Periods 1,3, 4, 5 ~ US History
Chapter 2 – Lesson 5 ~ workbook is Due on Monday
Due: Monday,
October 21, 2019 at 2:59 pm
Follow the instructions and complete
Colonial
areas comparison chart and map
Due: Monday,
October 21, 2019 at 2:59 pm
by going over the power point - fill in the comparison chart
color the map
Chapter 2 - 13 colonies EVERYTHING
due TUESDAY
Colonial Group Project - Foundational
Graphic Organizer (2 pages)
G.R.A.P.E.S. - the colony (geography, Religion,
Art/ Achievements, Politics/Government, Economics/Trade/Goods, social Structure
4 Comparison questions (answer after Friday)
Draw: Typical House, Clothing, and Food
The students will go through the Chapter 3- The Spirit of
Independence
Essential Question: Why does conflict develop? What motivates people to act?
Causes for writing the
Declaration of Independence – Why did the colonist believe they had the rights
they demand be granted to them? What the
prior documents that they based this demand from and why they gave them the
impudence to demand independence?
13 colonies
Standards
SOC.8.8.US.2.1.A · Compare the political and social differences
between 13 separate colonies and one independent nation.
SOC.8.1.4 · Locate and identify the
first 13 colonies, and describe how their location and natural environment
influenced their development.
SOC.8.10 · Locate and identify the first 13 colonies,
and describe how their location and geographic features influenced their
development.
SOC.8.2.B · compare political,
economic, religious, and social reasons for the establishment of the 13 English
colonies.
SOC.8.1.2.B · compare political,
economic, religious, and social reasons for the establishment of the 13
colonies.
Standards: Spirit of Independence
History-Social Science
Content Standards for California
8.1 Students
understand the major events preceding the founding of the nation and relate their
significance to the development of American constitutional democracy.
1. Describe the relationship
between the moral and political ideas of the Great Awakening and the development
of revolutionary fervor.
2. Analyze the philosophy
of government expressed in the Declaration of Independence, with an emphasis on
government as a means of securing individual rights (e.g., key phrases such as “all
men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable
Rights”).
3. Analyze how the American
Revolution affected other nations, especially France.
4. Describe the nation’s blend of civic republicanism,
classical liberal principles, and English parliamentary traditions.
Historical and Social Sciences Analysis Skills Chronological and
Spatial Thinking
1. Students construct various
time lines of key events, people, and periods of the historical era they are studying.
2. Students use a variety of maps and documents to identify
physical and cultural features of neighborhoods, cities, states, and countries and
to explain the historical migration of people, expansion, and disintegration of
empires, and the growth of economic systems.
Research, Evidence, and Point of View
1. Students frame questions
that can be answered by historical study and research.
2. Students distinguish relevant
from irrelevant information, essential from incidental information, and verifiable
from unverifiable information in historical narratives and stories.
3. Students assess the credibility of primary and secondary sources and draw
sound conclusions from them.
4. Students detect the different historical points of
view on historical events and determine the context in which the historical statements
were made (the questions asked, sources used, author’s perspectives).
Historical Interpretation
1. Students explain the central
issues and problems from the past, placing people and events in a matrix of time,
and place.
2. Students understand and distinguish cause, effect,
sequence, and correlation in historical events, including the long- and short-term
causal relations.
Over this year ~ you will be Studying about our
country. The Life and Lives, the
Geography and Climate ~ Growth and Conflict
US History Framework: The eighth grade course of study begins
with an intensive review of the major ideas, issues, and events that shaped the
founding of the nation. In their study of this era, students will view American
history through the lens of a people who were trying—and are still trying—to
fulfill the promise of the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution.
Throughout their eighth grade United States history and geography course,
students will confront the themes of freedom, equality, and liberty and their
changing definitions over time. This course will also explore the geography of
place, movement, and region, starting with the Atlantic Seaboard and then
exploring American westward expansion and economic development, the Civil War
and Reconstruction, and finally, industrialization. Covering parts of three centuries, the
historical content outlined in this chapter is both substantial and
substantive, which poses a significant challenge for teachers, with limited
time for in-depth study. In order to address this challenge, this chapter is
organized into five large sections that incorporate relevant questions that can
help students understand how individual events and people comprise a larger
narrative explanation of our past.
As
students learn American history from the late 1700s through the end of the
nineteenth century, they will develop reading, writing, speaking, and listening
skills that will enhance their understanding of the content. As in earlier
grades, students should be taught that history is an investigative discipline,
one that is continually reshaped based on primary-source research and on new
perspectives that can be uncovered. Students should be encouraged to read
multiple primary and secondary documents; to understand multiple perspectives;
to learn about how some things change over time and others tend not to; and
they should appreciate that each historical era has its own context and it is
up to the student of history to make sense of the past on these terms and by
asking questions about it.
The standards for the History classes:
History Focus in the Standards
CA HSS Analysis Skills (6-8 grades) research, evidence, and Point of
View
CA CC SS for ELA/Literacy – RH 6-8.1, 2, 6, 8, 9, SL 8.4, L.8.6
CA
ELD Standard ELD.P.8.1, 6a, 6b, 7, 9, 11, ELD.P11.8.a
Period 2
~ Multicultural Studies/College Ed ~ Art and Poetry
Poetry with
the LMU Students
The Six Pillars of
Character®
CHARACTER COUNTS!
(https://charactercounts.org) (https://charactercounts.org/program-overview/)
The Six Pillars of
Character® are the core ethical values of CHARACTER COUNTS!® articulated in the
Aspen Declaration (http://charactercounts.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/02/Website-The-Aspen-Declaration-Final2.26.2019.pdf),
these values were indented by a nonpartisan, nonsectarian (secular) group of
youth development experts in 1992 as “core ethical values that transcend
cultural, religious and socio-economic differences”.
The Six Pillars of
Character® are: Trustworthiness, Respect, Responsibility, Fairness, Caring and Citizenship.
CHARACTER COUNTS!® recommends always using these pillars in this special order
and using the acronym “T.R.R.F.C.C.” (Terric) to help in this endeavor.
Each student will create
their own tower of Character and explore each Pillar in what it means and how
it relates to them.
Each Pillar is
consistently identified with a color:
Trustworthiness
– Blue,
Respect –
Gold/Yellow,
Responsibility
– Green,
Fairness –
Orange,
Caring – Red,
Citizenship –
Purple.
< Art
Teaching
Art Skills
Grade Eight
Visual and Performing Arts: Visual Arts Content Standards.
1.0 ARTISTIC PERCEPTION
Processing, Analyzing, and Responding to Sensory
Information Through the Language and
Skills Unique to the Visual Arts - Students perceive and
respond to works of art, objects in nature, events, and the environment. They
also use the vocabulary of the visual arts to express their observations.
Develop Perceptual Skills and Visual Arts Vocabulary
• 1.1 Use artistic terms when describing the
intent and content of works of art.
Analyze Art Elements and Principles of Design
• 1.2 Analyze and justify how their artistic
choices contribute to the expressive quality of their own works of art.
D
Poetry -
Limerick due Tuesday
English Language Arts Standards » Reading:
Literature » Grade 1 » 10
With
prompting and support, read prose and poetry of appropriate complexity for
grade 8
English Language Arts Standards » Standard
10: Range, Quality, &
Complexity » Range of Text Types for 6-12
Students in grades 6-12 apply the Reading
standards to the following range of text types, with texts
selected from a broad range of cultures and
periods.
Literature Informational Text
Stories Dramas Poetry Literary Nonfiction and
Historical, Scientific, and
Technical Texts
Includes the subgenres of