Pedagogy of Social Science • Topic 1 of 4

Concept & Nature of Social Science

Start by separating two terms CTET deliberately blurs. Social science is the disciplinary study of human society and its sub-fields -- History, Geography, Political Science (Civics) and Economics, plus Sociology. Social studies is the integrated school subject that draws selectively from those disciplines to prepare children for citizenship; it fuses the subjects rather than teaching them as watertight compartments. The nature of social science is multidisciplinary, value-laden (it deals with justice, equality, freedom, not just facts), and centred on human relationships, society and change over time. Why teach it? NCF 2005 is explicit: the aim is not to load students with dates and definitions but to develop informed, reflective and responsible citizens of a democracy -- children who can read a map, question a source, respect diversity, and act for social justice. So the aims and objectives run from knowledge (understanding society, past and present) to skills (map work, source analysis, critical reasoning) to values and attitudes (national feeling, secularism, gender sensitivity, environmental care). The subject is wrongly treated as 'boring and memory-based'; the pedagogy questions reward teachers who make it inquiry-based and connected to children's lived experience.

✅ Solved examples

1. The integrated school subject that draws on History, Geography, Civics and Economics to prepare children for citizenship is best called:
Social studies. The individual disciplines (History, Geography etc.) are the 'social sciences'; the school subject that fuses them for citizenship education is 'social studies'.
2. According to NCF 2005, the primary aim of teaching social science is to:
Develop informed, reflective and responsible citizens of a democratic society -- not merely to make children memorise facts, dates and definitions.
3. Which feature best describes the nature of social science as a subject?
It is multidisciplinary and value-laden, dealing with human relationships, society and social change -- not a single, fact-only, exact science.
4. A teacher argues that social science should not be split into rigid separate periods for History, Geography and Civics in the middle school. This view supports:
An integrated / interdisciplinary approach to social studies, as recommended by NCF 2005, so children see society as a connected whole rather than disconnected subjects.

✏️ Practice — try these, take hints as needed

1. The disciplines History, Geography, Political Science and Economics are together known as the:
Not the school subject name.
The academic disciplines themselves.
Social sciences
2. Developing values such as secularism, equality and respect for diversity through the subject reflects which kind of objective?
Beyond knowledge and skills.
Concerns attitudes and feelings.
Affective / value-based (attitudinal) objectives
3. Social science is often described as value-laden because it deals with:
Not value-neutral like pure physics.
Justice, equality, freedom.
Human values, society and relationships
4. Teaching that connects classroom content to the child’s own home, locality and lived experience reflects which NCF principle?
Knowledge linked to life.
Not rote, abstract bookwork.
Connecting learning to the child’s lived experience / real life

📝 Topic test — 8 questions

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