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Ready, Set, Teach! Chapter 1 Indiana’s Geography Chapter Objectives Begin With the End in Mind Connect Make Learning Meaningful Experience Teach Knowledge and Skills For quick hints on how to teach this chapter, log on to myWorldSocialStudies.com. Big Question: Target Reading Skill: How does geography affect the way we live? Main Idea and Details Students will demonstrate the following enduring understandings: • Indiana has many varied landforms and water features. • Indiana is divided into three regions, each of which has different geographical features and natural resources. Student Worktext • Big Question • myStory Spark • myStory Student Worktext • • • • • Lessons 1–3 Got It? Formative Assessments myStory Ideas Target Reading Skill: Main Idea and Details 21C Skill Lesson: Use Latitude and Longitude • Indiana’s physical features have affected where people settled and what economic activities take place. • Indiana’s geographic features help to make it a crossroads for both national and international trade. Digital Presentation • myStory Spark • myStory Video 21st Century Learning Online Tutor • Main Idea and Details • Use Latitude and Longitude myWorld Leveled Readers Understand Assess Understanding Student Worktext • Review and Assessment • myStory Book myWorld Activity Digital Presentation • myWorld Activity • myStory Book myStory Book Online • Geography: Mapping People and the Environment Students write, illustrate, and publish a digital book. Chapter Assessment Chapter Assessment • Chapter Test, Forms A and B Administer online tests. 1 ESS15_TE04_IN_C01_OP.indd 1 31/01/15 2:33 AM Chapter 1 Indiana’s Geography Chapter Opener Lesson Plan Summary Objectives • Establish meaning. • Make meaningful connections to personal experiences. • Utilize prior knowledge to gain understanding. Target Reading Skill Objective: • Identify main ideas and details. ELL Objective: • Use different strategies to explore new vocabulary. 1 PRESENTATION Chapter 1 Introduction Use the Big Question Activity to introduce the chapter’s main idea. myStory Spark myStory Video 30 minutes Introduce this chapter using the Worktext. 2 Use the Big Question Activity to introduce the chapter’s main idea. • What are some different kinds of physical features? WORKTEXT Active Reading 45 minutes • How do different kinds of physical features affect the way people live? myStory Spark • What landforms and bodies of water are near your community? • How does the geography of your community affect the way people live? myStory Video • How can a region’s natural resources, such as rich soil and water, affect the people who live there? Hand out Target Reading Skill worksheets. Hand out Words to Know worksheets. 3 LEVELED READER Use these Leveled Readers as you work through the chapter. Not enough time for social studies? Teach these steps during your reading block or as center activities. • Below Level: Land and Water: How Geography Affects Our Communities • On Level: Using Natural Resources • Above Level: Landforms and Waterways 2 ESS15_TE04_IN_C01_OP.indd 2 31/01/15 2:33 AM WORKTEXT Chapter 1 Indiana’s Geography How does geography affect the way we live? Active Reading Lesson 1 Land and Water Lesson 2 Regions and Resources Lesson 3 Indiana Connections page 1 T.C. Steele Describe how the land or outdoor weather in Indiana affects your daily activities. Landscape Painter (1847–1926) Possible answer: I live near Lake Michigan. In the Indiana’s rolling hills, peaceful forests, and bright autumn colors inspired many, but especially an artist named Theodore Clement (T.C.) Steele. Born in the Indiana countryside in 1847, Steele learned to paint from a young age. By 13, he taught fellow students how to draw at a college prep school. Steele studied how to make portraits, or pictures of people. He made his living painting portraits. But his true love was painting Indiana’s landscapes, or scenes from nature. These paintings made him one of the most famous artists in the state. In the early 1900s, Steele and his second wife settled in Brown County. This is a beautiful region south of Indianapolis. They built a house on the top of a hill and named it “The House of the Singing Winds.” He was the first major artist to settle there. Today, visitors can tour Steele’s house and gardens and view the land that inspired him. The natural beauty of the landscape soon attracted other artists. This group of artists became known as the Hoosier Group of American regional impressionist painters. Their art became one of Indiana’s greatest contributions to American art history. winter, I wear a snowsuit and boots when the snow is deep. In the summer, my favorite activity is to take a boat ride on the lake. Indiana’s land has inspired artists such as T.C. Steele, who painted landscapes of the countryside like this one. [PHOTO: Image of Theodore Clement Steele] T.C. Steele was one of the most famous artists in the state. Think About It What does T.C. Steele’s story tell you about the landscape of Indiana? As you read this chapter, think about how the geography of a place affects the people who live there. 1 ESS14_SE04_IN_C01_OP.indd 2 16/01/15 12:42 AM ESS14_SE04_IN_C01_OP.indd 1 16/01/15 12:42 AM The Big Question T.C. Steele • Analyze Images How do you think physical features, such as the forest and field shown in the picture, might affect the activities of people who live nearby? Possible answer: The people who live nearby might have jobs in farming. They might use the forests for hiking or camping. • Make Comparisons How did the way T.C. Steele made his living at first differ from what he really loved to do? He at first made his living painting portraits, but his true love was painting Indiana’s landscapes. myStory Spark • What kinds of activities can you do because of the geography of where you live? Which activities are you unable to do because of the geography of where you live? Answers will vary. • Draw Inferences How did the geography of Indiana affect the life of T.C. Steele? Possible answer: He moved to Brown County and built a house there so he could paint the beautiful landscape. • Formulate Questions What question might you have for T.C. Steele about his life or about Indiana? Possible answer: Why did you name your house in Brown County the “House of the Singing Winds”? 3 ESS15_TE04_IN_C01_OP.indd 3 31/01/15 2:33 AM Chapter 1 Lesson 1 Land and Water Lesson Plan Summary IN Indiana Indiana Academic Standards 4.3.3 Locate Indiana on a map, and identify the location of the state capital, major cities, and rivers. 4.3.5 Explain how glaciers shaped Indiana’s landscape and environment. 4.3.6 Describe Indiana’s landforms (lithosphere), water features (hydrosphere), and plants and animals (biosphere). Target Reading Skill Objective: • Identify main idea and details. ELL Objective: • Use new vocabulary to talk about landforms and geographic features of Indiana. 1 myWorld and me WORKTEXT Envision It! Remind students of the discussion they had about the Big Question for this chapter: How does geography affect the way we live? • How does geography affect life in your community? Review the instructions for the Envision It! with students, and have them complete the activity. Preview the Key Idea and Vocabulary with students. • What landforms are in the region where you live? 2 15 minutes Not enough time for social studies? Teach this step during your reading block or as a center activity. Model active reading by asking the questions and using the teaching strategies indicated below this lesson’s worktext pages. 45 minutes Ask students to complete the Got It? activity at the end of the lesson to evaluate their understanding of the key objectives in this lesson. 10 minutes WORKTEXT Active Reading 3 WORKTEXT Got It? 4 ESS15_TE04_IN_C01_L01.indd 4 2/8/15 12:52 AM WORKTEXT Active Reading pages 2–3 NLOCK U Lesson 1 Students should draw a Hill Land and Water landform or body of water near where they live, such as a river. Possible answer: Lake Indiana is one of the 50 states that make up the United States. The state is known for its beautiful and varied landscapes. These include flat plains, grassy hills, sandy beaches, winding rivers, and large caves. Indiana’s Location Indiana Lake Michigan Indiana is located on the continent of North America. It is near the center of the United States and is part of the Midwest region. Several states border Indiana. To the west is Illinois. Kentucky is to the south. Ohio forms the eastern border. To the north is Michigan, as well as part of Lake Michigan. The Ohio River runs along the southern boundary of Indiana. The Wabash River forms part of the state’s western border. Indiana has cities where many people live and work. Indiana’s state capital and largest city, Indianapolis, is located in the center of the state. The capital is where the state’s goverment is located. Other cities, such as Gary, are located in northern Indiana near Lake Michigan. Evansville and New Albany are located along the Ohio River in the southern part of the state. MI South Bend Wabash River Lafayette IL Fort Wayne OH Muncie Indianapolis Terre Haute Columbus Bloomington Bedford N Madison Vincennes R. S io New Albany Oh Evansville KEY 0 0 E W 50 mi KY 50 km 2 State capital Other city Vocabulary River Label the landform and body of water on the left. In the box above, draw a picture of a landform or body of water where you live, and write its name on the line. Indiana includes many varied landforms, or natural features, and bodies of water. Gary I will know Indiana’s location, that glaciers shaped the land, and the unique landforms and water features in the state. 1. Label the capital city, the cities of Gary and Evansville, and the Wabash River on the map. Then describe the location of the city closest to where you live. glacier hydrologic cycle landform lithosphere hydrosphere evaporation precipitation biosphere IN Indiana’s Landscape Long ago, ice and snow covered many parts of North America, including Indiana. This period of time is called the Ice Age. During the Ice Age, glaciers moved from north to south. A glacier is a huge mass of ice that moves slowly across the land. These glaciers helped shape the landscape and environment of Indiana. For nearly 400,000 years, glaciers covered the northern two thirds of Indiana. As the glaciers moved and melted, they changed the natural features of the land. They flattened land, leaving behind rich soil that is good for farming. They dug large holes that became lakes. In northern Indiana, the melting glaciers created swamps and marshes. In the southern part of the state, the icy water helped form caves. Indiana Academic Standards 4.3.3 Locate Indiana on a map, and identify the location of the state capital, major cities, and rivers. 4.3.5 Explain how glaciers shaped Indiana’s landscape and environment. 4.3.6 Describe Indiana’s landforms (lithosphere), water features (hydrosphere), and plants and animals (biosphere). farmland 2. Flat land has many uses. It is good for building homes and businesses. It is also good for farms and recreation. This photograph shows different uses of Indiana’s flat landscape. Label three uses of the land that you see. South Bend is closest to where I live in the northern part of Indiana. businesses homes Possible answer: ESS14_SE04_IN_C01_L01.indd 2 3 ESS14_SE04_IN_C01_L01.indd 3 16/01/15 12:24 AM 16/01/15 12:24 AM Begin to Read Indiana’s Location • Analyze Maps What bodies of water form part of the boundary of Indiana? the Ohio River, the Wabash River, and Lake Michigan • Demonstrate Reasoned Judgment Name the continent where your classroom is located. How do you know? I know our classroom is on the continent of North America because it is located in Indiana. Support English Language Learners 1. Content and Language Have students read the “I will know” statement on page 3. Explain that a glacier is a large mass of ice that moves slowly across the land. Ask students how they think a glacier might change the shape of the land. 2. Frontload the Lesson Have students preview the lesson by viewing all of the visuals and captions. Then encourage them to predict what they will learn in the lesson. 3. Comprehensible Input Ask students to role-play a glacier moving across the land. Tell students to observe what happens when a glacier group (students linking elbows) moves slowly through a land group (students standing in a loose group). • Analyze Maps Which three cities are located on the Wabash River? Lafayette, Terre Haute, and Vincennes • Analyze Maps Which three cities shown on the map are farthest from the capital of Indiana? Gary, South Bend, and Evansville Indiana’s Landscape • Recognize Cause and Effect How did the rich, flat farmland of Indiana form? Moving glaciers flattened the land and left behind rich soil that is good for farming. • Draw Inferences Which part of Indiana would have been affected the least by the glaciers? How do you know? Possible answer: The southern third of the state would have been least affected since the glaciers did not move that far south. 5 ESS15_TE04_IN_C01_L01.indd 5 30/01/15 11:48 PM WORKTEXT Active Reading pages 4–5 The sand dunes along the shores of Lake Michigan are one of the most unique landforms in Indiana. Winds off Lake Michigan pile the sand on the shore forming tall dunes. Plants and grasses cover some sand dunes. The winds push and change other sand dunes. Plants cannot grow on these dunes because they move too much. For example, Mount Baldy is a tall dune that is more than 120 feet high. It remains mostly bare. Along with hills of sand, the Lake Michigan area also includes sandy beaches, swamps, grassy hills, and forests. 3. Write four landforms that can be found in Indiana. Possible answers: plains, hills, caves, sand dunes, valleys, forests Mount Baldy sand dune on Indiana Dunes National Lakeshore Wyandotte Cave is in Crawford County in southern Indiana. This room is called Rothrock Cathedral. Indiana’s Landforms Indiana has many different landforms. A landform is a natural feature of Earth’s surface, such as a mountain, hill, valley, or even an island. These features are part of the lithosphere. The lithosphere is the soil and rock that form Earth’s surface. Indiana is a varied land. It has flat plains, hills, and valleys. It also has forests and beaches. Most of the land in central and northern Indiana is flat. Many large farms are located there. The highest point in the state is Hoosier Hill near the Ohio border. It has an elevation of 1,257 feet. Elevation is the height of the land above sea level. In the south-central part of the state, the rolling hills of Brown County are a popular tourist attraction. Many large caves are also found in southern Indiana. Wyandotte Cave is about 30 miles west of New Albany. In one of its huge underground rooms, a rock pile called Monument Mountain stands 175 feet tall. 5 4 ESS14_SE04_IN_C01_L01.indd 4 16/01/15 12:24 AM ESS14_SE04_IN_C01_L01.indd 5 Indiana’s Landforms • Main Idea and Details What is the relationship between a landform and the lithosphere? The lithosphere is the soil and rock that form Earth’s surface. A landform is a natural feature that is part of the lithosphere. • Synthesize Information Why is most of the land in central and northern Indiana flat? Glaciers moved across the northern two thirds of Indiana for nearly 400,000 years. • Demonstrate Reasoned Judgment Could a room in Wyandotte Cave be more than 175 feet high? Why or why not? Yes, because a rock pile in one of the rooms stands 175 feet tall, so the room must be at least that high. • Predict Consequences What would happen to the number of plants and grasses on the sand dunes if the winds off Lake Michigan weren’t as strong? Why? There would be more plants and grasses because the sand would not move as much. 16/01/15 12:24 AM Differentiated Instruction Use the following questions to differentiate instruction for students when discussing Indiana’s landforms. L1 Special Needs: Pair students with visual problems with helper students. Have the helper students read the text and describe the images. The vision-impaired student should ask questions to clarify information. L2 Extra Support: Provide students with pictures of people exploring caves, farming, hiking in the hills, and climbing the Indiana Dunes. Ask them to locate on the map on page 2 where these pictures might have been taken. L3 On-level: Assign pairs of students an Indiana landform, such as farmland, Hoosier Hill, Wyandotte Cave, and the Indiana Dunes. Ask each pair to make a poster showing how people use the feature’s natural resources. L4 Challenge: Ask pairs of students to research the landforms in their region and write a paragraph describing how the landforms affect the way people in their region live. 6 ESS15_TE04_IN_C01_L01.indd 6 30/01/15 11:48 PM WORKTEXT The Wabash River is often muddy and slow-moving. Indiana’s water features include lakes and rivers. Glaciers carved hundreds of lakes into the northern region of Indiana. The state’s largest natural lake is Lake Wawasee. It has 25 miles of shoreline. The 43 miles of shoreline on Lake Michigan form part of Indiana’s northern border. Lake Michigan links Indiana to Canada and to the Atlantic Ocean. Indiana also has several reservoirs created by dams. A reservoir is a lake where water is stored. Monroe Lake is the largest human-made lake in the state. It is also the largest body of water in Indiana. Most of Indiana’s rivers flow into the Ohio River, which flows into the Mississippi River. Businesses in the state use rivers to ship products to other places. The Mississippi River flows into the Gulf of Mexico. From there, products can be shipped all over the world. The Wabash River is the longest river in the state. Because it drains Indiana’s farmland, it is often muddy and slow-moving. The Ohio River is the state’s second longest river. It runs along the state’s southern boundary for about 350 miles. 4. Label Evaporation and Precipitation on the diagram. Trace the arrows showing the sequence of the steps. The Hydrologic Cycle Condensation Water vapor cools and forms drops Cloud Precipitation rain or snow falls Evaporation Water changes to water vapor 6 Lake 7 16/01/15 12:24 AM ESS14_SE04_IN_C01_L01.indd 7 Water Features and the Hydrologic Cycle • Make Comparisons How do Lake Wawasee and Monroe Lake differ? Lake Wawasee is a natural lake, and Monroe Lake is a human-made reservoir. • Draw Inferences What is one reason for building a dam on a river? to store water • pages 6–7 Indiana’s water features are part of the hydrosphere. The hydrosphere is all the water on Earth’s surface. It includes lakes, rivers, and streams. Indiana’s water is also part of the hydrologic cycle, or the cycle that describes the movement of water on, in, and above Earth. The water on Earth is always moving and changing forms, from rain to ice to vapor, or gas. In the hydrologic cycle, the sun heats water in the oceans. Through evaporation, some of the water becomes vapor. Evaporation is the change of a liquid to a vapor. The vapor rises into Earth’s atmosphere and turns into clouds. This process is called condensation. Then, water drops form in the clouds and fall to Earth as precipitation. Precipitation is the amount of moisture that falls as rain or snow. Most precipitation on land flows into streams and rivers and ends up back in the oceans, where the process begins again. Water Features and the Hydrologic Cycle ESS14_SE04_IN_C01_L01.indd 6 Active Reading How might the Wabash and Ohio rivers affect where manufacturing businesses choose to locate? The rivers connect to lakes and other rivers that lead north to Canada or south to the Gulf of Mexico, so the businesses can ship their products anywhere in the world. 16/01/15 12:24 AM • Make Comparisons How does the hydrosphere differ from the lithosphere? The hydrosphere includes all the water on Earth’s surface. The lithosphere is all the land on Earth’s surface. • Demonstrate Reasoned Judgment Based on the hydrologic cycle, does the amount of water in the hydrosphere change? Why or why not? No, it changes form as it goes through the cycle, but the total amount stays the same. • Analyze Images How might water from the lake become snow on top of the mountains? The water in the lake evaporates. As it rises, it cools and forms clouds. As the clouds move over the mountains, snow falls from the clouds. 7 ESS15_TE04_IN_C01_L01.indd 7 30/01/15 11:48 PM WORKTEXT Active Reading pages 8–9 Plants and Animals in Indiana Indiana’s biosphere is as varied as its landforms and water features. The biosphere is all of the plants and animals living on Earth’s surface. Wildflowers, such as goldenrod, violets, and clover, bloom in spring and summer throughout the state. Wild apples, persimmons, and cherries can also be found throughout Indiana. Many less common plants can be found in the Indiana Dunes region. More than 1,100 kinds of plants and ferns grow there. These include prickly pear cactus, orchids, and prairie grasses. Still more types of plants, such as bluestem grasses, are found in Indiana’s small prairie region. In the early 1800s, more than 80 percent of Indiana was covered with forests. Over time, farmers cut down trees to make room for fields. Towns and cities grew. By 1917, only 7 percent of the state was forested. In the past 100 years, reforestation, or replanting trees, has led to 20 percent of the state being forested today, however. About half of this forested land is located in state parks and forests, including Hoosier National Forest. This forest in the hills of southern Indiana includes such trees as black walnut, hickory, oak, maple, and tulip. Indiana is home to many animals, such as whitetailed deer, skunks, raccoons, rabbits, and moles. Mice, woodchucks, and squirrels are found throughout the state. Indiana’s lakes and rivers are filled with catfish, trout, and bass, as well as rare fish like the lake sturgeon. Many water birds make their home in the state’s wetlands. These include the sandhill crane, a type of bird that is in danger of dying out. 5. Compare and Contrast Look at the plant life in the pictures on this page and the next page. Write one way in which they are similar and one way in which they are different. Possible answer: Similar: colors; Different: trees in one and grass in the other Years ago, other large mammals, such as black bears and elk, lived in Indiana. But they slowly disappeared. People hunted these animals. In addition, when people cleared land for farming and housing, they destroyed the places where the animals lived. Now other animals could disappear from the state, such as sandhill cranes and Indiana bats. People work to protect these and other animals from dying out. Hoosiers have helped set aside more than 22,000 acres of land in nature preserves across the state. Indiana grassland 6. Main Idea and Details Write one detail that supports the main idea that glaciers shaped the landscape of Indiana. Possible answer: Glaciers formed hundreds of lakes in the northern region of Indiana. 7. Hoosier National Forest Describe one way that people or businesses use Indiana’s waterways. Businesses use the rivers to ship products to other places. Possible answer: Stop! I need help with Discuss content students need help with. Wait! I have a question about Go! Now I know 9 8 ESS14_SE04_IN_C01_L01.indd 8 Pause to answer students’ questions. Help students self-assess their learning. ESS14_SE04_IN_C01_L01.indd 9 16/01/15 12:24 AM Plants and Animals in Indiana • Recognize Main Idea and Details Name six different plants and animals that are part of Indiana’s biosphere. Possible answers: wildflowers (goldenrod, violets, clover), wild apples and cherries, cactus, orchids, prairie grasses, trees (oak, walnut, hickory, maple, tulip), deer, skunks, raccoons, rabbits, moles, mice, woodchucks, squirrels, catfish, trout, bass, birds (crane) 16/01/15 12:24 AM • Predict Consequences What might have happened if Indiana had not protected the land in the Hoosier National Forest? Farmers might have continued cutting down trees to make room for fields until no trees were left. • Draw Inferences How does the Jasper-Pulaski Fish and Wildlife Area help the sandhill crane? It protects the wetlands where the cranes make their homes and helps to keep them from dying out. • Draw Conclusions Why did the amount of forested land in Indiana decrease from 80 percent to 20 percent? Farmers cut down trees to make room for fields. Other trees were cleared for cities and towns. • Recognize Cause and Effect What are two causes for the disappearance of large mammals in Indiana? People hunted the animals. When they cleared land for farms, they destroyed the places the animals lived. 8 ESS15_TE04_IN_C01_L01.indd 8 30/01/15 11:48 PM Chapter 1 Lesson 2 Regions and Resources Lesson Plan Summary IN Indiana Indiana Academic Standards 4.3.4 Map and describe the physical regions of Indiana and identify major natural resources and crop regions. 4.3.7 Explain the effect of the Earth/ sun relationship on the climate of Indiana. Target Reading Skill Objective: • Identify main idea and details. ELL Objective: • Use new vocabulary to talk about regions and resources of Indiana. 1 myWorld and me WORKTEXT Envision It! Remind students of the discussion they had about the Big Question for this chapter: How does geography affect the way we live? • How does the region in which you live affect the jobs people do in your community? Review the instructions for the Envision It! with students, and have them complete the activity. Preview the Key Idea and Vocabulary with students. • What are the weather and climate like in your community? 2 3 15 minutes Not enough time for social studies? Teach this step during your reading block or as a center activity. Model active reading by asking the questions and using the teaching strategies indicated below this lesson’s worktext pages. 45 minutes Ask students to complete the Got It? activity at the end of the lesson to evaluate their understanding of the key objectives in this lesson. 10 minutes WORKTEXT Active Reading WORKTEXT Got It? 9 ESS15_TE04_IN_C01_L02.indd 9 2/8/15 1:05 AM WORKTEXT Active Reading pages 10–11 NLOCK U Lesson 2 I will know Indiana’s land regions and their features. Regions and Resources Vocabulary till natural resource moraine weather climate On the left is the Central Till Plain and on the right is the Southern Lowlands. Circle the photograph that is most similar to what the land looks like where you live. Each picture shows a region of Indiana. Above is the Northern Lakes and Moraines region. Natural resources include water, trees, and soil. region Geographers divide Indiana into regions. A region is an area that has common features. These features might be natural, based on the land, or cultural, based on language. Indiana’s Three Regions Indiana is made up of three different regions. These are the Northern Lakes and Moraines, the Central Till Plain, and the Southern Lowlands. Each region has its own special characteristics. The northern region has several large cities and many lakes. Rich farmland covers much of the central region. In the southern region, there are limestone caves and rolling hills. The landforms and natural resources found in Indiana’s regions make them unique. A natural resource is something in the environment that people use. For example, water, trees, soil, and minerals are natural resources found in Indiana. The area called the Calumet is located along Lake Michigan. In the late 1800s, large companies came to this area. The new industries depended on Lake Michigan for transportation. They used local resources, such as coal and limestone, to make steel. Oil companies also built factories there. Today, this area is an industrial center with cities such as Gary and Hammond. However, there is also farmland in the region. Major crops include soybeans, corn, and beef cattle. 1. List two natural resources found in the Northern Lakes and Moraines region. Write which one you think is most important and why. IN 4.3.4 Map and describe the physical regions of Indiana and identify major natural resources and crop regions. 4.3.7 Explain the effect of the Earth/sun relationship on the climate of Indiana. Factories in Gary, Indiana, are located on the shores of Lake Michigan in the Northern Lakes and Moraines region. Possible answer: water, coal; I think coal is the most important resource because the steel industry brought many jobs to the region. The Northern Lakes and Moraines The Northern Lakes and Moraines region is mostly flat. A moraine is a mass of dirt and rocks left behind by glaciers. Moraines are among the only landforms that break up the flat appearance of this region. From a distance, they look like waves. Hundreds of lakes and ponds are also in this region. The area along the shores of Lake Michigan is home to the Indiana Dunes National Lakeshore and Indiana Dunes State Park. 10 ESS14_SE04_IN_C01_L02.indd 10 Indiana Academic Standards 11 16/01/15 12:29 AM ESS14_SE04_IN_C01_L02.indd 11 16/01/15 12:29 AM Begin to Read Indiana’s Three Regions • Draw Conclusions What factors determine Indiana’s three geographical regions? A region is an area with common natural or cultural features. Each of Indiana’s regions has landforms and natural resources that make them unique. • Make Comparisons What are Indiana’s three regions? How do the features of the regions differ? Indiana’s three regions are the Northern Lakes and Moraines, the Central Till Plain, and the Southern Lowlands. The Northern Lakes and Moraines has several large cities and many lakes. The Central Till Plain has rich farmland. The Southern Lowlands has limestone caves and rolling hills. Support English Language Learners 1. Content and Language Write the “I will know” statement from page 11 on the board. Have students look at the pictures in the Envision It! activity. Invite them to paraphrase or restate the “I will know” statement in their own words. 2. Frontload the Lesson Have students preview the lesson by reading the section headings and the captions with the images. Then encourage students to predict what they will learn in the lesson. 3. Comprehensible Input Review good active reading habits, such as using the 5 Ws (what, who, why, when, where) to ask questions as they read. Explain that these habits will make it easier to complete the interactive writing features in the Worktext. • Draw Conclusions Why are water, trees, soil, and minerals called natural resources? They are things in the environment that people use. The Northern Lakes and Moraines • Summarize What are three features found in the Northern Lakes and Moraines region of Indiana? moraines, lakes and ponds, and dunes • How do the natural resources found in the Calumet area affect the work people might do in that area? Possible answer: People might work in transportation because of Lake Michigan. They might work for the companies that make steel, or they might farm because of the good farmland. 10 ESS15_TE04_IN_C01_L02.indd 10 31/01/15 2:29 AM WORKTEXT Indiana’s Regions Lake Michigan MI Jo se ph R. South Bend Gary Fort Wayne S t. h as ab W M R. ar OH Hoosier Hill (1,257 ft) Wh it Terre Haute For E a st . N Indianapolis . eR Vincennes R ys R . Muncie IL Waba sh R. St . akee R. Kank ee um Ma W Bloomington kW hi te R. New Albany 0 50 mi 0 Evansville . O hio R E S 50 km KY KEY Northern Lakes and Moraines Central Till Plain Southern Lowlands State capital Other city Highest point 2. Place an X on the map where you live. Circle the region in the map key. Answers will vary. Active Reading The Central Till Plain The Southern Lowlands South of the Northern Lakes and Moraines region is the Central Till Plain. Till is the soil and rock that gets left behind after a glacier melts. The soil in the Central Till Plain is the most fertile in the state. Although most of this region is very flat, the highest point in Indiana, called Hoosier Hill, is located there. The rich soil of this region makes it an ideal place for farming. The agriculture belt of the Central Till Plain is dotted with large farms, fields of crops, and fenced-in areas for hogs and cattle. Indiana ranks fifth in the nation in corn production. Much of Indiana’s corn is grown in this central region. Farmers here also grow soybeans, wheat, and hay. They raise hogs, cattle, and chickens. Milk and eggs are also important products of the region. The state capital, Indianapolis, is located in this region. Leaders chose this region for the capital because of its central location. Indianapolis attracted industries in the late nineteenth century because of its nearby source of natural gas. Natural gas was a valuable resource. It was used to produce light and heat. The automobile industry was one industry that grew in Indianapolis. The Ball brothers started their glass manufacturing company in nearby Muncie because of the availability of natural gas. Although the natural gas was soon used up, many industries stayed in the state. The landscape of the Southern Lowlands region looks quite different from the rest of the state. It has rounded hills, some forests, limestone caves, and rich, fertile lowlands. The land is not flat like the rest of the state because glaciers did not cross most of this region. Coal and petroleum, or oil, are two of the natural resources found in the southwest corner of the region near the Wabash River. Farmers grow melons in the fertile soil found there. In the central area, a “limestone belt,” or area of limestone deposits, runs from Bloomington to the East Fork White River. Limestone is a stone used for building. Towns like Bedford opened limestone quarries, or stone pits, more than 100 years ago. Over time, water has worn huge underground holes in the limestone, forming caves. Wyandotte Cave, pictured in the last lesson, has 25 miles of passages. Historians believe that people lived there in prehistoric times. In the southeast corner, there is a series of steep hills, called knobs. Artists like T.C. Steele and William Forsyth have been inspired by southern Indiana’s natural beauty. Cities in the Southern Lowlands include Evansville and Bloomington. Evansville is known as “Plastics Valley” because of the many plastics companies there. Bloomington has limestone quarries, electronics factories, and a large university. pages 12–13 3. Compare and Contrast Fill in the missing features, resources, and crops in the chart. Circle items that are unique to each region. Indiana’s Physical Regions Region The rich soil in the Central Till Plain is ideal for farming. Physical Features Natural Resources Major Crops Northern Lakes and flat land, moraines, Moraines lakes and ponds, dunes water, coal, limestone, oil, soil soybeans, corn, beef cattle Central Till Plain flat land, Hoosier Hill, farmland fertile soil, natural gas corn, soybeans, wheat, hay, hogs, cattle, chickens, eggs, milk Southern Lowlands rounded hills, forests, fertile lowlands, caves coal, oil, limestone, fertile soil melons 12 ESS14_SE04_IN_C01_L02.indd 12 13 16/01/15 12:29 AM ESS14_SE04_IN_C01_L02.indd 13 The Central Till Plain The Southern Lowlands • Draw Conclusions How are the types of businesses in the Central Till Plain an example of how geography affects the way people live? Agriculture is important because of the rich soil. Many industries grew around Indianapolis because natural gas was available. • • Draw Inferences Why might cattle, hogs, and chickens be raised in the same areas that grow crops such as corn, wheat, and hay? Possible answer: The food that the animals eat is grown in the same place that the animals are raised. • Analyze Maps What two major Indiana rivers drain the Central Till Plain? the Wabash and White rivers 16/01/15 12:29 AM Identify Main Idea and Details Why are there more hills, forests, and caves in the Southern Lowlands than in other regions of Indiana? The glaciers didn’t cross most of this region, so the land didn’t become flat. • Recognize Cause And Effect How do the natural resources between Bloomington and the East Fork White River affect the work people do in the area? People might work in the limestone quarries. • Analyze Charts What major crop is found in the Southern Lowlands of Indiana? melons • Make Comparisons How do the features of the Southern Lowlands differ? The southwest corner has the Wabash River, fertile soil, coal, and oil. The central area has a limestone belt. The southeast corner has steep hills and natural beauty. 11 ESS15_TE04_IN_C01_L02.indd 11 31/01/15 2:29 AM WORKTEXT Active Reading pages 14–15 Climate and Precipitation Indiana’s Plant Hardiness Zones Lake Michigan MI South Bend Fort Wayne N E W er S IL h as ab W v Ri OH Indianapolis KEY er Evansville O h i o R iv 0 0 50 mi 50 km KY Zone 5b Zone 6a Zone 6b State capital Other city What is the weather like today? Weather is the condition of the air at a certain time and place. The weather may be different in different parts of Indiana. The weather affects what people wear and the activities they do. Weather changes from day to day. The climate changes much more slowly. Climate is the pattern of weather in a place over a long period of time. Indiana has a temperate climate with four seasons. It is usually not extremely hot or extremely cold. Indiana’s distance from the equator is one reason for its temperate climate. Places close to the equator are warmest throughout the year because the sun shines strongest there. Places far from the equator, like the poles, are coldest. This is why Indiana has a warmer climate than many places to the north and a cooler climate than places to the south. The state has warm, humid summers and chilly, cloudy winters. Southern Indiana is slightly warmer than northern Indiana. Lake Michigan affects the climate of northwest Indiana. In the fall, the lake’s water remains warm from the summer. This warms the air above the lake and keeps temperatures mild. But in the spring, the water stays cold from the winter. This cools the air and keeps the temperature lower. 4. Look at the map. Gardeners and farmers use this USDA Plant Hardiness Zone Map to see what plants grow best where they live. Circle your zone in the key. Then research the plants and trees that grow well in that zone. Write the names of two plants or trees that could be used in a community park. Lake Michigan also affects the precipitation in Indiana. Recall that precipitation is the amount of rain and snow that falls there. The average snowfall for Indiana is 20 inches a year. But the northern border near Lake Michigan often gets more than 100 inches a year! This is because cold air passing over the warmer lake produces very heavy precipitation. The winds that blow across Lake Michigan cause heavy snowfall in places like Michigan City. 5. Main Idea and Details The three land regions of Indiana have different physical features. Write three details to support this main idea. Possible answer: Hundreds of lakes dot the landscape in the Northern Lakes and Moraines. The Central Till Plain has large farms. The Southern Lowlands has rolling hills. 6. Describe how the changing seasons affect how people in Indiana live. Possible answer: In winter, it snows a lot in some parts of Indiana. People who live there dress warmly and can ski. In summer, it is warm so people who live near water can swim and kayak. Students will identify their Stop! I need help with Discuss zone and choose two plants Wait! I have a question about or trees that grow well there. Go! Now I know content students need help with. Pause to answer students’ questions. Help students self-assess their learning. 15 14 ESS14_SE04_IN_C01_L02.indd 14 16/01/15 12:29 AM ESS14_SE04_IN_C01_L02.indd 15 16/01/15 12:29 AM Climate and Precipitation Differentiated Instruction • Make Comparisons What is the difference between weather and climate? Weather is the condition of the air at a particular time or place. Climate is the pattern of weather over a long period of time. Use the following questions to differentiate instruction for students when discussing Indiana’s regions and resources. • Draw Conclusions What context clues help the reader understand the meaning of temperate on page 14? “It is usually not extremely hot or extremely cold. . . . Indiana has a warmer climate than many places to the north and a cooler climate than places to the south.” • Recognize Cause and Effect Why does Indiana have a temperate climate? It isn’t close to either the equator or the poles. • Analyze Maps Through which plant hardiness zones does the Wabash River flow? all three L1 Special Needs: You may wish to have a student helper make an audio tape of the lesson by reading each section of the text slowly. Use the tape for students who would benefit from an audio approach to the content. L2 Extra Support: Provide small groups of students with a blank map of Indiana. Have them use the information in the lesson to divide the map into regions and draw in the major features of each region. L3 On-level: Assign groups of students a region of Indiana. Have students research the natural resources found in that region and make a resource map of the region. Students should place icons, samples, or pictures of each resource in its correct location on the map. Have groups post their maps. L4 Challenge: Ask pairs of students to research and draw a map showing the locations of major Indiana industries, either from the early 1900s or the present. 12 ESS15_TE04_IN_C01_L02.indd 12 31/01/15 2:29 AM Chapter 1 21st Century Skill Use Latitude and Longitude Skill Lesson Plan Summary IN Indiana Indiana Academic Standards 4.3.1 Use latitude and longitude to identify physical and human features of Indiana. 1 2 Use Latitude and Longitude WORKTEXT Teach the Skill Provide students with a physical map of Indiana similar to the one in the Worktext. You may also wish to provide a globe or world map to help students identify the location of Indiana relative to the equator and prime meridian. Help students identify the latitude and longitude lines. Point out that Indiana is north of the equator, so all latitude lines have an N after the number. Indiana is west of the prime meridian, so all the longitude lines have a W after the number. Model how to find the nearest latitude and longitude lines to Indianapolis. Model active reading by asking the questions and using the teaching strategies indicated below this lesson’s worktext pages. 20 minutes 15 minutes WORKTEXT Try It 13 ESS15_TE04_IN_C01_SK.indd 13 31/01/15 2:40 AM WORKTEXT Active Reading pages 16–17 Learning Objective Map Skills IN I will know how to use latitude and longitude to identify features of Indiana. 4.3.1 Use latitude and longitude to identify physical and human features of Indiana. Use Latitude and Longitude F o r k Whit eR . Wab ash R. te R. St . Jo se ph R. We use maps for many different Indiana: Physical and Human Features purposes. They help us find physical features, such as lakes, rivers, dunes, 87° W 85° W 88° W 86° W 84° W and forests. Maps can also show 42° N Lake 42° N MI Michigan features that were created by people. These human features of maps Indiana Dunes South Bend Gary National Lakeshore . include cities, farms, highways, and Lake eR me Wawasee Mau railroad lines. R. Kankakee Fort Wayne 41° N To find the exact location of 41° N St .M N physical and human features on ar ys R . R . maps, we use latitude and longitude. W E h as ab These imaginary lines form a grid W S Muncie OH system that identifies the location of 40° N 40° N features on maps. Lines of latitude Indianapolis are drawn east to west. The equator IL Terre is the starting point for latitude. All Haute hi W locations north of the equator are Monroe marked with an N, and all locations Bloomington Lake 39° N south of the equator are marked with 39° N st Ea an S. Lines of longitude are drawn Hoosier National Forest 0 50 mi north to south. The prime meridian 0 50 km is the starting point for longitude. All Patoka Lake locations east of the prime meridian 85° W Evansville 38° N are marked with an E, and all . KEY O hio R locations west of the prime meridian National Forest KY National Lakeshore are marked with a W. State capital Study the blue grid on the map Other city 86° W 87° W 88° W of Indiana at the right. To identify the latitude and longitude of Indianapolis, first find the capital city on the map. Next, find the line of latitude closest to the city. Use your finger to follow the line to the right or to the left to find the number. You will see that it is 40°N. Now find the line of longitude closest to the city. Use your finger to follow the line to the top or bottom of the map to find the number. It is 86°W. Now you know that Indianapolis is located close to latitude 40°N and longitude 86°W. Use the map to answer the questions below. 1. Find Evansville on the map. What is the closest latitude line? 38°N 2. Identify the two lakes that are located between 87°W and 86°W. Monroe Lake and Patoka Lake 3. The Ohio River forms the southern border of Indiana. What lines of longitude does the river cross in Indiana? 85°W, 86°W, 87°W, 88°W 4. What two physical features are located near 42°N and 87°W? Indiana Dunes National Lakeshore and Lake Michigan 5. Apply Suppose the state has decided to build a new railroad line (human feature) that will connect Gary and Indianapolis. Draw the railroad line on the map, as well as what its symbol would look like in the map key below. Then write the lines of latitude and longitude that the railroad will cross below. Students should draw a railroad symbol for the key. 41°N, 40°N, 87°W 16 ESS14_SE04_IN_C01_SK.indd 16 17 16/01/15 12:51 AM ESS14_SE04_IN_C01_SK.indd 17 Differentiated Instruction Use the following questions and strategies to differentiate instruction for students when discussing how to use latitude and longitude to locate places in Indiana. 16/01/15 12:51 AM L4 Challenge: Show students the exact latitude and longitude of your school using a GPS app on a smartphone. Challenge students to find out more about how degrees of latitude and longitude are broken into smaller sections similar to the way an hour is divided into minutes and seconds. L2 Extra Support: Divide a piece of graph paper into four quadrants by drawing a horizontal and vertical line through the center of the page. Place an X in the upper left quadrant of the grid at a point where two lines cross. Ask students to give the X an “address” by counting the squares to the left of the vertical line and above the horizontal line. Point out that this is similar to what students are doing when they use latitude and longitude lines to find a location. L3 On-level: To give students more practice using latitude and longitude, have partners make up a question similar to the questions on page 17. Partners should write their question on an index card and write the answer to the question on the back. Teams should exchange cards with another pair, read and discuss the question, and write the answer. Students can then check their answer on the back of the card. If the answers don’t agree, pairs should discuss how they got the answer and decide which one is correct. 14 ESS15_TE04_IN_C01_SK.indd 14 31/01/15 2:40 AM Chapter 1 Lesson 3 Indiana Connections Lesson Plan Summary IN Indiana Indiana Academic Standards 4.3.11 Examine Indiana’s international relationships. 4.4.3 Explain the benefits of trade and give examples of how people in Indiana have engaged in trade. Target Reading Skill Objective: • Identify main idea and details. ELL Objective: • Use new vocabulary to talk about how Indiana is connected to other states and countries. 1 myWorld and me WORKTEXT Envision It! Remind students of the discussion they had about the Big Question for this chapter: How does geography affect the way we live? • How does learning about people who live in other states or countries change the way we live? Review the instructions for the Envision It! with students, and have them complete the activity. Preview the Key Idea and Vocabulary with students. • How is your community connected to other states, countries, or cultures? 2 5 minutes Not enough time for social studies? Teach this step during your reading block or as a center activity. Model active reading by asking the questions and using the teaching strategies indicated below this lesson’s worktext pages. 45 minutes Ask students to complete the Got It? activity at the end of the lesson to evaluate their understanding of the key objectives in this lesson. 10 minutes WORKTEXT Active Reading 3 WORKTEXT Got It? 15 ESS15_TE04_IN_C01_L03.indd 15 31/01/15 2:28 AM WORKTEXT Active Reading pages 18–19 NLOCK U Lesson 3 I will know how Indiana is connected to other states and countries. Indiana Connections Vocabulary trade manufacturing Circle two items in the picture that represent this culture group. People celebrate their cultures in many ways. Here, Mongolian Buddhists dance at a festival in Bloomington, Indiana. Benefits of Trade “The Crossroads of America” is Indiana’s state motto, or saying. This motto describes the state’s central location in the United States along roads, rivers, and train lines. Hoosiers are connected to the rest of the country by the interstate highways that crisscross the state. Indiana, the United States, and the World 1. Look at the picture of a barge on the Ohio River. Describe how Indiana is connected to other parts of the world. Its waterways link it to other places. Indiana’s location in the center of the country links it to other states. This allows businesses to easily ship goods to other places in the country. Fourteen interstate highways pass through Indiana, linking it to the rest of the nation. Indiana has more railroad lines than many other states. Trains carrying cargo, or goods, travel from Chicago, Illinois, and St. Louis, Missouri, through Indiana. Waterways link Indiana not just to other states, but to the whole world. The Ohio River flows into the Mississippi River, which in turn flows into the Gulf of Mexico. From there, goods can be shipped all over the world. Southwind Maritime Center, in the town of Mount Vernon, is one of Indiana’s ports on the Ohio River. Portage, on the shores of Lake Michigan, is one of Indiana’s largest port cities. It connects Indiana to Canada. Ships on the Great Lakes can reach the Atlantic Ocean through the St. Lawrence Seaway. From Portage, huge ships, called freighters, carry Indiana steel and other products to markets around the world. Indiana is connected to the world through trade. Trade is the buying and selling of goods and services. Trade has many benefits. No single place can provide everything that the people who live there need. Each place depends on others to get the things they need and want. Trade benefits Indiana in other ways, too. It brings money into the state. It also creates jobs for workers. Trade has existed for many thousands of years. Long ago, it took barges, wagons, and stagecoaches weeks or months to make a delivery. Today, a jet plane can cross those same distances in hours. And cargo ships can hold more goods than ever before. They can transport those goods far more cheaply, too. More goods are now shipped and received around the world than at any other time in history. export import IN culture cultural exchange Indiana Academic Standards 4.3.11 Examine Indiana’s international relationships. 4.4.3 Explain the benefits of trade and give examples of how people in Indiana have engaged in trade. The Subaru of Indiana assembly plant in Lafayette makes goods that can be shipped all over the world. 19 18 ESS14_SE04_IN_C01_L03.indd 18 16/01/15 12:36 AM ESS14_SE04_IN_C01_L03.indd 19 16/01/15 12:37 AM Begin to Read Indiana, the United States, and the World • Demonstrate Reasoned Judgment How might goods manufactured in other states reach your part of Indiana? Possible answer: Goods from other states reach my part of Indiana by airplane, train, truck, or boat. • Identify Alternatives How might a steel company ship its steel to the Gulf of Mexico? Possible answer: The company might put the steel on a truck and take it to a boat on the Ohio River. The boat would travel to the Mississippi River, and from there to the Gulf of Mexico. Support English Language Learners • Draw Inferences Why is it important that 14 interstate highways pass through Indiana? Possible answer: All these highways allow Indiana to ship and receive goods easily from around the country. 1. Content and Language Write trade on the board. Explain that to trade means “to exchange one object for another.” Ask students to name something they have traded. 2. Frontload the Lesson Have students preview the lesson by studying the images and captions. Then encourage students to predict what they will learn in the lesson. 3. Comprehensible Input Have students form groups of three. Give Student 1 three index cards reading “Indiana.” Give Student 2 three index cards reading “Illinois.” Give Student 3 three index cards reading “China.” Taking turns, students should trade one card with another group member until each student in the group has a card from each location. Connect trade to buying and selling goods from other states or countries. Benefits of Trade • Predict Consequences What might happen if people in Indiana did not trade with people from other states or countries? Possible answer: People would only buy goods that were produced in Indiana and would not sell their goods outside of Indiana. There would be fewer goods to choose from. • Identify Central Issues How does trade benefit Indiana? Possible answer: Trade lets Hoosiers get things they need and want that they cannot get in Indiana. It also brings money into the state and helps create jobs. 16 ESS15_TE04_IN_C01_L03.indd 16 31/01/15 2:28 AM WORKTEXT Active Reading pages 20–21 Indiana’s Top Trading Partners, 2013 ARCTIC OCEAN Top Exports and Imports 3 CANADA 1 UNITED STATES Indiana MEXICO 2 FRANCE JAPAN 5 4 ATLANTIC OCEAN INDIAN OCEAN PACIFIC OCEAN KEY Trading partner of Indiana 2. Circle Indiana’s top two trading partners. Write why you think these countries are top trading partners. Possible answer: Canada and Mexico are the top trading partners because they are located closest to Indiana. SOUTHERN OCEAN International Trade Indiana trades goods with many countries. Indiana businesses ship more goods to Canada than anywhere else in the world. In 2013, the state shipped nearly $12 billion worth of goods to Canada. Businesses in Indiana use the state’s natural resources to make products that are needed in other regions of the world that might not have those resources. For example, Indiana’s fertile soil is good for growing crops such as corn, soybeans, and mint. Farms ship crops to other areas where those crops do not grow well. In 2011, Indiana’s agriculture industry earned $4.6 billion from selling crops to other countries. Indiana’s steel industry is centered in the northwestern part of the state. It produces 20 million tons of steel a year. Steel is used to make many products, such as stoves, televisions, and refrigerators. Indiana ships these products to other countries. The industry in Indiana that ships the most goods to other countries is the vehicle manufacturing industry. Manufacturing is the making of goods by machines, usually in factories. Indiana companies make vehicles and parts for vehicles such as automobiles and aircraft. The steel that is produced in the state is used to make many of these products. Indiana manufacturers make many different exports. Exports are goods that are shipped to another country to be sold there. The vehicle manufacturing industry in Indiana is the top exporter. The second highest exporter is the pharmaceutical industry. A pharmaceutical company exports medicine. One of the biggest pharmaceutical companies in the world is Eli Lilly and Company. It is located in the capital city, Indianapolis. Indiana also relies on imports. Imports are goods that are brought in from another country to be sold here. Hoosiers cannot produce everything that people in the state need. Instead, they import goods from businesses overseas. Some of the top goods that Indiana imports are ingredients for medicine, cellular phones, and vehicle parts. Hoosiers import more goods from Canada than anywhere else. The state also buys many products from Ireland, China, Japan, and Mexico. 3. Look at the graph below that shows Indiana’s top exports. About how much more money does Indiana earn through its export of industrial machinery than electric machinery? about $3 million Indiana’s Top Exports, 2012 8 Millions of dollars GERMANY 6 4 2 0 Export Vehicles and Parts Pharmaceutical Products Industrial Machinery Optical and Medical Instruments Electric Machinery Source: U.S. Census Bureau and Indiana University 21 20 ESS14_SE04_IN_C01_L03.indd 20 16/01/15 12:37 AM ESS14_SE04_IN_C01_L03.indd 21 International Trade Top Exports and Imports • • How do Indiana’s natural resources affect the products that Indiana businesses sell to other countries? Possible answer: Indiana businesses use the state’s natural resources, such as fertile soil, to grow crops that other countries want to buy. 16/01/15 12:37 AM Identify Main Idea and Details Why do companies that export goods also import goods? Provide an example. Possible answer: Companies do not have all they need on their own. Examples: Pharmaceutical companies need to buy imported ingredients for medicine in order to make and export medicine. Vehicle manufacturing industries need to buy imported vehicle parts in order to make and export cars. • Recognize Cause and Effect Why is Indiana a good place for businesses to manufacture stoves, vehicles, and parts for vehicles? Indiana’s steel industry produces 20 million tons of steel a year, which can be used to make cars and appliances. • Analyze Graphs About how much does Indiana earn by exporting industrial machinery? about $5.5 million • Analyze Maps Which international trading partner requires goods to travel the farthest? Japan • Analyze Graphs About how much does Indiana earn in total for its top five exports? more than $23 million • Draw Conclusions Do you think Indiana ships most of the steel it produces to other countries? Why or why not? Possible answer: No, because Indiana makes other products out of steel and ships many products made from steel to other countries. • Demonstrate Reasoned Judgment What might account for the fact that Indiana both exports and imports vehicle parts? Possible answer: Indiana may have the resources to make some parts, but not others. 17 ESS15_TE04_IN_C01_L03.indd 17 31/01/15 2:28 AM WORKTEXT Active Reading pages 22–23 Cultural Exchanges Indiana not only provides and receives products from other parts of the world, but the state and other countries also share their cultures. A culture is the way of life of a group of people. Indiana takes part in cultural exchanges with people in other countries. A cultural exchange happens when two different cultures share information with each other. Indiana has sister cities and sister states in other countries. Sister cities and states work together as friends to understand the other’s culture. These relationships also promote trade and tourism. Indianapolis alone has eight sister cities! These include cities in Taiwan, Germany, Italy, Slovenia, China, Brazil, the United Kingdom, and India. International relationships have many benefits to Hoosiers. They can learn about different cultures. They also create new volunteer and business opportunities. Each year, the city of Indianapolis celebrates its international relationships with the Indy Sister Cities Fest. Hoosiers enjoy music, games, world sports, and other cultural activities at this street fair. In 1964, President John F. Kennedy started an organization called Partners of the Americas. Kennedy 4. Indiana has wanted to increase cultural exchanges between the United partnerships with States and Latin America. People created one of the first people in other countries. partnerships between Indiana and Rio Grande do Sul, Circle the two shown a state in Brazil. Over the past 50 years, Hoosiers and on the map. gauchos, or people from this state in Brazil, have shared their Indiana’s Sister States cultures. Students from the two ARCTIC OCEAN countries have visited each other’s schools. Farmers from Indiana have taught people in Brazil how Indiana, United States to grow vegetables. Gaucho youth Zhejiang, ATLANTIC China orchestras have visited Indiana to OCEAN share their music. Zhejiang Province in China is INDIAN OCEAN another sister state of Indiana. PACIFIC This partnership began in 1987. It Rio Grande do Sul, OCEAN Brazil was started mostly for economic reasons. Indiana’s exports to China have grown over the past decade. China uses more meat, coal, and steel than any other country in the world. Through this partnership, Indiana has increased trade with China. Schools in both countries have also started to work together. 5. Main Idea and Details Write what happens in a cultural exchange. Two cultures share information with each other. 6. Indiana students practice making Chinese characters in their Chinese class. Main Idea and Details Write two details to support the main idea that Indiana’s waterways link the state to the rest of the world. Ships carry freight on the Ohio River, which flows to the Mississippi River. Ships can reach Canada and the Atlantic Ocean through Lake Michigan and the St. Lawrence Seaway. Possible answer: 7. List three benefits of Indiana’s relationships with its sister cities and states. These relationships promote trade and tourism, help people learn about different cultures, and create new business opportunites. Possible answer: Stop! I need help with Discuss Wait! I have a question about Go! Now I know content students need help with. Pause to answer students’ questions. Help students self-assess their learning. 22 ESS14_SE04_IN_C01_L03.indd 22 23 16/01/15 12:37 AM ESS14_SE04_IN_C01_L03.indd 23 16/01/15 12:37 AM Cultural Exchanges Differentiated Instruction • Recognize Cause and Effect How do cultural exchanges benefit Indiana’s economy? Possible answer: The relationships from sister cities and sister states promote trade and tourism, which bring money into the economy. Use the following questions to differentiate instruction for students when discussing Indiana’s connections to other states and countries. • Formulate Questions What question might you ask about Indiana’s sister cities and states? Possible answer: How does Indiana choose which cities or states to work with? L1 Special Needs: If the content is too complex for some students, create an outline showing the most important concepts. Have students locate each item on the outline, highlight it in the text, and explain it in his/her own words. • Synthesize Information What are some ways that Indiana and Brazil have shared their cultures? People have visited each other’s schools. Farmers from Indiana have taught gauchos how to grow vegetables. Gaucho youth orchestras have visited Indiana to share music. L2 Extra Support: Provide students with an outline map of the world, showing the names of the countries. Working in groups of three, have students locate and circle the countries where Indianapolis’s sister cities are located. Ask students what they already know about these countries and what they might learn by sharing information with the people. • Draw Inferences What natural resources in Indiana have contributed to increased trade with China? Possible answer: Indiana’s fertile soil lets farmers raise cattle, which China imports for meat. Indiana has coal deposits, so they can ship coal to China. L3 On-level: Have students work with a partner. Partners should first identify a culture mentioned in the lesson that they would like to learn more about. Then have students write questions for an interview they would like to have with a student their age from that country. L4 Challenge: Assign groups of students one of Indiana’s top trading partners from the map on page 20. Have groups research the three largest exports to and imports from that country in recent years. Then have them make a bar graph showing the total amounts of money Indiana earned and spent in trade with their country. 18 ESS15_TE04_IN_C01_L03.indd 18 31/01/15 2:28 AM Chapter 1 Review and Assessment Lesson Plan Summary 1 Performance Assessment Both the myStory Book and myWorld Activity performance assessments are available in the Chapter Closer Digital Presentation. PRESENTATION Chapter 1 30 minutes Choice A myStory Book Writing Activity Students use the myStory ideas from their worktexts to write and illustrate an eight-page booklet demonstrating their understanding of the key objectives, vocabulary, and Big Question for this chapter. Choice B myWorld Activity Hands-on Activity: Geography: Mapping People and the Environment In this activity, students draw a map of Indiana to show how people interact with the environment. See the full instructions online to complete the activity as well as Students’ Instructions and a rubric for the activity. Use Activity Cards 1–5. 30 minutes Optional: You may want to assign the Chapter Review and 15 minutes 2 Chapter Review 3 Formal Assessment WORKTEXT See the Online Lesson Plan for full instructions on how to complete the story together as a class, or have each student complete his or her own story. Make sure students’ stories reflect what the chapter’s content means to them. The myStory Book feature in their worktext will help them achieve this. Assessment in the worktext as homework. Optional: Print and distribute Test Forms A and B for this chapter. Notes 19 ESS15_TE04_IN_C01_RV.indd 19 30/01/15 11:49 PM WORKTEXT Active Reading pages 24–25 Chapter 1 Chapter 1 Study Guide Review and Assessment Lesson 1 Lesson 1 Land and Water Lesson 2 Land and Water •IndianaislocatedintheUnitedStates,intheMidwestregion.Its capital,Indianapolis,islocatedinthecenterofthestate. Regions and Resources 1. Describe howglaciersshapedIndiana’s landscapeandenvironmentlongago. •Longago,glaciersshapedthelandscapeofIndiana. •Indianahasvariedlandforms,waterfeatures,andplantsandanimals. Glaciers covered most of Indiana. As they moved and melted, they changed the natural features of the land. They flattened the land, dug large holes, and helped form caves. •Thestate’swaterwaysincludehundredsoflakesandtwomajorrivers: theWabashandOhiorivers. Lesson 2 Indiana’s Regions and Resources •Indianahasthreelandregions:theNorthernLakesandMoraines,the CentralTillPlain,andtheSouthernLowlands. •Indiana’snaturalresourcesincludewater,trees,soil,andminerals. •Indianahasatemperateclimatethatisaffectedbythestate’sdistance fromtheequator. 2. Match eachwaterwaywithits description. •LakeMichiganaffectstheweatherandprecipitationinthestate. d Lesson 3 _____Lake Wawasee _____Monroe Lake _____Wabash River _____OhioRiver b Indiana Connections •Indiana’scentrallocationintheUnitedStatesmakesitthe“Crossroads ofAmerica.” a •TradebenefitsHoosiersbyallowingpeopletogetthingstheyneedand want,bringingmoneyintothestate,andcreatingjobs. •Indiana’stoptradingpartnerisCanada.Itstopexportsvehiclesand vehicleparts. c a. longestriverin Indiana b. largest reservoir c. formssouthern boundaryofIndiana d. largestnaturallake 3. Labelpartofthehydrologiccycle. 4. Whichregionfitsthisdescription? Thelandismadeupofroundedhills, someforests,limestonecaves,andrich farmland. A. NorthernMorainesandLakes B. CentralTillPlain C. SouthernLowlands D. IndianaDunes 5. Writethreenaturalresourcesfound intheNorthernLakesandMoraines region. water, fertile soil, coal, limestone, and petroleum Possible answers: 6. Fill intheblanks. Indianahasa climate.Thesunshinesstrongestin tothe places equator.Placesfarfromtheequatorhave temperatures. temperate closest colder Condensation •Hoosiersparticipateinculturalexchangeswithothercountries. Evaporation precipitation 24 ESS14_SE04_IN_C01_RV.indd 24 25 16/01/15 12:45 AM ESS14_SE04_IN_C01_RV.indd 25 16/01/15 12:45 AM Support English Language Learners Support English Language Learners Language Production Assess Understanding Use the following activities to help students write about geography and how it affects their life. Have ELLs work in groups of varying language proficiencies to complete the Chapter Activity. Review the rubric and instructions with each group. Beginning LOW Have students draw pictures or diagrams to show different features of Indiana’s geography. Have them choose one picture and write a word or caption to show how it affects their life. Beginning HIGH Have students choose one natural resource from their group’s region and draw a picture of it on a map of Indiana. Intermediate HIGH Write cloze sentences that describe the way that geography affects people’s lives. Have students complete the sentences and then read them aloud. Examples: My environment has ____. This means that I can _____. Intermediate LOW/HIGH Have students identify one resource that is found in several regions of the state and one that is found in only one region. Students should draw a picture of the resource on a blank map of Indiana. Advanced HIGH Ask partners to choose one feature of Indiana’s geography. One partner will write a description of the feature. The other partner will write about how it affects the lives of people in the state. Advanced LOW Have students write full sentences describing the resources in their region and how they are used. 20 ESS15_TE04_IN_C01_RV.indd 20 30/01/15 11:49 PM WORKTEXT Active Reading Goonlinetowriteandillustrate yourownmyStory Bookusingthe myStory Ideasfromthischapter. Chapter 1 Review and Assessment How does geography affect the way we live? Lesson 3 Indiana Connections 7. Main Idea and Details Write twobenefitsoftrade. creates jobs for workers, brings money into the state, allows people to get the things they need Possible answers: 10. Indiana has a variety of landforms, waterways, and resources, along with a temperate climate. This varied geography affects people in different ways, depending on where they live. Geography influences where we choose to live, what we wear, what we do for fun or work, and what our communities are like. How does geography affect the way we live? Lookatthepictureand answerthequestion. 9. Whichofthefollowingbestdescribesa culturalexchange? A. Twocountriestradegoods. B. Twocountriessharetransportation. IN 4.W.1 Writefor discipline-specific tasks,purposes, andaudiences. Thinkaboutwhereyouliveandwhatpeopleinyourcommunitydofor funorwork.Writehowgeographyaffectspartofyourlife. My town is located near the Ohio River. I enjoy fishing and swimming in the river on hot summer days. 8. Writehowthesteelindustryhelps Indiana’stradebusiness. Steel is used to make many products that are shipped to other countries, such as televisions and vehicle parts. pages 26–27 HowdoesIndiana’sgeographyaffect theworkthatpeopledothere? Nowdrawapicturetoillustrateyourwriting. Possible answer: Much of the land in Indiana is flat with fertile soil. Many people work as farmers. Hoosiers also work in the steel industry, which uses natural resources found in the state. Students should draw a picture that shows how geography affects their lives. C. Twoculturesshareinformation. D. Twoculturesbuildfactories. Whileyou’reonline,checkoutthemyStory Current Eventsareawhereyoucancreate yourownbookonatopicthat’sinthenews. 26 ESS14_SE04_IN_C01_RV.indd 26 27 16/01/15 12:45 AM ESS14_SE04_IN_C01_RV.indd 27 Big Question 1. Call on volunteers to name different features of Indiana’s geography. List these features on the board. 2. Have students take turns choosing a feature and describing how it affects their lives. 3. Ask students to explain how Indiana’s geography affects the way people live throughout the state. 16/01/15 12:45 AM myStory Book 1. Explain to students that they will now have the opportunity to create a story about what they learned in this chapter. 2. They will be able to describe it in their own words. They will also be able to select the images they think are best. 3. Explain that prompts will guide them through the writing of the story. myWorld and Me 1. Have students think about a specific way that their life is different because they live in Indiana and not somewhere else. 2. Have students draw a picture that shows the way that their life is different. 21 ESS15_TE04_IN_C01_RV.indd 21 30/01/15 11:49 PM