
Submission of assignments
Where practicable, assignments should be submitted to an assignment submission folder in MYLO. You must submit assignments by the due date or receive a penalty (unless an extension of time has been approved by the Unit Coordinator). Students submitting any assignment in hard copy, or because of a practicum finalisation, must attach a student cover sheet and signed declaration for the submission to be accepted for marking.
 
Requests for extensions
If you are unable to submit an assessment task by the due date, you should apply for an extension.
 
A request for an extension should first be discussed with your Unit Coordinator or teaching support team where possible. A request for an extension must be submitted by the assessment due date, except where you can provide evidence it was not possible to do so. Typically, an application for an extension will be supported by documentary evidence: however, where it is not possible for you to provide evidence please contact your Unit Coordinator.
 
The Unit Coordinator must notify you of the outcome of an extension request within 3 working days of receiving the request.
Late penalties
Assignments submitted after the deadline will receive a late penalty of 5% of the original available mark for each calendar day (or part day) that the assignment is late. Late submissions will not be accepted more than 10 calendar days after the due date, or after assignments have been returned to other students on a scheduled date, whichever occurs first. Further information on Late Penalties can be found on the Assessments and Results Procedure.
 
Review of results and appeals
You are entitled to ask for a review of the marking and grading of your assessment task if there is an irregularity in the marking standards or an error in the process for determining the outcome of an assessment. Details on how to request a review of a mark for an assignment are outlined in the Review and Appeal of Academic Decisions Procedure.
 
 
 

Required Resources
Required reading materials
You will need the following text:
Gilbert, R., Tudball, L, and Brett, P. (eds.) (2020).
Teaching Humanities and Social Sciences, (7th ed). Melbourne: Cengage.
Your Unit Co-ordinator authored four of the chapters in this text as well as being an editor!  Louise Zarmati and I are very conscious of the cost of textbooks and recommend the same core text for EPR260 and EPR360. You can secure a 10% discount through using the offer code shared in MyLO. You also have the option of buying an e-book version rather than a hardcopy. Earlier editions of the text can also be helpful but become progressively further distanced from Australian Curriculum updates and recent academic references. My lectures will reference material in the 8th edition of this text (unfortunately due to be published in mid 2024 after this unit finishes).
Required readings - ECE students 
The above texts are relevant, but in your case the Green and Price text (especially) or Reynolds text are preferable to the Gilbert/Tudball/Brett text (they have a more sustained focus upon HASS with younger children). Also required (you almost certainly have them already). 
Arthur, L., Beecher, B., Death, E., Dockett, S., & Farmer, S. (2012). Programming and Planning in Early Childhood Settings (5th ed.). Port Melbourne, VIC: Cengage Learning.   
Department of Education Employment and Workplace Relations [DEEWR]. (2009). The Early Years Learning Framework. Canberra, ACT
 
Recommended reading materials
Recommended Readings are set by the Unit Coordinator as readings that will be useful for this Unit to develop your knowledge and understanding of teaching and course-specific content.  If you are seeking sources of evidence to support your assessment work, you will find these readings a useful starting point. There is no requirement to buy these texts/materials. 
Buchanan, J. (2013), History, Geography and Civics: Teaching and learning in the primary years. Melbourne: Cambridge University Press. 
Green, D. and Price, D. (Eds.) (2019). Making Humanities and Social Sciences Come Alive: Early Years and Primary Education. Melbourne: Cambridge University Press. 
Reynolds, R. (2014). Teaching Humanities and Social Sciences in the Primary School (3rd edn.). Sydney: Oxford University Press. 
Taylor T., Fahey, C., Kriewaldt, J. & Boon, D. (2012). Place and Time: Explorations in Teaching Geography and History. Frenchs Forest, NSW: Pearson.   
The journal publications listed below are highly recommended for further reading on the topics covered in the unit. You will be advised of additional sources through lectures and tutorials and are expected to refer to policy documents as appropriate: 
Brett, P. (2018). Retrieving the civic dimension in history: Creating meaningful and memorable links between History and Civics and Citizenship in primary classrooms. The Social Educator, 36 (2) 15-29.  
Heggart, K. R.  & Flowers, R. (2019). Justice Citizens, Active Citizenship, and Critical Pedagogy: Reinvigorating Citizenship Education. Democracy and Education, 27 (1), Article 2.  Available at: https://democracyeducationjournal.org/home/vol27/iss1/2
Peterson, A. & Bentley, B. (2017). Education for citizenship in South Australian public schools: a pilot study of senior leader and teacher perceptions, The Curriculum Journal, 28:1, 105-122. 
Tudball, L. & Henderson, D. (2014) Contested notions of civics and citizenship education as national education in the Australian curriculum. Curriculum and Teaching, 29(2), 5-24. 

You are required to read widely as appropriate for this unit. Key readings and chapters will be posted on-line. Journals such as Agora, Teaching Geography, Teaching History, and Social Education are valuable online sources accessible from the University of Tasmania Library Catalogue.  The Social Educator: The Journal of the Social and Citizenship Educators’ Association of Australia (SCEAA) has a strong Civics and Citizenship focus and is highly recommended reading. It is available from the UTAS data bases in A+ Education. For a variety of other texts related to specific teaching sessions see MyLO and the Library Reading List for this unit. I have made sure that there is a really good range of possible readings available to you via the Reading List that you can link to through MYLO.
Other Recommended Readings – ECE students 
Ailwood, J., Brownlee, J., Johansson, E., Cobb-Moore, C., Walker, S.,& Boulton-Lewis, G. (2011). Educational policy for citizenship in the early years in Australia. Journal of Education Policy, 26 (5), 641-653 
Browett, J. & Ashman, G. (2008). Thinking Globally: Global Perspectives in the Early Years Classroom. Vic: Curriculum Corporation  
Brown, J. (2015). ‘Fostering Global Citizenship’. Every Child, Vol. 21 (1).   
Davis, M. (Ed) (2010). Young Children and the Environment. Early Education for Sustainability. Cambridge; Cambridge University Press.   
Ebbeck, M. (2006). The Challenges of Global Citizenship: Some Issues for Policy and Practice in Early Childhood Education. Childhood Education, 82(6). p. 353-357.  
Phillips, L. (2010). Social justice storytelling and young children’s active citizenship. Discourse: Studies in the Cultural Politics of Education, 31 (3), 363–76. 
Raban, B., Margetts, K., Church, A., Deans, J. (2010). The Early Years Learning Framework in Practice. Vic: Teaching Solutions.
Swift, D. (2017). The challenges of developing disciplinary knowledge and making links across the disciplines in early years and primary humanities, Education 3-13, 45(3), 365-374,
 

 

 
 
Other required resources