Skip to content
integrated computational thinking

Abstraction 1: Intro to Abstraction

< Back to Building Block
Step 5 of 7: Abstraction in Social Studies
a map of the US during the civil war

Mapping is an excellent example of abstraction. For instance, when studying the Civil War a teacher could ask three groups of students (Groups A, B, and C) to create different maps that highlight specific aspects of the war.

Group A may study the Civil War by emphasizing the politics of which states were Union and which states were Confederate on their map.

Group B might highlight transportation routes and large cities, indicating the economic differences between the Union and the Confederacy.

Group C
could mark down important battles, allowing for analysis of the military campaigns.

Each map represents the CT concept of abstraction for a different purpose. By focusing on one aspect, students can develop a deep understanding of the war through a political, economic, or military lens.

This example activity supports standard D2.Geo.1.6-8. from the C3 Framework:

Construct maps to represent and explain the spatial patterns of cultural and environmental characteristics. Guven and Gulbahar suggest that by approaching topics using abstraction “such activities may help to reduce students’ perceived complexity of the topic” (2020, p. 6).