Title: By Jamie Horsley and Amy Frederick
1Social Studies Standards Community
- By Jamie Horsley and Amy Frederick
- Grade 1
- ED 417
2Table of Contents
- Social Studies Standard History
- History Activities
- History Websites
- Social Studies Standard People in Societies
- People in Societies Activities
- People in Societies Websites
- Social Studies Standard Geography
- Geography Activities
- Geography Websites
- Social Studies Standard Economics
- Economics Activities
- Economics Websites
- Social Studies Standard Government
- Government Activities
- Government Websites
- Social Studies Standard Citizenship Rights and
Responsibilities - Citizenship Rights and Responsibilities
Activities - Citizenship Rights and Responsibilities Websites
- Social Studies Standard Social Studies Skills
and Methods
3Social Studies Standard History
- Students use materials drawn from the diversity
of human experience to analyze and interpret
significant events, patterns, and themes in the
history of Ohio, the United States, and the
world. - Benchmarks
- Place events in correct order on a timeline.
- Compare daily life in the past and present
demonstrating an understanding that while basic
human needs remain the same, they are met in
different ways in different times and places. - Recognize that the actions of individuals make a
difference, and relate the stories of people from
diverse backgrounds who have contributed to the
heritage of the United States.
4History Activities
- Research the history of the students community
(or the school community). Make visuals (posters)
to show what is learned. - Have a discussion about how the community has
changed through time. - Interview members of the community to find out
how the community is different than it was ten to
twenty years ago. Questions might include What
buildings are no longer around? What new
buildings are around? - Create a timeline of important events in the
community. - Learn about important figures in the national
community. Research early settlers to find out
what important contributions they made to their
new communities.
5History Websites
- Ohio Kids
- http//www.ohiokids.org/
- Kids Konnect
- http//www.kidskonnect.com/content/view/199/27/
- The Ohios Historical Society Kids Page
- http//www.ohiokids.org/archive/ohv/index.html
- A Timeline Activity with Childrens Books
- http//www.carolhurst.com/subjects/ushistory/time
line.html - Ohio Memory
- http//www.ohiomemory.org/
- Easy Fun School
- http//www.easyfunschool.com/article2277.html
6Social Studies Standard People in Societies
- Students use knowledge of perspectives,
practices, and products of cultural, ethnic and
social groups to analyze the impact of their
commonality and diversity within local, national,
regional and global settings. - Benchmarks
- Identify practices and products of diverse
cultures - Identify ways that different cultures within the
United States and the world have shaped our
national heritage
7People in Societies Activities
- Discuss what makes a community, then create a
classroom community. - Invite someone from another community to talk
about their community to share the similarities
and differences of two communities. - Create a Venn diagram to compare and contrast two
communities. - Explain and categorize different places within
the community. - Create a class collage of the community. Cut out
newspaper and magazine clippings and make
pictures to represent the community.
8People in Societies Websites
- Kids next door
- http//www.hud.gov/kids/
- Mr. Rogers Neighborhood
- http//pbskids.org/rogers/
- What do they do?
- http//www.whatdotheydo.com/
- Fun school
- http//funschool.kaboose.com/
- Little Explorers
- http//www.enchantedlearning.com/Dictionary.html
9Social Studies Standard Geography
- Students use knowledge of geographic locations,
patterns, and processes to show the
interrelationship between the physical
environment and human activity, and to explain
the interactions that occur in an increasingly
interdependent world. - Benchmarks
- Identify the location of the state of Ohio, the
United States, the continents and oceans on maps,
globes, and other geographic representations. - Identify physical and human features of places.
10Geography Activities
- Work with maps to see that our small communities
make up larger communities. Many communities make
up Dayton, many cities such as Dayton make up the
Ohio community, etc. - In groups, the students can create maps of the
classroom. The map should include labels and a
title. - Visit a farm to see what activities are done in a
rural area. - After learning the different landforms of Ohio,
the students will make a flap book about each
landform. - Create an alphabet chart listing different
features of the community.
11Geography Websites
- Mapquest
- http//www.mapquest.com/
- Ohio Kids
- http//www.ohiokids.org/index.shtml
- Enchanted Learning
- http//www.enchantedlearning.com/geography/landfo
rms/glossary.shtml - Site Safari
- http//homeschooling.about.com/gi/dynamic/offsite
.htm?zi1/XJsdnhomeschoolingcdneducationtm15
f10sup504.1.336.ip_tt2bt1bts1zuhttp3A
//www.ohiokids.org/ss/index.shtml - Ohio History and Activity Books
- http//homeschooling.about.com/od/toppicks/tp/ohi
o.htm
12Social Studies Standard Economics
- Students use economic reasoning skills and
knowledge of major economic concepts, issues, and
systems in order to make informed choices as
producers, consumers, savers, investors, workers,
and citizens in an independent world. - Benchmark
- Explain how the scarcity of resources requires
people to make choices to satisfy their wants. - Distinguish between goods and services and
explain how people can be both buyers and sellers
of goods and services. - Explain ways that people may obtain goods and
services.
13Economics Activities
- Read the book Sheep in a Shop, then discuss goods
and services. - Read the book If You Give a Mouse a Cookie.
Discuss the concept of unlimited wants, then make
a class book that has the same structure as If
You Give a Mouse a Cookie. For example, students
can write, If you give a teacher a cat, then she
will want - Play a game of charades in which each student
draws a card with an action on it. After the
students guess the action, they will categorize
each action as being one of a producer or
consumer. - Read the book Berenstain Bears Trouble with
Money. Create personal banks from containers
(like an oatmeal container) and decorate. - To learn about scarcity, the class will be
divided into groups and each will be given a bag
with a different number of objects. The students
will have to decide how to divide that object
between everyone in the group. The students
should discuss the problems they faced when
deciding.
14Economics Websites
- Kids Bank
- http//www.kidsbank.com/
- Economics for Kids
- http//www.socialstudiesforkids.com/subjects/econ
omics.htm - Money matters for kids
- http//www.crownmoneymap.org/MoneyMap/Login/FrmLo
gin.aspx - Moneyopolis
- http//www.moneyopolis.org/new/home.asp
- Econkids
- http//econkids.rutgers.edu/
15Social Studies Standard Government
- Students use knowledge of the purposes,
structures and processes of political systems at
the local, state, national and international
levels in order to understand that people create
systems of government as structures of power and
authority to provide order, maintain stability
and promote the general welfare. - Benchmarks
- Identify elected leaders and authority figures in
the home, school, and community and explain the
reasons for having persons in authority. - Recognize and explain the importance of symbols
and landmarks of the United States. - Explain the purposes of rules in different
settings and the results of adherence to, or
violation of, the rules.
16Government Activities
- Have a classroom election in which children
nominate their peers for official positions,
create campaign posters, and vote for the
candidates. - Give the prompt, If I were president and let
students write about what they would solve as
president. - Create a Venn diagram comparing and contrasting
two candidates (the students can decide who to
compare). - Discuss the words and phrases of the pledge of
allegiance and their meanings. - Make posters about important figures in the local
government with facts and pictures.
17Government Websites
- Bens guide to U.S. Government for Kids
- http//www.proteacher.com/cgi-bin/outsidesite.cgi
?id9026externalhttp//bensguide.gpo.gov/origin
alhttp//www.proteacher.com/090038.shtmltitleBe
ns20Guide20to20the20U.S.20Government - Whitehouse for Kids
- http//www.whitehouse.gov/kids/
- The official kids portal to the U.S. Government
- http//www.kids.gov/
- The U.S. treasury for kids
- http//www.kids.gov/
- Americas story
- http//www.americaslibrary.gov/cgi-bin/page.cgi
18Social Studies Standard Citizenship Rights and
Responsibilities
- Students use knowledge of the rights and
responsibilities of citizenship in order to
examine and evaluate civic ideals and to
participate in community life and the American
Democratic system. - Benchmarks
- Describe the results of cooperation in group
settings and demonstrate the necessary skills. - Demonstrate personal accountability, including
making choices and taking responsibility for
personal actions.
19Citizenship Rights and Responsibilities
Activities
- Create a Class Citizenship Tree and have each
student write on a branch. They will begin their
sentences with, I can help others by - Give the students this situation Youre at a
school picnic and theres a long line for buying
cold drinks. Youre really thirsty. You see a
friend of yours way ahead of you in line. Should
you ask your friend if you can cut in line? How
is the idea of respect for others connected to
this situation? How do others in line feel when
somebody cuts in line? Allow students to write
responses and share with the class. - Have the students role-play a scenario in which
they were supposed to memorize a story for class
but did not because they played video games all
night. What is the student going to do? Why are
our responsibilities important? - Go on a field trip to visit a volunteer
organization. - Have the students make decorations for a class
party (decorations should be related to
responsibilities concepts).
20Citizenship Rights and Responsibilities Websites
- Citizenship Resources
- http//www.blss.portsmouth.sch.uk/resources/citiz
.shtml - UNICEF
- http//www.unicef.org.uk/tz/rights/index.asp
- US citizenship Library
- http//www.uscitizenship.info/citizenship-lib-chi
ldren.htm - Citizenship Pieces
- http//www.citizenship-pieces.org.uk/
- Kids Next Door
- http//www.hud.gov/kids/
21Social Studies Standard Social Studies Skills
and Methods
- Students collect, organize, and synthesize
information from multiple sources to draw logical
conclusions. Students communicate this
information using appropriate social studies
terminology in oral, written, or multimedia form
and apply what they have learned to societal
issues in simulated or real-world settings. - Benchmarks
- Obtain information from oral, visual, print, and
electronic resources. - Predict outcomes based on factual information.
- Communicate information orally, visually, or in
writing. - Identify a problem and work in groups to solve it.
22Social Studies Skills and Methods Activities
- Students will use the internet to find out facts
about their state community. They will have a
worksheet to guide them. - Students will research an interesting fact not
included in the worksheet. Each student will
present his/her fact to the class orally and
visually, with pictures for each presentation. - Have a discussion about change in a community.
Knowing information about the past, what do you
think will change in the near future? Students
should each write about what they think will
change in the community and explain why. - Take a field trip to the local community library.
Request that the librarian show the children the
different resources available to them (different
types of print sources, multimedia resources,
etc.). - Enlarge a map of the community. Have the students
work in small groups to tell directions to get
from one point in the community to another point
using directional terms.
23Social Studies Skills and Methods Websites
- Enchanted Learning
- http//www.enchantedlearning.com/usa/states/ohio/
- Things To Do
- http//www.thingstodo.com/states/OH/facts.htm
- 50 States
- http//www.50states.com/facts/ohio.htm
- Education America
- http//www.educationamerica.net/facts/index.phtml
?sidoh - World Almanac for Kids
- http//www.worldalmanacforkids.com/WAKI-ViewArtic
le.aspx?pinwwwwak-424article_id766chapter_id1
5chapter_titleUnited_Statesarticle_titleOhio