Grade Domain Topics We have holidays to celebrate our country: Labor Day, Columbus Day, Veteran s Day, Thanksgiving Day, Martin Luther King Day, President s Day, Memorial Day, Flag Day, Independence Day We use symbols to show how proud we are to be Americans: state and national flags, bald eagle, Statue of Liberty, Lincoln Memorial, Washington Monument, White House, Pledge of Allegiance, Star Spangled Banner We use words to talk about history: Now/Long Ago, Before/After, Morning/Afternoon/Night, Today/Tomorrow/Yesterday, First/Last/Next, Day/Week/Month/Year, Past/Present/Future K It is important to be a good citizen: how and why rules are made; why rules should be followed I can learn about good character from stories: honesty, patriotism, loyalty, courtesy, respect, truth, pride, self-control, moderation, accomplishment Place names where I live: street address, city, county, state, country, continent Maps help us learn about places: land/water features on maps and globes, how a map or globe shows us what our world looks like Our country and community are diverse and we have different customs and celebrations People do different work in the community: police officer, fire fighter, soldier, mail carrier, baker, farmer, doctor, teacher People who work get money for the work they do Money is used to buy goods and services: difference between goods and services, identify money (bills and coins) No one has as much money as they want, so they must make choices about how to spend the money they have
Grade Domain Topics Describe how everyday life for historical figures is similar to and different from everyday life in the present (food, clothing, homes, transportation, communication, recreation) Explain how folk tales show our national heritage: John Henry, Johnny Appleseed, Davy Crockett, Paul Bunyan, Annie Oakley Historical Figures, How They Contributed to our Country Benjamin Franklin (inventor, author, statesman) Thomas Jefferson (Declaration of Independence) Meriwether Lewis & William Clark with Sacagawea (exploration) Harriet Tubman (Underground Railroad) Theodore Roosevelt (national parks and the environment) George Washington Carver (scientist) Explain how the historical figures showed good character traits: fairness, respect for others, respect for the environment, conservation, courage, equality, tolerance, 1 perseverance, commitment Explain the meaning of the words to My Country Tis of Thee and America the Beautiful Locate the city, county, state, country, and continent we live in on a map or globe Locate all of the continents: North America, South America, Africa, Europe, Asia, Antarctica, and Australia on a map and globe Identify and describe landforms (mountains, deserts, valleys, plains, plateaus, and coasts) Describe geography related to the historical figures Identify goods that people make and services that people provide for each other Explain that people have to make choices about which goods or services to buy because there is not enough money to buy everything Describe how people are producers (make things/provide services) and consumers (buy things/use services) Tell why it is helpful to make good spending and savings choices with your money
Grade Domain Topics Describe how everyday life of historical figures is similar to and different from everyday life now (food, clothing, homes, transportation, communication, recreation, rights, and freedoms) Describe regions in Georgia where the Creeks and Cherokees lived and how they used their local resources Compare and contrast the Georgia Creek and Cherokee cultures of the past to Georgians today Historical Figures, How They Contributed to Georgia James Oglethorpe, Tomochichi, and Mary Musgrove (founding of Georgia) Sequoyah (development of Cherokee alphabet) Jackie Robinson (sports) Martin Luther King, Jr. (civil rights) Jimmy Carter (leadership and human rights) Understand what a government is and why rules and laws are needed Identify the current leaders and what they do: President Barack Obama, leader of the country; Governor Nathan Deal, leader of the state, Mayor Edna Jackson, leader of the city (when a new leader is chosen, students need to learn the new name of the leader) Give examples of how the historical figures showed good citizenship: honesty, dependability, 2 liberty, trustworthiness, honor, civility, good sportsmanship, patience, compassion Show knowledge of state and national capitol buildings shown in pictures as well as the location of national capitol: Washington, D.C. and state capitol: Atlanta Locate the geographic regions of Georgia: Blue Ridge Mountains, Piedmont, Coastal Plain, Valley and Ridge, and Appalachian Plateau Locate major rivers: Ocmulgee, Oconee, Altamaha, Savannah, St. Mary s, Chattahoochee, Flint Explain how geographic locations impacted the lives and work of the historical figures: know the places the historical figures are from and where they traveled as well as what the regions were like and how the historical figures adapted to the regions. Explain that when you choose to use your money for one thing, you lose the opportunity to use it for something else Tell how people get their goods and services: price, majority rule, contests, force, sharing, lottery, command, first come first served, personal characteristics Explain how money makes trade easier than bartering Describe the costs and benefits of saving or spending your money
Grade Domain Weight Topics 3 30% (17) 30% (16) American Democracy comes from Ancient Greece; we also borrowed their style of buildings Historical Figures, How They Enlarged Freedom and their Character Traits Paul Revere>Independence; liberty Frederick Douglass>Civil Rights; justice Susan B. Anthony>Women s Rights; diligence Mary McLeod Bethune>Education; diligence Franklin Roosevelt>New Deal/WWII; cooperation Eleanor Roosevelt>United Nations/Human Rights; tolerance Thurgood Marshall>Civil Rights; justice Lyndon Johnson>Great Society and Voting Rights; freedom of conscience and expression Cesar Chavez>Worker s Rights; respect for and acceptance of authority Branches of Government (Executive, Legislative, Judicial) Levels of government (local, state, national) Separation of Powers between branches Responsibilities of each branch Rivers: Mississippi, Ohio, Rio Grande, Colorado, Hudson Mountains: Appalachian, Rocky Equator, Prime Meridian, Lines of Latitude and Longitude on a globe Greece Where historical figures lived/worked Explain how geographic locations impacted the lives and work of the historical figures Four Types of Productive Resources (natural, human, capital, entrepreneurs) Explain how the government acts in the economy: by charging taxes and using the taxes to pay for services like schools, libraries, and the military
Grade Domain Weight Topics 4 50% (28) Events Reasons for Spanish, French, and English exploration in North America Causes, events, and results of the American Revolutionary War War of 1812 Louisiana Purchase Lewis & Clark Expedition Alamo Gold Rush Explain similarities and differences between the Southern, Middle, and New England colonies Explain challenges of creating a new country, including the Declaration of Independence, Bill of Rights, & debates of the Constitutional Convention Explain Westward Expansion People Native Americans: Where they lived and how they used nature to get food, clothing, and shelter>arctic (Inuit), Northwest (Kwakiutl), Plateau (Nez Perce), Southwest (Hope), Plains (Pawnee), and Southeastern (Seminole) How the explorers cooperated or had conflict with Native Americans: John Cabot, Vasco Nunez Balboa, Juan Ponce de Leon, Christopher Columbus, Henry Hudson, & Jacques Cartier Describe life for these people in colonial America: landowners, farmers, artisans, women, indentured servants, slaves, and Native Americans Describe key people of the American Revolution: King George III, George Washington, Benjamin Franklin, Thomas Jefferson, Benedict Arnold, Patrick Henry, & John Adams, James Madison Movements to End Slavery/Women s Rights: Harriet Tubman, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Sojourner Truth Natural rights, We the People, federal system of government Freedom of Expression Branches of Government: what they do, how they relate to each other and to the states; checks and balances and separation of powers The way government works: how laws are made and enforced, how rights are protected, how the country is defended, why we limit the power of people in government, and how the government gets and uses money Democratic beliefs: respecting rights of all, promoting the common good, obeying reasonable laws, staying informed, voting, volunteering, communication with public officials U.S. Physical Features: Atlantic Coastal Plain, Great Plains, Continental Divide, Great Basic, Death Valley, Gulf of Mexico, St. Lawrence River, Great Lakes U.S. Man-Made Features: Bew York City, Boston, Philadelphia, Erie Canal Explain how physical geography impacted the Native Americans, Explorers, Colonies, Revolutionary War, & Westward Expansion How trade works: opportunity costs, price incentives, specialization, benefits of voluntary exchange, how trade promotes economic activity, how new technology improves business productivity and trade Personal Budgeting: elements of a budget (time, income, spending, savings) and why it s important to carefully decide what to do with your money
Grade Domain Weight Topics 5 50% (28) Events Causes, Events, and Consequences of the Civil War: Uncle Tom s Cabin, John Brown s Raid; issues causing the war (states rights/slavery); major battles (Fort Sumter, Gettysburg, Atlanta, Sherman s March, Appomattox); effects of war on the North and the South Effects of Reconstruction: 13 th, 14 th, 15 th Amendments; Freedmen s Bureau; sharecropping; Jim Crow U.S. Involvement in WWI: sinking of the Lusitania; cultural developments Great Depression Causes and Effects: Stock Market Crash; Dust Bowl; New Deal Programs U.S. involvement in WWII: Major events (Pearl Harbor, Iwo Jima, D-Day, VE/VJ Days, Holocaust); dropping of the Atomic bomb; US role in the United Nations Cold War Era: Iron Curtain; reasons for Berlin airlift, Korean War, and NATO; Cuban Missile Crisis, Vietnam Civil Rights Era: Brown v. Board of Education; March on Washington, Civil Rights Act, Voting Rights Act, assassinations of American leaders; new technologies of television and space exploration Modern U.S.: Peace in the Middle East, collapse of the Soviet Union, Persian Gulf War, War on Terrorism; new technologies of personal computers and the Internet American Life at the Turn of the 20 th Century: Cattle Trails, Inventions, Panama Canal, immigration People Civil War: Lincoln, Lee, Grant, Jefferson Davis, Stonewall Jackson Inventors: Wright Brothers, George Washington Carver, Alexander Graham Bell, Thomas Edison Early 20 th Century: Presidents William McKinley and Theodore Roosevelt 1920s: Louis Armstrong, Langston Hughes, Babe Ruth, Henry Ford, Charles Lindbergh Depression Era: Herbert Hoover & Franklin Roosevelt; Duke Ellington, Margaret Mitchell, Jesse Owens WWII national leaders: Roosevelt, Stalin, Churchill, Hirohito, Truman, Mussolini, & Hitler WWII: Tuskegee Airmen, Rosie the Riveter Cold War Era: Joseph McCarthy, Nikita Khrushchev Civil Rights Era: Thurgood Marshall, Rosa Parks, Martin Luther King, Jr., John F. Kennedy, Robert Kennedy Role of US citizens: responsibilities, freedoms, due process, Constitutional protection of citizen s rights Constitutional Amendments: how and why they are made 12 th and 17 th Amendments: what they are and why they were made 15 th, 19 th, 23 rd, 24 th, and 26 th Amendments: how each expanded voting rights Physical Features: Grand Canyon, Salton Sea, Great Salt Lake, Mojave Desert Man-Made Features: Chisholm Trail, Pittsburgh, Gettysburg, Kitty Hawk, Pearl Harbor, Montgomery Explain how businesses and industry impacted population across the US from the Civil War to the present Trade Concepts: opportunity costs, price incentives, specialization, benefits of voluntary exchange, how trade promotes economic activity, how new technology improves business productivity and trade Role in the Economy: Banks, Businesses, Households, Government How businesses and consumer interact: businesses decide competition, markets, and prices and people buy what they feel is the best deal for them; people earn income by selling their labor; entrepreneurs take risks to start businesses Personal Budgeting: elements of a budget (time, income, spending, savings) and why it s important to carefully decide what to do with your money