Grade Level & Subject:

Grade 2 Social Studies

Curriculum Map

Year

2003-04 PILOT

Calendar

February

March

 

 

Third Nine Weeks – February -March

 

Possible Resources

 

 

We Live Together, Grade 2-Macmillan/McGraw-Hill (Anchor Text)

 

Nine Weeks Focus

 

 

Unit 3-4 (pages 140-201)

“Our Past,”  “All About Work”

 

Skills/Standards

(To teach and measure)

 

History

3. Place a series of related events in chronological order on a time line.

4. Use historical artifacts, photographs, biographies, maps, diaries and folklore to answer questions about daily life in the past.

5. Identify the work that people performed to make a living in the past and explain how jobs in the past are similar and/or different from those of today.

7. Recognize the importance of individual action and character and explain how they have made a difference in others' lives with emphasis on the importance of:

  a. Social and political leaders in the United States (e.g., George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, Tecumseh, Harriet Tubman, Abraham Lincoln, Sojourner Truth, Susan B. Anthony and Martin Luther King Jr.);

  b. Explorers, inventors and scientists (e.g., George Washington Carver, Thomas Edison, Charles Drew, Rachel Carson and Neil Armstrong).

 

People in Societies

1. Describe the cultural practices and products of people on different continents.

2. Describe ways in which language, stories, folktales, music and artistic creations serve as expressions of culture and influence the behavior of people living in a particular culture.

3. Explain how contributions of different cultures within the

United States have influenced our common national heritage.

4. Describe the contributions of significant individuals, including artisans, inventors, scientists, architects, explorers and political leaders to the cultural heritage of the United States

 

Geography

1. Read and interpret a variety of maps.

 

Economics

2. Explain how people are both buyers and sellers of goods and services.

3. Recognize that most people work in jobs in which they produce a few special goods or services.

4. Explain why people in different parts of the world earn a living in a variety of ways.

5. Recognize that money is a generally accepted medium of exchange for goods and services and that different countries use different forms of money.

 

Government

.

Citizenship Rights and Responsibilities

 

Social Studies Skills and Methods (embedded in each social studies standard)

1. Obtain information from oral, visual and print sources.

2. Identify sources used to gather information:

  a. People;

  b. Printed materials;

  c. Electronic sources.

3. Predict the next event in a sequence.

4. Distinguish the difference between fact and fiction in oral, visual and print materials.

5. Communicate information in writing.

6. Use problem-solving/decision-making skills to identify a problem and gather information while working independently and in groups.

A C A D E

 

 

Assessment

Choices