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NCCSS Conference Dates - April 24-25
The NCCSS Executive Board and Directors are pleased to share that the 2025 NCCSS Conference, which was postponed due to the Governor’s State of Emergency with the incoming winter storm, has now been rescheduled for April 24-25. The conference will take place at the Koury Convention Center in Greensboro, North Carolina.
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Using the DBQ Online platform, educators will explore practical methods for engaging students, including Multi-Lingual learners and those requiring accommodations. Participants will learn adaptable scaffolding techniques that foster inquiry and critical thinking across content areas, with a focus on inclusivity and differentiation. This session will empower educators to create DBQ experiences that are both accessible and challenging, ensuring all students are engaged and succeed, regardless of their learning needs.
Regional Director of Professional Development and Partnerships, The DBQ Project
The DBQ Project was founded in 2000 to support teachers and students in learning to read smart, think straight, and write more clearly. As teachers, we believe all students can develop high-level critical thinking skills if they have consistent instruction and a chance to practice... Read More →
Did you know that North Carolina is home to over 1,200 international companies? This fact highlights the need for preparing students for a global, knowledge-driven economy. In this session, we will explore strategies for equipping students with essential skills like cross-cultural communication, collaboration, and problem-solving. As a participant in the 2022-23 NEA Global Fellowship, a program focused on global education and sustainable development, I will share interdisciplinary SDG lessons, classroom resources, and professional development opportunities for teachers. By the end of the session, you’ll leave with actionable strategies and resources to help your students succeed in today’s interconnected world.
Equip your elementary and middle school students with essential civics and literacy skills through inquiry-based learning! This presentation highlights how inquiry-based learning can strengthen civic literacy skills and dispositions by leveraging engaging civic content. This session highlights 5E inquiry strategies—engage, explore, explain, elaborate, and evaluate—to develop critical thinking, primary source analysis, and social-emotional learning. Explore free, adaptable lessons including culturally responsive pedagogies that foster inclusive, student-centered classrooms. Ideal for educators teaching foundational democratic concepts, this session demonstrates how to cultivate literacy skills and empower student agency, preparing young learners to thrive in today’s diverse and complex world with the tools needed for informed, active participation. During the session, participants will get access to free resources, webinars, and professional opportunities that the Center offers.
Social Studies: The Gateway to the Worlds. I wanted to share some thoughts on how our Social Studies curriculum can really emphasize the connection between history and current events. It’s fascinating to see how historical events shape today’s world, and I believe we can enhance our students’ understanding by making these links clearer. Let’s talk about how we can integrate discussions on historical influences into our lessons. For instance, exploring significant events and their impacts can help students see the relevance of history in their daily lives and current affairs. I’d appreciate your input on how we can collaborate to make this a focal point in our teaching. Perhaps we could brainstorm some activities or projects that highlight these connections?
In the fall of 1774, fifty-one women in Edenton, North Carolina undertook a revolutionary act: they signed a resolution in protest of Britain's colonial taxation policies and gave their oaths to boycott British goods. Later remembered as the Edenton Tea Party, this event was an early example of women's political activism during the American Revolution. Despite this event happening over 250 years ago, no one had researched the backgrounds of all 51 signers until now. This presentation explains the history of the event and provides some insights into who these early Patriots were.
Discover how to engage K-8 students with the big ideas in North Carolina social studies using News-O-Matic. This session will explore practical strategies for teaching key topics like historical turning points, human-environment interaction, civic responsibility, and economic systems. Learn how News-O-Matic’s interactive tools and resources foster critical thinking and inquiry-based learning while connecting students to North Carolina’s history, geography, and culture in meaningful ways. Leave with tools to align lessons with standards and inspire your students to think critically about the world around them.
This session will explore the development of civic literacy curriculum materials designed specifically for K-5 classrooms. Participants will learn how to engage young students in understanding core democratic principles, active citizenship, and community participation. We’ll highlight key strategies for creating age-appropriate resources that empower teachers to foster critical thinking, empathy, and civic responsibility from an early age. You will leave the session with K-5 civic literacy resources that are ready for use across North Carolina, providing practical tools and insights to bring civic education to life in elementary classrooms.
Elementary Social Studies Curriculum Specialist, Charlotte Mecklenburg Schools
Versatile Curriculum Specialist with extensive experience in professional training, instructional design, and program facilitation. Proven ability to craft engaging learning experiences for diverse audiences by leveraging technology and data-driven insights. Skilled at fostering collaboration... Read More →
Friday April 25, 2025 9:00am - 9:25am EDT
Tidewater B3121 W Gate City Blvd, Greensboro, NC 27494
Celebrate world cultures with even the youngest students as you easily integrate these rich resources and ideas into your elementary classroom. Hands-on, inquiry-based Social Studies activities keep students engaged and using higher order thinking skills. We will help you enrich every content area, build background knowledge, pique curiosity, and have fun! You can use what we share to build a foundation for lifelong learning, empathy, respect, collaboration, communication, and inquiry. You may even take away a means to get your own passport stamped!
This session explores how elementary social studies educators can effectively integrate WIDA Standards to support multilingual learners in accessing and engaging with social studies content. Through hands-on activities, participants will analyze social studies tasks, adapt materials, and create learning objectives that align with both academic content standards and language development goals. Also, will examine strategies for scaffolding instruction to build academic language while fostering critical thinking and inquiry-based learning. The session will highlight examples of using WIDA’s Proficiency Level Descriptors and Key Language Uses (Narrate, Inform, Explain, and Argue,) to design lessons that are inclusive and culturally and linguistically sustaining.
Engage elementary students with activities that can broaden their perspective about the world around them. Discover fun, interdisciplinary games and role-playing activities that explore natural resources (distribution, extraction, and communal management), changes over time of human settlements and how these settlements affect their local and global ecosystems. Stimulate discussion, critical thinking and problem-solving, while building knowledge and skills in geography, economics and civic engagement. The presented activities build skills in communication, problem solving, inquiry social interaction and cooperation, listening, and more.
Discover how to integrate social studies into K-2 literacy instruction by using engaging historical content to build foundational ELA skills. This session explores strategies for creating small group activities that align with literacy standards while introducing young learners to important topics in social studies, such as community roles, cultural traditions, and historical figures. Participants will learn how to design lessons that enhance reading comprehension, vocabulary, and writing skills while fostering curiosity about the world around them. By embedding social studies content into literacy small groups, educators can address multiple standards, promote cross-curricular learning, and inspire a love of both history and reading. This session is ideal for teachers seeking creative ways to connect literacy with social studies themes in early education, particularly in areas of local and U.S. history.
Elementary students need to learn the beauty of the natural world before they become interested in saving it. Young children learn through their senses and experiences. Everyday children learn how the weather changes, how people interact with the environment, how things move, the characteristics of a place and how things are built. Teachers can help children learn the basis for geographic knowledge in everyday experiences. Participants will explore concrete suggestions and interesting activities including connections for both the classroom and to share with parents at home. Participants will experience hands-on activities together connecting everyday things to expand geographic thinking using maps, globes, books and exhibits.