Standards
My Community and Other Communities
Generate resourceCivic Participation
Generate resourceEconomics and Economic Systems
Generate resourceGeographic Reasoning
Generate resourceComparison and Contextualization
Generate resourceChronological Reasoning and Causation
Generate resourceGathering, Interpreting and Using Evidence
Generate resourceA community is a population of various individuals in a common location. It can be characterized as urban, suburban, or rural. Population density and use of the land are some characteristics that define and distinguish types of communities.
Generate resourceAn urban community, or city, is characterized by dense population and land occupied primarily by buildings and structures that are used for residential and business purposes.
Generate resourceSuburban communities are on the outskirts of cities, where human population is less dense, and buildings and homes are spaced farther apart.
Generate resourceRural communities are characterized by large expanses of open land and significantly lower populations than urban or suburban areas.
Generate resourceStudents will identify the characteristics of urban, suburban, and rural communities and determine in which type of community they live.
Generate resourceBy discussing different types of housing (apartment, single-family house, etc.) and the proximity of houses to each other, students will understand the term "population density" and how it applies to different communities.
Generate resourceActivities available for people living in urban, suburban, and rural communities are different. The type of community a person grows up in will affect a person's development and identity.
Generate resourceStudents will identify activities that are available in each type of community, and discuss how those activities affect the people living in that community.
Generate resourcePeople share similarities and differences with others in their own community and with other communities.
Generate resourcePeople living in urban, suburban, and rural communities embrace traditions and celebrate holidays that reflect both diverse cultures and a common community identity.
Generate resourceStudents will examine the ethnic and/or cultural groups represented in their classroom.
Generate resourceStudents will explore the cultural diversity of their local community by identifying activities that have been introduced by different cultural groups.
Generate resourceStudents will identify community events that help promote a common community identity.
Generate resourceA community is strengthened by the diversity of its members, with ideas, talents, perspectives, and cultures that can be shared across the community.
Generate resourceStudents will explore how different ideas, talents, perspectives, and culture are shared across their community.
Generate resourceThe United States is founded on the principles of democracy, and these principles are reflected in all types of communities.
Generate resourceThe United States is founded on the democratic principles of equality, fairness, and respect for authority and rules.
Generate resourceStudents will explore democratic principles, such as dignity for all, equality, fairness, and respect for authority and rules, and how those principles are applied to their community.
Generate resourceGovernment is established to maintain order and keep people safe. Citizens demonstrate respect for authority by obeying rules and laws.
Generate resourceStudents will examine the ways in which the government in their community provides order and keeps people safe, and how citizens can demonstrate respect for authority.
Generate resourceThe process of holding elections and voting is an example of democracy in action in schools, communities, New York State, and the nation.
Generate resourceStudents will learn about the process of voting and what opportunities adults in the community have for participation.
Generate resourceStudents will participate in voting within the classroom and in school, as appropriate.
Generate resourceStudents will examine the symbols of the country, including the eagle, American flag, the Statue of Liberty, the White House, and Mount Rushmore.
Generate resourceCommunities have rules and laws that affect how they function. Citizens contribute to a community's government through leadership and service.
Generate resourceCommunities have the responsibility to make and enforce fair laws and rules that provide for the common good.
Generate resourceStudents will explain the importance of making fair laws and rules, the benefits of following them, and the consequences of violating them.
Generate resourceCommunities have leaders who are responsible for making laws and enforcing laws.
Generate resourceStudents will identify who makes and enforces the rules and laws in their community. They will also explore how leaders make and enforce these rules and laws.
Generate resourceStudents will explore opportunities to provide service to their school community and the community at large (e.g., beautifying school grounds, writing thank-you notes to helpers).
Generate resourceStudents will identify how adults can provide service to the school and the community at large.
Generate resourceGeography and natural resources shape where and how urban, suburban, and rural communities develop and how they sustain themselves.
Generate resourceUrban, suburban, and rural communities can be located on maps, and the geographic characteristics of these communities can be described by using symbols, map legends, and geographic vocabulary.
Generate resourceStudents will examine how land within a community is used and classify land use as "residential" (used for housing), "industrial" (used to make things), "commercial" (used to provide services), and "recreational" (where people play or do sports).
Generate resourceStudents will create maps including maps that represent their classroom, school, or community, and maps that illustrate places in stories.
Generate resourceThe location of physical features and natural resources often affects where people settle and may affect how those people sustain themselves.
Generate resourceStudents will compare how different communities in their state or nation have developed, and explain how physical features of the community affect the people living there.
Generate resourceHumans modify the environment of their communities through housing, transportation systems, schools, marketplaces, and recreation areas.
Generate resourceStudents will explore how humans have positively and negatively affected the environment of their community though such features as roads, highways, buildings, bridges, shopping malls, railroads, and parks.
Generate resourceStudents will describe the means people create for moving people, goods, and ideas in their communities.
Generate resourceThe location and place of physical features and man-made structures can be described using symbols and specific geography vocabulary.
Generate resourceStudents will use a compass rose to identify cardinal (North, South, East, West) and intermediate (Northeast, Southeast, Southwest, Northwest) directions on maps and in their community.
Generate resourceStudents will locate the equator, northern and southern hemispheres, and poles on a globe.
Generate resourceStudents will use maps and legends to identify major physical features, such as mountains, rivers, lakes, and oceans of the local community, New York State, and the nation.
Generate resourceIdentifying continuities and changes over time can help understand historical developments.
Generate resourceContinuities and changes over time in communities can be described using historical thinking, vocabulary, and tools such as time lines.
Generate resourceContinuities and changes over time in communities can be examined by interpreting evidence such as maps, population charts, photographs, newspapers, biographies, artifacts, and other historical materials.
Generate resourceStudents will examine continuities and changes over time in their community, using evidence such as maps, population charts, photographs, newspapers, biographies, artifacts, and other historical materials.
Generate resourceStudents will develop a time line for their community, including important events, such as when the school was built.
Generate resourceCause-and-effect relationships help us recount events and understand historical development.
Generate resourceCause-and-effect relationships help us to understand the changes in communities.
Generate resourceStudents will distinguish between cause and effect and will examine changes in their community in terms of cause and effect (e.g., automobiles and the growth of suburbs, growing population in suburban areas, and reduction of farms).
Generate resourceThe availability of resources to meet basic needs varies across urban, suburban, and rural communities.
Generate resourceStudents will investigate what resources are available in their community and what resources are obtained from neighboring communities.
Generate resourceStudents will examine how available resources differ in communities (e.g., home-grown food available in rural farm areas vs. shopping in supermarkets).
Generate resourcePeople make decisions to buy, sell, and use money based on their needs, wants, and the availability of resources.
Generate resourceScarcity, the price of goods and services, and choice all influence economic decisions made by individuals and communities.
Generate resourceStudents will examine how consumers react to changes in the prices of goods.
Generate resourceStudents will explore the purpose of taxes and how they are collected in their communities.
Generate resourceA community requires the interdependence of many people performing a variety of jobs and services to provide basic needs and wants.
Generate resourceGoods are the products a person or group of people makes. Services are actions performed by a person or group of people with a certain skill.
Generate resourceStudents will distinguish between goods and services and identify goods produced in their community.
Generate resourceMembers of a community specialize in different types of jobs that provide goods and/or services to the community. Community workers such as teachers, firefighters, sanitation workers, and police officers provide services.
Generate resourceStudents will identify different types of jobs performed in their community.
Generate resourceAt times, neighboring communities share resources and workers to support multiple communities.
Generate resourceStudents will explore how communities share resources and services with other communities.
Generate resourceRecognize different forms of evidence used to make meaning in social studies (including primary and secondary sources, such as art and photographs, artifacts, oral histories, maps, and graphs).
Generate resourceIdentify and explain creation and/or authorship, purpose, and format of evidence.
Generate resourceUnderstand the concept of time measurements, including minutes, hours, days, weeks, months, years.
Generate resourceIdentify causes and effects, using examples from his/her family life or from the community.
Generate resourceIdentify similarities and/or differences between his/her community and other communities.
Generate resourceRecognize the relationship between geography, economics, and history in his/her community.
Generate resourceDescribe a historical development in his/her community with specific details, including time and place.
Generate resourceAsk geographic questions about where places are located and why they are located there, using location terms and geographic representations, such as maps, photographs, satellite images, and models. Describe where places are in relation to each other and describe connections between places.
Generate resourceDistinguish human activities and human-made features from natural events or physical features.
Generate resourceDescribe how his/her actions affect the environment of the community; describe how the environment of the community affects human activities.
Generate resourceExplain how scarcity necessitates decision making; identify the benefits and costs of decisions.
Generate resourceDescribe the resources used to produce goods and provide services in the local community.
Generate resourceDescribe the goods and services that people in the local community produce and those that are produced in other communities.
Generate resourceDemonstrate respect for the rights of others in discussions and classroom debates, regardless of whether one agrees with the other viewpoints.
Generate resourceParticipate in activities that focus on a classroom, school, or local community issue or problem.
Generate resourceIdentify the role of the individual in classroom, school, and local community participation.
Generate resourceShow respect in issues involving difference and conflict; participate in negotiating and compromising in the resolution of differences and conflict.
Generate resourceIdentify the governor of New York, the president of the United States, and the school principal and their leadership responsibilities.
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