Collaboration & Historical Fiction
Collaboration & Historical Fiction

This article explored collaboration between Social Studies
and English teachers around the context of historical fiction. In this
experiment, Social Studies teachers used Historical Fiction in their classrooms
to discuss topics in History while English teachers used Historical Fiction to
learn about grammatical structures and writing forms. The educational theory it
was exploring was the strengths of interdisciplinary collaboration. One of the
ways I saw collaboration between all subject matter teachers play out in my
schooling was during round robin activities in elementary school. When important
holidays or special occasions came around, all four content area teachers would
create an activity in which we travelled to the various classes in our grade level
and learned about that occasion through the lens of the various subjects. For
example, during Christmas, we would do Christmas-themed math problems, complete
science experiments with red and green colored elements, read historical
documents about past Christmas traditions around the world, and read texts
about Christmas. Collaboration such as this is a good way to foster
assimilation of knowledge for students because they are able to connect current
knowledge with previous knowledge, as well as knowledge from other areas. The
point of this article was to show readers that “collaboration is an important
tool for literacy learning” (p. 26). However, my main concern after reading this
article is what you do if and when other teachers are not on board with the
same level of collaboration as you are expecting. I think collaboration with other
teachers in varying content areas is important and beneficial. However, I am concerned
about the logistics of it in my future classroom. I would love to read more
about the logistics of using collaboration to inform my planning, but I definitely
think collaboration can help improve learning in many subject areas.
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Katie, I remember doing round robin activities too when I was in elementary school. It was really fun to have the same sort of theme across all of my classes. But going off of your other point, even if teachers in other content areas are not wanting to collaborate, you will still know kind of what content they will be going over, so you could finesse when you do certain activities to lie up with the other classes whether the other teachers are involved or not.
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