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Social Studies: Difference between revisions

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Add elective list and course plan
Electives: Add idiosyncracies
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* [[History of Women in America]]
* [[History of Women in America]]


Unlike the [[English]] department, many of the electives do not run some years due to a lack of student interest, according to Mrs. Howard. {{Stub}}
Unlike the [[English]] department, many of the electives do not run some years due to a lack of student interest, according to Mrs. Howard.  
 
== Idiosyncracies ==
 
* Teachers in the social studies department often teach the same course in wildly different ways and with widely varying content
* Lecture slides are generally posted
* Most social studies classes are quite project-heavy, and they often have more projects than tests
* The social studies department tends to give less homework than other departments; this statement is not true for AP classes such as [[APUSH]], though

Revision as of 20:58, 27 December 2024


The Gunn Social Studies department includes classes like World History, US Government, AP US History, and AP Human Geography. Students are typically encouraged to take a Social Studies class every year.

Social Studies Classes

9th grade: World History (next year Ethnic Studies + World History)

10th grade: US Government + Contemporary World History or the SJ version of these classes

11th grade: AP US History or US History or US History SJ

12th grade: Economics or Economics SJ + A social studies elective or AP Economics

Electives

AP Classes

College Prep or Honors

Unlike the English department, many of the electives do not run some years due to a lack of student interest, according to Mrs. Howard.

Idiosyncracies

  • Teachers in the social studies department often teach the same course in wildly different ways and with widely varying content
  • Lecture slides are generally posted
  • Most social studies classes are quite project-heavy, and they often have more projects than tests
  • The social studies department tends to give less homework than other departments; this statement is not true for AP classes such as APUSH, though