Social Studies Skills 4th/5th: Indicator #3


Social Studies Skills: Fourth and Fifth

Students will demonstrate an understanding of historical and current events using chronological and spatial thinking, develop historical interpretations, and frame questions that include collecting and evaluating information from primary and secondary sources.

In the context of Maryland up to contemporary times and United States history through 1790, students are able to do everything required at earlier grades and are able to:


Indicator #3
Interpret and organize primary and secondary sources of information including pictures, graphics, maps, atlases, artifacts, timelines, political cartoons, videotapes, journals, and government documents.  


A mini-unit on famous women in history, the unit provides a variety of resources and includes having the students interview women and include them in a timeline of history. http://teacherlink.ed.usu.edu/TLresources/longterm/LessonPlans/Byrnes/womnweek.html

National Transportation Month Activities that teach the children to read maps, timetables for transportation, graphs and charts.  Several performance based activities http://www.education-world.com/a_lesson/lesson064.shtml

Students are always interested in Alexander Graham Bell and his work with inventing the telephone and hearing devices for the deaf.  The Library of Congress American Memory Collection provides original source and secondary source materials for students to research and investigate the many contributions of Bell.  This site gives ideas and information with suggestions for lessons but not actual lesson plans http://memory.loc.gov/learn/collections/agb/thinking.html

Using Primary Sources is a group of suggestions designed to help teachers use the source materials contained in the Library of Congress http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/ndlpedu/lessons/primary.html

A lesson plan framework from the Library of Congress that helps you utilize primary sources http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/ndlpedu/lessons/fw.html

A lesson plan that requires the children to use maps and information to locate the birthplaces of the US Presidents http://www.nationalgeographic.com/xpeditions/lessons/01/g35/presidents.html  

In this lesson, students will collect information about size, population, and political characteristics.  They will then chart the information and asked specific questions related to world geography http://www.nationalgeographic.com/xpeditions/lessons/13/g35/countries.html

A lesson plan with an outcomes of making a world history timeline that also includes using charts, tables, graphs and analyzing political cartoons for timeline content, an internet connected activity http://members.spree.com/teach2prime/social15.htm


 
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Dr. Greg Bryant or Dr. David Vocke. Thank you in advance for your help.