Introduction: The Task of Teaching Social Studies Methods; S. G. Grant, John Lee, and Kathy Swan.
- Part I. Learners and Learning.
- Chapter 1. Raising Your Voice: Engaging the Social Studies Through Spoken Word Poetry; Lauren Bagwell and Brooke Blevins.
- Chapter 2. Using Current Social Problems to Confront Pre-Service Teachers' Deficit Orientations of Their Candidates; Emilie M. Camp and Prentice T. Chandler.
- Chapter 3. Practicing Deliberative Discussion: A Supportive Protocol; Todd Dinkelman.
- Chapter 4. It's In the Bag: Alternative Assessment and the Brown Bag Exam; Jeremy Hilburn and Denise Ousley.
- Chapter 5. Images of Africa: The Influence of Culture and Experience on Perceptions of Place; Hannah Kim.
- Chapter 6. Becoming Critical Readers: Analyzing Authorship in Texts; Kimberly R. Logan, H. James Garrett, and Avner Segall.
- Chapter 7. Starting Them Early: The Social Studies Needs Assessment Assignment; Starlynn Nance.
- Chapter 8. Social Studies Through a Student's Eyes: Collaborative Action Research for Teachers and Students; Tony L. Talbert and Brooke E. Blevins.
- Chapter 9. Reconnecting With Your Teenage Self; Scott Wylie.
- Part II. Teachers and Teaching.
- Chapter 10. Invitation to a Dinner Party: Learning About Social Studies Leaders; Chara Bohan.
- Chapter 11. Lesson Plan Menu; Daniel T. Bordwell and Christopher H. Clark.
- Chapter 12. Pedagogical Toolbox Analysis; Jonathan Ryan Davis and Maureen Connolly.
- Chapter 13. Teacher Candidates Collaborate to Create an Interdisciplinary Assignment; Lorrei DiCamillo and Nancy M. Bailey.
- Chapter 14. Using Video Stimulated Recall to Reflect on Teaching and Adapt to Candidate Needs; Jason L. Endacott.
- Chapter 15. Feedback on Their Feedback; Brian Girard and Robert Bain.
- Chapter 16. The Object of the Exercise: Increasing the Role of Museums in the Social Studies Classroom; Jill M. Gradwell and Kathryn H. Leacock.
- Chapter 17. Cultivating Ambitious Practices: An Interdisciplinary Methods Model; Kevin W. Meuwissen and Jayne C. Lammers.
- Chapter 18. Constructing Rationales to Teach Controversial Issues; Thomas Misco.
- Chapter 19. Anticipating Social Studies Content; Kari Muente, Timothy Lintner, and Darren Minarik.
- Part III. Subject Matter.
- Chapter 20. Learning to Crosswalk: Horizon Content Knowledge in Economics; Cheryl A. Ayers.
- Chapter 21. Maps and Apps for Responsible Consumer Literacy; Jason Harshman.
- Chapter 22. History as Lived and Local; Jennifer Hauver.
- Chapter 23. Documenting Democracy: The Digital Short Project; Todd S. Hawley.
- Chapter 24. What Is Significant? Grappling with Pre-Service Teacher Perceptions of Historical Significance and Subject Content Knowledge; Aaron Johnson, David Hicks, and Stephanie van Hover.
- Chapter 25. Doing Local History: An Exercise Using the C3 Framework for Social Studies Methods Courses; Michael P. Marino and Margaret Smith Crocco.
- Chapter 26. Posting Perspectives: Evaluating Sources on Controversial Issues; Paul B. McHenry.
- Chapter 27. What Should I Teach? Conceptualizing Subject Matter; Rebecca Mueller, Lauren Colley, and Emma Thacker.
- Chapter 28. Methods of Integrating Current Events Into Social Studies Lessons; Jeff Passe.
- Chapter 29. Problematizing the Social Studies; Mark Pearcy.
- Chapter 30. Commitment to Social Justice Is Not Enough, Love Is Not Enough: Helping New Social Studies Teachers Develop Content Knowledge for Teaching; Dave Powell.
- Chapter 31. Connecting Content to the World; Mardi Schmeichel.
- Chapter 32. Teachers as Decision Makers: Using a Document-Based Activity Structure (DBAS) to Create Social Studies Curriculum; Corey R. Sell and Philip E. Bernhardt.
- Chapter 33. Discussing Standards: A Dialogic Analysis of the NYS Social Studies Framework; Dennis Urban and Elina Lampert-Shepel.
- Part IV. Context.
- Chapter 34. An Hour in Our Town; Erin Adams.
- Chapter 35. Experiencing a Different Field: Cultural Capital and the Classroom; Nick Bardo and Bárbara C. Cruz.
- Chapter 36. Picturing Social Studies; Kristy A. Brugar.
- Chapter 37. Community Mapping Video Podcast Project: Developing Teacher Candidates' Sociocultural Consciousness; Erik Jon Byker, Amy Good, and Nakeshia Williams.
- Chapter 38. Troubling the Familiar: The Institutionalized Racism Inquiry Project; Alexander Cuenca.
- Chapter 39. A Lived-In Secondary Social Studies Methods Course; Brad M. Maguth.
- Chapter 40. Mentoring, Public Outreach, and Social Justice Issues: Ingredients for a Powerful Professional Partnership; Joe O'Brien and Tina M. Ellsworth.
- Chapter 41. Tracking in Schools: Candidates Map Their Placement Context; Alexander Pope.
- Chapter 42. Academic Profiles: Connecting Kids, Data, and Practice; Kent Willmann.
- Biographies.