Tasking Middle Level Students with Disciplinary Thinking and Civic Engagement Using Inquiry and Zoom
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Keywords

Freedom to Vote Act
Edward M. Kennedy Institute
political thinking
public issues
Zoom technology

How to Cite

Clabough, J., Bickford, J., & Russell, W. (2026). Tasking Middle Level Students with Disciplinary Thinking and Civic Engagement Using Inquiry and Zoom. Research in Social Sciences and Technology, 11(2), 32-52. https://doi.org/10.46303/ressat.2026.8

Abstract

This case study situated middle level students to experience inquiry through best practices in social studies education pedagogy and cutting edge technology. The curricular unit positioned students to engage in close reading, text-based writing, and critical thinking about accessible, age-appropriate texts using discipline-specific strategies and effective scaffolding. Findings included students’ civic engagement with complicated material, criticality using political thinking skills, and appreciation for the Zoom experience. Students developed, refined, and communicated evidence-based conclusions about an important public issue, the Freedom to Vote Act. This case study serves as one pathway for social studies teachers to help develop middle school students’ political thinking skills about public issues.
https://doi.org/10.46303/ressat.2026.8
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