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Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS The Social Studies Department acknowledges the contributions made to the development of these materials by all social studies staff and especially the following people. 8th GRADE Brendan Blackburn Diana Jordan Phil Hayden Chris McDermott Mitch Pascal Diana Hasuly-Ackman Social Studies Supervisor i Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 TABLE OF CONTENTS OVERVIEW • Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Program Rationale • Social Studies Content Goals • Preface VIRGINIA STATE STANDARDS OF LEARNING GUIDE • • • • • Course description, theme, key concepts, and units of study Unit, SOL, enduring understanding, unit question, preview activity, key terms/people Virginia Curriculum Framework Sample lesson(s) Appendicies SUGGESTED LITERATURE and OTHER SOURCES SUGGESTED PACING GUIDE TEXTBOOK ALIGNMENT CHART ii Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 PROGRAM RATIONALE The Arlington Public Schools Social Studies program is founded on the premise that democracy demands citizens who are informed, interested in the welfare of individuals and society, and committed to the success of democratic processes and values. The Arlington Public School Social Studies curriculum is designed to promote • • • • • • • • • • • • • a chronological approach that places history in its geographic setting accordingly establishing human activities in time and space, a study of world history that includes the basic ideas of both western and non-western cultures, an emphasis on the study of fundamental democratic principles, civic values and ethical understandings, a focus on economic concepts that have influenced the development of civilizations of the past and present, a scope and sequence in which knowledge and skills are taught in a systematic continuum, an enriched and broader course of study for the primary grades which includes an introduction to world studies, a thematic and conceptual approach that organizes content around universal ideas that transcend time, place, and people, an interdisciplinary approach that integrates history, geography, economics, civics, sociology, psychology, language arts, science, mathematics, and the visual and performing arts, a multicultural perspective that reflects the contributions of men and women of different racial, religious, and ethnic groups, a purposeful linking of past and present that draws parallels among civilizations, a balanced presentation of controversial issues that emphasizes reasonable evidence, not bias or emotion, a variety of learning activities that include debate and discussion, simulations, oral histories, use of primary and secondary documents, writing for understanding, use of technology, historical research, reading of non-fiction and fiction, development and use of time lines, surveys, charts, graphs, maps, globes, and participating in community activities, a variety of teaching practices that -make connections to students’ experiences, -are active and hands on, -are inquiry and discovery based, -use multiple intelligences, -simulate real-life situations, -use instructional technology -allow for self-assessment and application of knowledge, -maintain high expectations for student work, and -use higher order thinking. iii Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 PREFACE This guide provides the teacher with the curriculum that is necessary for delivering the required instruction for the course of study. It outlines the content and skills to be taught. This guide reflects academic goals requiring that students • demonstrate a high degree of knowledge. • communicate subject matter clearly. • solve problems using effective processes to reach viable solutions. • apply learning to the world beyond the classroom. • self assess work and reflect on lessons learned. The Virginia Standards of Learning and the 2008 Virginia Curriculum Framework have been included in this guide. State objectives, essential understandings, questions, content and skills have been included to make appropriate connections to each unit. The course description gives an overview of the content. The theme for the course of study suggests a universal idea that transcends the people, time, and place and brings coherence to varied key concepts in the course of study. Units of study are ways in which the content has been organized Enduring understandings are broad generalizations that are related to unit content but applicable to new situations beyond this content. Conceptual Unit questions engage students in uncovering important ideas at the heart of the unit. Preview activities are preliminary exercises that set the stage for learning new content and assessing prior knowledge. Lists of key terms and people highlight important vocabulary. Sample lessons provide examples of a ways to instruct segments of the unit. Suggested literature and other resources offer teachers ways to enrich content through fiction and non-fiction reading and/or internet use. Approximate timeframes for completion of units are suggested in the pacing guide. Such factors as holidays, diversity of students needs, availability of resources, and others will affect the pacing of content. An alignment chart cross-references newly adopted textbook pages to curriculum content. This guide can be accessed on the Arlington Public Schools website at www.arlington.k12.va.us, under the Instruction link. iv Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 CONTENT GOALS The student • understands the significance of the past to private and public lives, and society in general, • comprehends that cultures are diverse yet share the human condition, • grasps the complexity of the patterns of historical events, • understands how things happen and how things change, and how human intentions influence events, • comprehends the interplay of change and continuity, and that both are probable and natural, • understands that not all problems have solutions, • recognizes that personal characteristics of specific individuals have made both positive and negative differences, • appreciates that non-rational, irrational and accidental forces alter history, • develops historical empathy as opposed to just present-mindedness by perceiving past events and issues as they were experienced by people at the time, and • reads widely and critically in order to recognize the difference between fact and conjecture, between evidence and assertion, and between the important and the inconsequential. Adapted from: The Bradley Commission on History in Schools v Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 COURSE DESCRIPTION: The course of study for eighth grade is world geography, emphasizing world regions. It includes the study of fundamental geographic skills and tools, absolute and relative location of people and places, physical and cultural characteristics of place, adaptation to environments, migration and settlement patterns, and the relationship of geography, politics, and economics. Students will continue to learn fundamental geographic concepts as applied to their daily lives. THEME: The organizing theme for grade eight is INTERACTION. KEY CONCEPTS: Students will learn that INTERACTION • defines the network of the language, themes and tools of geography used to study both the past and present world (Geographic Skills). • describes the intersection of positions on the earth’s surface, including the major physical and cultural features of each region (Place Geography). • describes the climate, topography, biogeography, natural resources, and processes that shape patterns on the earth’s surface (Physical Geography). • connects the features of a society as a way of life and the variance of these over time and place (Cultural Geography). • links the ways people make a living with the ways they trade with each other (Economic Geography). • relates politics and territory with the development of political structures over place and time (Political Geography). • conveys the impact of location and development on urban, suburban, and rural areas over time and place (Urban Geography). • explains society is interplay with the natural environment on local, regional, and global scales (Environmental Geography). • illustrates the geography of the past and how geographic patterns have changed over time (Historical Geography). UNITS and UNIT SECTIONS: I. Introduction to Geography This unit introduces the student to basic geography. • the five themes of geography • the different types of geography • geographic vocabulary • global place geography • the use of the textbook and a variety of resources II. Geographic Skills This unit develops an understanding of fundamental geographic skills which the students will use throughout the course. • reading and interpreting maps • using globes • calculating latitude and longitude • understanding and interpreting grids • analyzing charts and graphs • using atlases 1 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 III. Physical Geography This unit focuses on space, the atmosphere, land, water and their interaction. • regional climatic patterns and weather phenomena and their effects on people and places • human’s influence on the environment • environment’s influence on humans • tectonic plates IV. Cultural Geography This unit introduces the concept of culture. • different cultures and the characteristics that define those cultures • regional demographic statistics • the effects of conflict and cooperation on cultures and regions • physical and human characteristics of places and regions • past and present trends in human migration V. Economic Geography This unit focuses on basic economic theory and the development of different economic systems. • economic indicators, standard of living, quality of life • natural, human, and capital resources • global patterns and networks of interdependence • developed and developing countries VI. North America This unit addresses the developing interrelationships between the United States, Canada, and Mexico through examination of NAFTA and other trade agreements. • the physical and cultural geography of the United States, Canada and Mexico • place geography of North America • global patterns and networks of economic interdependence VII. Latin America This unit focuses on understanding Latin America as a region, the characteristics of developing economies, human rights, and regional politics. • physical and cultural geography of the region and of selected countries • place geography of Latin America • past and present trends in human migration and cultural interaction VIII. South, Southeast, and East Asia This unit addresses contemporary issues such as trade and human rights. • cultures of the countries in this region • place geography 2 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 • • physical geography historical geography IX. Africa This unit focuses on the history and economics of Africa. • physical and cultural geography of selected countries • the place geography of Africa X. Southwest Asia and North Africa This unit examines historic and contemporary conflicts, ancient cultures and civilizations, and the selected economic issues. • physical, economic, and cultural characteristics of the region • conflict and cooperation affect the division of control of the earth’s surface XI. Polar Regions This unit focuses on the Arctic environment and Antarctica. • economic, cultural and physical geography • ecological processes • regional climate patterns and weather phenomena • role of international organizations XII. Europe This unit focuses on contemporary issues. • physical and cultural geography • place geography • economic geography XIII. Russia and Central Asia This unit focuses on contemporary issues of the environment and conflict. • compare and contrast the political and economic systems with that of the United States • physical and cultural geography of the region and of selected countries • the place geography of Eastern Europe, Russia, and Northern Eurasia XIV. Australia and Oceania This unit focuses on the theme of human-environment interaction and examines the legacy of European culture. • physical and cultural geography of the region • ecological processes • economic characteristics of the region including natural, human and capital resources • interpreting the past and understanding the present to plan for the future 3 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 XV. Local Geography This unit focuses on the geography of Virginia, the Washington Metropolitan Area, and of Arlington. • demographics of the area • patterns of urban development • site and situation • spatial division at local and regional level XVI. Geographic Literacy This unit applies geography to our daily life. • five themes of geography • different types of geography • patterns of development • site and situation • spatial divisions • place geography • geographic vocabulary 4 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 UNIT I: Introduction to Geography STANDARDS OF LEARNING: This unit will address the following objectives: SOL WG.3 a) The student will apply the concept of a region by explaining how characteristics of regions have led to regional labels. SOL WG.12 b) The student will apply geography to interpret the past, understand the present, and plan for the future by relating current events to the physical and human characteristics of places and regions. ENDURING UNDERSTANDING: The physical characteristics of an environment affects its human activity. CONCEPTUAL UNIT QUESTION (s): What is geography? or Is the study of geography important in today’s world? PREVIEW ACTIVITY: Draw a free-hand map of the world, from memory. (Repeat at the end of the year to demonstrate improvement) SUMMARY OF KEY TERMS/PEOPLE: The following list of terms reflects some of the important vocabulary and individuals students should know to successfully understand course content and pass the SOL exams. absolute location Australia human-environment interaction North America relative location (HEI) Africa equator Indian Ocean Pacific Ocean South America Antarctica Europe latitude physical geography Southern Ocean Arctic Ocean geography location place Asia hemisphere longitude prime meridian Atlantic Ocean human geography movement region SOL ESSENTIAL UNDERSTANDINGS, QUESTIONS, CONTENT and SKILLS: The following pages, from the State’s Curriculum Framework, outline the essential understandings, questions, knowledge and skills related to the SOLs. They provide the base from which the content in this unit is studied. 5 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.3a The student will apply the concept of a region by a) explaining how characteristics of regions have led to regional labels. Essential Understandings Essential Questions Essential Knowledge Essential Skills Regions are areas of Earth’s surface which share unifying characteristics. Why do geographers create and use regions as organizing concepts? Regions are used to simplify the world for study and understanding. Locate areas (regions) on maps and globes. Regions may be defined by physical or cultural characteristics. What are some examples of physical and cultural regions? Physical regions Interpret regional patterns on maps and globes. Regional labels may reflect changes in people’s perceptions. What are some examples of regional labels that reflect changes in perceptions? • • • • • Sahara Taiga Rainforest Great Plains Low Countries Cultural regions Language • • Latin America Francophone world Ethnic • • 6 Chinatowns Kurdistan Draw conclusions and make generalizations about data. Explain cause and effect relationships. Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.3a (continued) The student will apply the concept of a region by a) explaining how characteristics of regions have led to regional labels. Essential Understandings Essential Questions Essential Knowledge Religion • • Islam Buddhism Economic • • Wheat Belts European Union (EU) Political • • 7 North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) African Union (AU) Essential Skills Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.12b The student will apply geography to interpret the past, understand the present, and plan for the future by b) relating current events to the physical and human characteristics of places and regions. Essential Understandings Current events are shaped by the physical and human characteristics of the places and regions where they occur. Essential Questions Essential Knowledge How are current events connected to the geographical characteristics of places and regions? Geographic relationships Compare maps and make inferences. How physical characteristics influence current events Identify and interpret regional patterns on maps. • Identify primary ideas expressed in graphic data. Natural hazards (e.g, flooding, earthquakes, volcanoes, drought) • Climate change How human characteristics influence current events • • Population distribution Geographic patterns of ethnic diversity • A sense of place (emotional attachment to specific locations) • Geographic patterns of trade and interdependence (e.g., oil) • Geographic patterns of wealth and poverty (developed and developing nations) 8 Essential Skills Gather, classify, and interpret information. Draw conclusions and make generalizations about data. Examine cause and effect relationships. Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 SAMPLE LESSON TITLE: 5 Themes in the News UNIT I: Introduction to Geography ENDURING UNDERSTANDING: The physical characteristics of an environment affects its human activity. CONCEPTUAL UNIT QUESTION(s): What is geography? or Is the study of geography important in today’s world? KEY CONCEPT(s): Interaction, Physical Geography, Cultural Geography; others depending on articles used SOL OBJECTIVES: WG.12b LESSON DESCRIPTION: Students use newspaper articles and their notes to create a poster demonstrating their understanding of the 5 themes of geography Materials/Resources: Newspapers, poster paper, coloring supplies (crayons, markers, etc), interactive notebooks Strategies: Mixed ability groups; presentation skills Student Action: • review 5 themes • listen to directions • get into groups • find an article • apply 5 themes • create poster • present 9 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 Teacher Action: • lead review of 5 themes • give directions • assign groups • pass out newspapers • monitor group progress • assess posters through presentation Assessment: presentation of posters Adaptation: GT: Students try to guess the name (or continent) of the country in the article from information about the 5 themes (Note: absolute location should not be used for this adaptation). Special Education: Graphic organizer for notes; models from previous years. HILT: Teacher selects articles for each theme. Students highlight relevant information in the article and check with teacher before starting poster. 10 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 UNIT II: Geographic Skills STANDARDS OF LEARNING: This unit will address the following objectives: SOL WG.1 The student will use map, globes, satellite images, photographs, or diagrams to: a) obtain geographical information about the world’s countries, cities, and environments. b) apply the concepts of location, scale, map projections, or orientation. c) develop and refine mental maps of world regions. d) create and compare political, physical, and thematic maps. e) analyze and explain how different cultures use maps and other visual images to reflect their own interests and ambitions. ENDURING UNDERSTANDING: Visual representations of geographic information provide an organized way of seeing the many elements in a place. CONCEPTUAL UNIT QUESTION: What makes Geography the “science of place?” PREVIEW ACTIVITY: Geography means “to describe the earth.” Ask students to think of a place they really enjoy traveling to. Have them create a mental map of this place and then list all the tools and resources necessary to describe this place to someone who has never been there before. Then have individuals work in groups to share their answers. Then the teacher compiles an overall list as students share their responses. While maps and globes are the most obvious tools of the Geographer, work with students to help them recognize how pictures, drawings, graphs, charts, databases, and cultural artifacts are all resources used in Geogrphy. SUMMARY OF KEY TERMS/PEOPLE: The following list of terms reflects some of the important vocabulary and individuals students should know to successfully understand course content and pass the SOL exams. absolute location azimulthal cardinal directions compass rose distortion equator GIS latitude legend longitude meridian Mercator projection parallels polar projection prime meridian projections relative location Robinson projection scale SOL ESSENTIAL UNDERSTANDINGS, QUESTIONS, CONTENT and SKILLS: The following pages, from the State’s Curriculum Framework, outline the essential understandings, questions, knowledge and skills related to the SOLs. They provide the base from which the content in this unit is studied. 11 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.1a The student will use maps, globes, satellite images, photographs, or diagrams to a) obtain geographical information about the world’s countries, cities, and environments. Essential Understandings Essential Questions Geographic information may be acquired from a variety of sources. How does using a variety of sources support the process of geographic inquiry? Geographic information supports the process of inquiry into the nature of countries, cities, and environments. Using a variety of sources supports the process of geographic inquiry. Essential Knowledge Variety of sources • GIS (Geographic Information Systems) • Field work • Satellite images • Photographs • Maps, globes • Databases • Primary sources • Diagrams 12 Essential Skills Gather, classify, and interpret information. Select the appropriate geographic information sources to draw conclusions. Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.1b The student will use maps, globes, satellite images, photographs, or diagrams to b) apply the concepts of location, scale, map projection, or orientation. Essential Understandings Essential Questions Latitude and longitude define absolute What are some uses of latitude and location. longitude? Relative location describes the spatial relationships between and among places. Areas can be represented using a variety of scales. Essential Knowledge Essential Skills Concepts Use compass rose to identify and use cardinal directions. • • How is relative location used to describe places? • • • Why are different scales necessary for developing map representations? Why is a directional indicator (e.g., The amount of detail shown on a map compass rose) necessary on a map? is dependent on the scale used. How do maps distort spatial A directional indicator (e.g., compass relationships when compared with the rose) identifies map orientation. globe? Maps distort spatial relationships when compared with the globe. 13 Scale Absolute location • Latitude • Longitude Relative location Orientation Map distortion • Mercator • Robinson • Polar Locate places using latitude/longitude on maps and globes. Compare maps of different scales. Gather, classify, and interpret information. Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.1c The student will use maps, globes, photographs, and pictures in order to c) develop and refine mental maps of the world regions. Essential Understandings Essential Questions Mental maps are based on objective How do people use mental maps to knowledge and subjective perceptions. organize information? People develop and refine their mental How are perceptions reflected in maps through both personal experience mental maps? and learning. How can mental maps be developed Mental maps serve as indicators of and refined? how well people know the spatial characteristics of certain places. Essential Knowledge Essential Skills Uses of mental maps Locate places on maps and globes. • Carry out daily activities (e.g., route Interpret maps and globes. to school, shopping) Draw maps from memory. • Give directions to others • Understand world events Evaluate information. Ways mental maps can be developed and Refined • • • • 14 Comparing sketch maps to maps in atlases or other resources Describing the location of places in terms of reference points (e.g., the equator, prime meridian) Describing the location of places in terms of geographic features and land forms (e.g., west of the Mississippi River, north of the Gulf of Mexico) Describing the location of places in terms of the human characteristics of a place (e.g., languages, types of housing, dress, recreation, customs and traditions) Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.1d The student will use maps, globes, satellite images, photographs, or diagrams to d) create and compare political, physical, and thematic maps. Essential Understandings Essential Questions Essential Knowledge Essential Skills A map is a visual representation of geographic information. What are the ways that maps show information? Standard ways that maps show Information Select the appropriate geographic resource to draw conclusions. • • • • • What are the major types of thematic maps? Symbols Color Lines Boundaries Contours Types of thematic maps • • • • • • • • • • 15 Population (e.g., distribution and density) Economic activity Resource Language Ethnicity Climate Precipitation Vegetation Physical Political Compare and contrast information found on different types of maps. Compare maps and make inferences. Draw conclusions and make inferences about data. Identify and interpret regional patterns on maps. Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.1e The student will use maps, globes, satellite images, photographs, and pictures to e) analyze and explain how different cultures use maps and other visual images to reflect their own interests and ambitions. Essential Understandings Maps and other visual images reflect change over time. Essential Questions − − − − − − − Essential Knowledge Essential Skills Knowledge How do maps reflect changes over time? • • • Map of Columbus’ time Map of the world today GIS (Geographic Information Systems) How are maps and other visual Place names images used to present a particular bias • Formosa, Taiwan, Rep. of China (positive or negative) about an • Palestine, Israel, West Bank, and Gaza area of the earth’s surface? Boundaries • • • • Africa—1914, 1990s Europe—Before World War II and after World War II; since 1990 Russia and the former Soviet Union Middle East - Before 1948, after 1967 Perspectives of place names • • • Arabian Gulf v. Persian Gulf Sea of Japan v. East Sea Middle East v. North Africa and Southwest Asia Disputed areas • • • • Korea Western Sahara Former Yugoslavia Kashmir 16 Compare maps and make inferences. Interpret the idea, concepts, or events expressed by a cartoon, picture, or other graphic media. Compare and contrast information found on different types of maps. Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 SAMPLE LESSON TITLE: Round Earth, Flat Map: Understanding Map Projections UNIT II: Geography Skills ENDURING UNDERSTANDINGS: • Visual representations of geographic information provide an organized way of seeing the many elements in a place • All maps are distorted representations of the Earth’s surface. • Different map projections are developed for specific purposes. CONCEPTUAL UNIT QUESTION: What makes Geography the “science of place”? KEY CONCEPT: Geographic Skills SOL OBJECTIVES: WG.1a, WG.1b, WG.1c, WG.1d, WG.1e LESSON DESCRIPTION: This lesson focuses on map distortions. Students begin with a warm up asking them to write an individual response to the prompt: “What problems do map makers have when they try to make a flat map from our spherical world?” Teacher creates an overall list of observations through class sharing. Key vocabulary words, projection and distortion, are emphasized. Then, working in groups, students examine one of four different map projections, Mercator, Interrupted, Polar/Azimulthal, and Robinson, and compare them to globes in order to identify the pros and cons of each projection. They will refer to text material to identify the use for the particular map projection and share their findings with the rest of the class. Individuals record their own and other group presentations on a grid. Materials/Resources: National Geographic Round Earth, Flat Map site: www.nationalgeographic.com/features/2000/exploration/projections/index.html, Appendix A, Four to five globes, one per group. Strategies/Steps: Independent and collaborative work, brainstorming, comparing maps to globes Student Action: • work individually to answer warm up question • examine a single map projection, working in groups and present it to the class • use a graphic organizer to take notes on their own projection and the other presentations. Teacher Action: • introduce lesson with the warm up • create an overall list of student observations • monitor group work • help to clarify concepts • ask questions during group presentations. 17 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 Assessment: The following assignment reinforces lesson by asking students to apply concepts to real life scenarios. It can be completed and attached in student’s interactive notebook, if used, or created as a separate assignment. You are a cartographer who has been hired to make maps for several clients, each with very different needs. Design an informational brochure that would clearly and creatively explain the four types of map projections you could make and which projections and design features you’d use for each of the following type of clients. Use information from your notes. • A company that produces geography textbooks. • An adventure travel company that is sponsoring an expedition to the North Pole. • A non-profit organization that’s mapping the world population. • A sailboat manufacturer that wants to expand its product line into the map business. Grading Rubric for Map Projections Brochure (30 points) Catchy brochure title on maps and their usefulness (3 points) _____ An image of each map projection and how its useful to each client (20 points) _____ Unique, creative, colorful, and interesting (6 points) _____ Turned in on time (1 point) _____ TOTAL _____ Comments: _______________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Extension Assessment: Imagine that you are an apprentice in the office of Gerardus Mercator and he has asked his staff to come up with ideas for a new world map. How would you have drawn the world back in the 1500’s? Draw your version of the world using old-style imagery such as animals and monsters in the sea, or angels and winds in the corners. If you do not like to draw or would like an alternative, trace the continents onto your paper and then download some images from the internet and glue them onto your map. Grading Rubric for “Old Style” Map of the World (25 points) Map has elements of cartography such as landmasses, oceans place names, compass rose, etc. (12 points) Colorful, legible, logical (map makes sense) (6 points) Unique, creative, interesting, “old style” elements (6 points) Turned in on time (1 point) TOTAL _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ Comments: _______________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Adaptation: HILT: Break down the warm up into two parts – (a) Ask students to visualize the planet earth and describe it in three words, (b) sketch it, (c) then ask students, “If you were a map maker and were asked to make a flat map, what problems would you have? 18 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 UNIT III: Physical Geography STANDARDS OF LEARNING: This unit will address the following objectives: SOL WG.2 The student will analyze how selected physical and ecological processes shape the Earth’s surface by a) identifying regional climatic patterns and weather phenomena and their effects on people and places. b) describing how humans influence the environment and are influenced by it. SOL WG.4 The student will locate and analyze physical, economic, and cultural characteristics of world regions: Latin America and the Caribbean, Europe, United States and Canada, North Africa and Southwest Asia, Sub-Saharan Africa, Russia and Central Asia, South Asia, Southeast Asia, East Asia, Australia and the Pacific Islands, and Antarctica. ENDURING UNDERSTANDING: Efforts to control nature have had mixed results. CONCEPTUAL UNIT QUESTION(s): “In nature there are neither rewards or punishments – there are consequences.” ~ Robert G. Ingersoll Do you agree or disagree? “Relative to nature humans are not in control, nature still has the upper hand.” ~ National Geographic Video -- Nature’s Fury Do you agree or disagree? PREVIEW ACTIVITY: Play the game of “Cross Out” as a preview to what students already know about physical geography. Students work in mixed ability groups to list as many words related to the topic given by the teacher. After 5 minutes each group shares their list with the class. If any word is repeated on another list, that word is crossed out from all lists. To make the activity more competitive, teams can receive points for unique and applicable words. Physical feature categories include: “Landforms,” “Bodies of Water,” “Natural Disasters,” “How Humans Change Their Physical Environment,” and “Climate.” 19 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 SUMMARY OF KEY TERMS/PEOPLE: The following list of terms reflects some of the important vocabulary and individuals students should know to successfully understand course content and pass the SOL exams. acid rain arable land archipelagoes arid basin canals climate Continental Divide cyclones deforestation delta erosion geysers glaciers hot spots hurricanes hydrologic cycle icecap inlets and harbors irrigation isthmus llanos monsoons Sahel temperature oases savanna terracing pampas sea and land breeze tides peninsula sediment tornadoes permafrost seismic activity tropical climate plains seismograph tsunamis plate tectonics spring/fall equinox tundra plateau steppe typhoons polders strait valley precipitation subarctic vegetation rainshadow effect or orographic subpolar volcanoes effect desertification loess reservoirs summer/winter solstice weather phenomena elevation Mediterranean climate Ring of Fire Taiga weathering SOL ESSENTIAL UNDERSTANDINGS, QUESTIONS, CONTENT and SKILLS: The following pages, from the State’s Curriculum Framework, outline the essential understandings, questions, knowledge and skills related to the SOLs. They provide the base from which the content in this unit is studied. 20 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.2a The student will analyze how selected physical and ecological processes shape the Earth’s surface by a) identifying regional climatic patterns and weather phenomena and their effects on people and places. Essential Understandings Climate is defined by certain characteristics. Climate patterns result from the interplay of common elements. Climate regions have distinctive vegetation. Certain weather phenomena are unique to specific regions. Climate and weather phenomena affect how people live in different regions. Essential Questions What are the common characteristics that define climate? What are the elements that influence regional climate patterns? What vegetation is characteristic of key climate zones? Where do specific types of weather phenomena occur? What effects do climate and weather phenomena have on people living in different regions? Essential Knowledge Climate characteristics • • • Temperature Precipitation Seasons (hot/cold; wet/dry) Climate elements • • • • • Influence of latitude Influence of winds Influence of elevation Proximity to water Influence of ocean currents World climate regions • • • Low latitudes—e.g., tropical wet, tropical wet and dry, arid, semiarid, highland Middle latitudes—e.g., semiarid, arid, Mediterranean (dry summer subtropical) humid continental, marine west coast, highland High latitudes—e.g., subarctic, tundra (subpolar), icecap Vegetation regions • • • • • • • Rain forest Savanna Desert Steppe Middle latitude forests Taiga Tundra 21 Essential Skills Compare maps and make inferences. Interpret the idea, concepts, or events expressed by pictures, or other graphic media. Apply latitude to identify climate zones. Interpret charts, diagrams, and climographs. Select the appropriate geographic resource to draw conclusions. Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.2a (continued) The student will analyze how selected physical and ecological processes shape the Earth’s surface by a) identifying regional climatic patterns and weather phenomena and their effects on people and places. Essential Understandings Essential Questions Essential Knowledge Weather phenomena • • • • Monsoons—South and Southeast Asia Typhoons—Pacific Ocean Hurricanes—Atlantic Ocean Tornadoes—United States Effects of climate • • • • 22 Crops Clothing Housing Natural hazards Essential Skills Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.2b The student will analyze how selected physical and ecological processes shape the Earth’s surface by b) describing how humans influence the environment and are influenced by it. Essential Understandings Physical and ecological processes shape the Earth’s surface. Humans both influence and are influenced by their environment. Essential Questions Essential Knowledge Physical and ecological processes How have physical and ecological • Earthquakes processes shaped the Earth’s • Floods surface? • Volcanoes • Erosion What are some ways humans • Deposition influence their environment? How are humans influenced by their environment? Essential Skills Gather, classify, and interpret information. Draw conclusions and make generalizations about data. Human impact on environment Explain cause and effect relationships. Water diversion/management • Aral Sea • Colorado River • Aswan High Dam • Canals • Reservoirs • Irrigation Identify and interpret regional patterns on maps. Changing landscapes • Agricultural terracing (e.g., China, Southeast Asia) • Polders (e.g., Netherlands) • Deforestation (e.g., Nepal, Brazil, Malaysia) • Desertification (e.g., Africa) Environmental changes • Acid rain (e.g., forests in Germany, Scandinavia, China and Eastern North America) • Pollution (e.g., Mexico City, Chernobyl, oil spills) 23 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.4 The student will locate and analyze physical, economic, and cultural characteristics of world regions: Latin America and the Caribbean, Europe, United States and Canada, North Africa and Southwest Asia, Sub-Saharan Africa, Russia and Central Asia, South Asia, Southeast Asia, East Asia, Australia and the Pacific Islands, and Antarctica. Essential Understandings The development of a region is influenced by many factors, including physical, economic and cultural characteristics. Essential Questions Essential Knowledge Essential Skills See attached charts for specific information concerning physical, Explain charts comparing two or more economic, and cultural characteristics. concepts. In what ways do physical, economic, and cultural characteristics influence regional development? Human interaction with environment What are some ways that human The interaction of humans with their interaction with the environment affects • Deforestation—Amazon environment affects the development of the development of a region? Basin, Nepal, Malaysia a region. • Acid rain—Black Forest What are some criteria that may be used • Decreased soil fertility— Different criteria may be used to to determine a country’s relative Aswan High Dam determine a country’s relative importance? importance. Criteria for determining relative What impact do elements of the importance Elements of the physical environment, physical environment, such as major such as major bodies of water and bodies of water and mountains, have on • GDP (Gross Domestic mountains, influence the economic and countries? Product) cultural characteristics of regions. • Land size • Population size • Resources Impact of physical elements Example: Water • Rio Grande—Boundary • Ob River—Flows northward into Arctic Ocean • Zambezi River—Water power • Ganges and Brahmaputra rivers— Flood hazard 24 Identify primary ideas expressed in graphic data. Gather, classify, and interpret information. Draw conclusions and make generalizations about data. Explain cause and effect relationships. Identify and locate regions, continents, oceans, and major features on maps and globes. Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.4 (continued) The student will locate and analyze physical, economic, and cultural characteristics of world regions: Latin America and the Caribbean, Europe, United States and Canada, North Africa and Southwest Asia, Sub-Saharan Africa, Russia and Central Asia, South Asia, Southeast Asia, East Asia, Australia and the Pacific Islands, and Antarctica. Essential Understandings Essential Questions Essential Knowledge Example: Mountains • • 25 Rocky Mountains—Create rain shadows on leeward slopes Himalayas—Block moisture to create steppes and deserts in Central Asia Essential Skills Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.4 (Essential Knowledge continued) The student will locate and analyze physical, economic, and cultural characteristics of world regions: Latin America and the Caribbean, Europe, United States and Canada, North Africa and Southwest Asia, Sub-Saharan Africa, Russia and Central Asia, South Asia, Southeast Asia, East Asia, Australia and the Pacific Islands, and Antarctica. Countries Physical Characteristics Economic Characteristics Cultural Characteristics Latin America and the Caribbean Latin America and the Caribbean Latin America and the Caribbean Latin America and the Caribbean Mexico and Central America: Mexico, Belize, Guatemala, El Salvador, Honduras, Nicaragua, Costa Rica, Panama • South America: Colombia, Venezuela, Guyana, Suriname, French Guiana, Ecuador, Peru, Bolivia, Brazil, Paraguay, Argentina, Uruguay, Chile • • • Caribbean: Cuba, Haiti, Jamaica, Dominican Republic, Puerto Rico (U.S.) • • • • • • • Major mountain ranges— Andes, Sierra Madres Wildlife migration patterns e.g., Monarch butterflies, raptors Rainforests Coastal desert—Atacama Reversed seasons south of the equator Amazon River Basin Grasslands: pampas, llanos Tropical climates predominant Volcanoes and earthquakes Archipelagoes Vertical zonation (tierra caliente, tierra templada, tierra fria) • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 26 Diverse economies • Indian civilizations Subsistence farming • African traditions Plantation agriculture • Influence of European colonization Slash and burn agriculture • Predominance of Roman Cash crops and food crops Catholic religion Haciendas Rigid social structure Cattle ranges, gauchos Mestizos Deforestation Location of settlements: Destruction of rainforests coastal in South America Oil resources—Ecuador, Megacities, squatter Venezuela, Mexico settlements Heavy smog, pollution— Rapid population growth Mexico City Out-migration Disparity of income distribution Cultural heritage North American Free Trade • Music—African influences, Agreement (NAFTA)— calypso, steel drum bands, Mexico, Canada, United reggae States. • Traditional dances Diverse mineral resources • Spanish, Portuguese languages (e.g., copper in Chile, iron ore in Venezuela and Brazil) Cultural landscapes • Pyramids, cathedrals • Haciendas, ejidos (communal land) • Machu Picchu • Tikal Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.4 (Essential Knowledge continued) The student will locate and analyze physical, economic, and cultural characteristics of world regions: Latin America and the Caribbean, Europe, United States and Canada, North Africa and Southwest Asia, Sub-Saharan Africa, Russia and Central Asia, South Asia, Southeast Asia, East Asia, Australia and the Pacific Islands, and Antarctica. Countries Physical Characteristics Economic Characteristics Cultural Characteristics Cities as centers of culture and trade • • • • 27 Mexico City Rio de Janeiro Buenos Aires Santiago Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.4 (Essential Knowledge continued) The student will locate and analyze physical, economic, and cultural characteristics of world regions: Latin America and the Caribbean, Europe, United States and Canada, North Africa and Southwest Asia, Sub-Saharan Africa, Russia and Central Asia, South Asia, Southeast Asia, East Asia, Australia and Antarctica. Countries Physical Characteristics Europe Europe Location of countries with Part of large landmass called Eurasia particular emphasis on countries listed (determined by their per Peninsulas capita GDP, land size, and • Iberian population) • Italian • Scandinavian GDP • Jutland Islands • Switzerland • Great Britain • Luxembourg • Ireland • Norway • Sicily Fjords Land size Mountains • Alps • Ukraine • Pyrenees • France North European plain • Spain Rivers • Danube Population • Rhine • Seine • Germany • Volga • United Kingdom • • Italy Seas • France • Adriatic • Aegean • Mediterranean • Baltic • Black • North Economic Characteristics Cultural Characteristics Europe Europe • • • • • • • • • • 28 Mountain regions—Tourism, • Birthplace of Industrial recreation, and mineral resources Revolution Areas threatened by air and water • Many ethnic groups— pollution Languages, religions, customs • Forests (Black Forest) • Sporadic conflict among groups (wars, revolutions) • Cities (Venice) • Birthplace of western culture— • Rivers (Rhine, Danube, Seine) Greece and Rome • Development of industrial and • Spread of European culture to transportation centers near many other parts of the world mineral deposits, coal and iron (exploration, colonization, ore imperialism) • Ruhr valley • Highly urbanized • Po valley • One of the world’s most Rivers and canals serving as major densely populated areas transportation links • North Atlantic Treaty Oil reserves in the North Sea Organization (NATO) Well-educated workforce— Industrial and technological Cities as centers of culture and trade societies, banking in Switzerland Advanced farming techniques, high • Berlin crop yields, fertile soils, black earth • London (chernozem) • Paris Well-developed infrastructure • Madrid The Chunnel • Rome Differences in Western and Eastern • Athens European industrial development due to differing economic systems in • Warsaw prior years European Union Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.4 (Essential Knowledge continued) The student will locate and analyze physical, economic, and cultural characteristics of world regions: Latin America and the Caribbean, Europe, United States and Canada, North Africa and Southwest Asia, Sub-Saharan Africa, Russia and Central Asia, South Asia, Southeast Asia, East Asia, Australia and the Pacific Islands, and Antarctica. Countries Physical Characteristics • • • • Economic Characteristics Oceans • Atlantic • Arctic Strait of Gibraltar Varied climate regions— Tundra to Mediterranean Effects of the North Atlantic Drift and prevailing westerlies on Europe’s climates • • • • • 29 Cultural Characteristics Trade important, especially to Cultural landscape island nations; interdependence • Notre Dame, Arc de Triomphe, Louvre, Eiffel Tower Large role of government in some economies (Sweden and • Colosseum, Leaning Tower of Denmark). Pisa, St. Peter’s Basilica Replacement of communism • Parthenon with capitalism in Eastern • Westminster Abbey, Big Ben Europe. • Windmills Reclaimed land—Polders in • Castles Netherlands Demographics typical of developed economies • High per capita GDP • High life expectancy • Low population growth rate • Low infant mortality • Low percentage of population under age 15 • High literacy rate Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.4 (Essential Knowledge continued) The student will locate and analyze physical, economic, and cultural characteristics of world regions: Latin America and the Caribbean, Europe, United States and Canada, North Africa and Southwest Asia, Sub-Saharan Africa, Russia and Central Asia, South Asia, Southeast Asia, East Asia, Australia and Antarctica. Countries Physical Characteristics Economic Characteristics United States and Canada United States Canada United States and Canada United States and Canada United States and Canada • Abundant natural resources • Colonized by the Europeans • Major exporters of • Continental Divide • Multicultural societies technology, consumer • Rivers • Increasingly diverse populations goods, information systems, • Mississippi • High literacy rates and foodstuffs • St. Lawrence • High standard of living • Highly developed • Colorado • Highly urbanized infrastructures • Columbia • Canada’s struggle to maintain a • Highly diversified national identity • Rio Grande economies • Highly mobile populations • Other water features • Rich supply of mineral, • World’s longest unfortified border • Gulf of Mexico energy, and forest resources between the United States and • Great Lakes • North American Free Trade Canada • Arctic Ocean Agreement (NAFTA) • Democratic forms of government • Pacific Ocean • Multinational corporations • Arts that reflect the cultural heritage • Atlantic Ocean • Center of world financial of multicultural societies • Hudson Bay markets (New York Stock • North Atlantic Treaty Organization • Land forms Exchange) (NATO) • Appalachian Mountains • Sustained economic growth • Pacific Coastal Ranges • Widening gap between rich Cities as centers of culture and trade • Basin and Range and poor • Toronto • Rocky Mountains • Export of U.S. culture via • Montreal • Great Plains the global marketplace (e.g., • Ottawa • Interior lowlands McDonald’s, Coca Cola, • Quebec • Atlantic and Gulf coastal plains music, blue jeans) • Vancouver, British Columbia • Canadian Shield • Washington, D.C. • Grand Canyon • Chicago • Columbia Plateau • New York City • Colorado Plateau • Los Angeles • Houston 30 Cultural Characteristics Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.4 (Essential Knowledge continued) The student will locate and analyze physical, economic, and cultural characteristics of world regions: Latin America and the Caribbean, Europe, United States and Canada, North Africa and Southwest Asia, Sub-Saharan Africa, Russia and Central Asia, South Asia, Southeast Asia, East Asia, Australia and the Pacific Islands, and Antarctica. Countries Physical Characteristics • Economic Characteristics Varied climate regions— Ranging from tundra in Alaska to tropical wet in Hawaii 31 Cultural Characteristics Cultural landscape • U.S. Capitol • Golden Gate Bridge • Independence Hall • St. Louis Gateway Arch • Wheat fields • Skyscrapers, shopping malls • Bilingual signs • Influence of the automobile (e.g., gas stations, motels, interstate highways, drive-up services) Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.4 (Essential Knowledge continued) The student will locate and analyze physical, economic, and cultural characteristics of world regions: Latin America and the Caribbean, Europe, United States and Canada, North Africa and Southwest Asia, Sub-Saharan Africa, Russia and Central Asia, South Asia, Southeast Asia, East Asia, Australia and the Pacific Islands, and Antarctica. Countries North Africa and Southwest Asia (Middle East) Location of countries with particular emphasis on countries listed (determined by their per capita GDP, land size, and population) GDP • • • • Physical Characteristics Economic Characteristics Cultural Characteristics North Africa and Southwest Asia (Middle East) North Africa and Southwest Asia (Middle East) North Africa and Southwest Asia (Middle East) • • • Kuwait United Arab Emirates Qatar Israel • Land Size • Algeria • Saudi Arabia • Libya Population • Iran • Turkey • Egypt • Crossroads of Europe, Africa, and Asia Desert and semiarid climates— Sahara, sahel, steppes Mountains • Atlas • Taurus • Zagros Water Features • Mediterranean Sea • Red Sea • Black Sea • Arabian Sea • Persian/Arabian Gulf • Strait of Hormuz • Bosporus Strait • Dardanelles Strait • Nile River • Tigris River • Euphrates River • Jordan River • • • • • • • • • • • Seasonal flooding, alluvial soils, delta regions, oases, wadis • • 32 Heavy reliance on primary • Rapid urbanization economic activity (oil drilling, • Modernization centered in agriculture, pastoralism) urban areas while traditional life Major producers of world’s oil continues in rural areas Oil revenues—Positive and • Large percentage of population negative effects under age 15 Water—The region’s most • Population unevenly distributed precious resource • Arab countries and Arabic Great variation in standard of language living—Ranging from • Non-Arab countries: Turkey, relatively high to povertyIran, Israel stricken • Birthplace of three major Regional conflicts, political monotheistic religions— unrest that affects tourism Judaism, Christianity, and Islam Aswan High Dam—Positive • Conflict over Palestine and negative effects • Nomadic lifestyles Suez Canal—Enhanced • Art that reflects the diversity of shipping routes in the region religions (stained glass, Guest workers geometric tiles, calligraphy, Trade important to region from mosaics, prayer rugs) earliest time Cities as centers of culture and trade Wide range of per capita income and levels of • Baghdad development • Cairo Contemporary trade routes (sea • Istanbul lanes) • Jerusalem Organization of Petroleum • Mecca Exporting Countries (OPEC) • Tehran Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.4 (Essential Knowledge continued) The student will locate and analyze physical, economic, and cultural characteristics of world regions: Latin America and the Caribbean, Europe, United States and Canada, North Africa and Southwest Asia, Sub-Saharan Africa, Russia and Central Asia, South Asia, Southeast Asia, East Asia, Australia and the Pacific Islands, and Antarctica. Countries Physical Characteristics Economic Characteristics Cultural Characteristics Cultural landscape • • • • • • • • • • 33 Mosques, minarets Church of the Holy Sepulcher Hagia Sophia Bazaars, souks Western Wall Dome of the Rock Kaaba Pyramids Oil rigs Walled cities Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.4 (Essential Knowledge continued) The student will locate and analyze physical, economic, and cultural characteristics of world regions: Latin America and the Caribbean, Europe, United States and Canada, North Africa and Southwest Asia, Sub-Saharan Africa, Russia and Central Asia, South Asia, Southeast Asia, East Asia, Australia and the Pacific Islands, and Antarctica. Countries Sub-Saharan Africa Location of countries with particular emphasis on countries listed (determined by their per capita GDP, land size, and population) Physical Characteristics Sub-Saharan Africa • • • GDP • • • South Africa Gabon Botswana Land Size • Democratic Republic of Congo • Sudan • Chad • Mozambique • Madagascar • • • • • Continent composed of a huge plateau, escarpments River transportation impeded by waterfalls and rapids Location of equator through middle of region; similar climate patterns north and south of the equator Smooth coastline; few harbors Large number of landlocked states Storehouse of mineral wealth Limited fertility of rainforest soils Kalahari and Namib Deserts Bodies of water Population • Nigeria • Ethiopia • Democratic Republic of Congo • Tanzania • Kenya • South Africa • Nile River • Zambezi River • Niger River • Congo River • Atlantic Ocean • Indian Ocean • Red Sea • Lake Victoria • Lake Tanganyika • Nature preserves and national parks Economic Characteristics Cultural Characteristics Sub-Saharan Africa Sub-Saharan Africa • Large percentage of population engaged in agriculture • Uneven population distribution (primary activity) • Many ethnic groups— • Subsistence agriculture Languages, customs • Nomadic herding • Large numbers of refugees • Slash and burn agriculture • Knowledge of history through oral tradition • Plantation agriculture • Country names related to • Cash crops and food crops historical • Poorly developed empires—Mali, Ghana, infrastructure Zimbabwe • Large number of landlocked states Diversity of Africans reflected in • Substantial mineral wealth cultural heritage (diamonds, gold, alloys) • Major exporters of raw • Masks materials • Sculpture • Wide range of per capita • Dance income • Music • Productivity that lags behind • Colorful dress population growth • Jewelry • Desertification • Demographics typical of Cities as centers of culture and trade developing economies • Low per capita GDP a) Lagos • Low life expectancy b) Dakar • High population growth • Johannesburg rate • High infant mortality • Large percentage of population under age 15 • Low literacy rates 34 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.4 (Essential Knowledge continued) The student will locate and analyze physical, economic, and cultural characteristics of world regions: Latin America and the Caribbean, Europe, United States and Canada, North Africa and Southwest Asia, Sub-Saharan Africa, Russia and Central Asia, South Asia, Southeast Asia, East Asia, Australia and the Pacific Islands, and Antarctica. Countries Physical Characteristics Economic Characteristics Cultural Characteristics Cultural landscape a) b) c) d) e) 35 Markets Churches Mosques, minarets Villages Modern city cores Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.4 (Essential Knowledge continued) The student will locate and analyze physical, economic, and cultural characteristics of world regions: Latin America and the Caribbean, Europe, United States and Canada, North Africa and Southwest Asia, Sub-Saharan Africa, Russia and Central Asia, South Asia, Southeast Asia, East Asia, Australia and the Pacific Islands, and Antarctica. Countries Russia and Central Asia Physical Characteristics Russia and Central Asia Location of countries with particular emphasis on countries listed (determined by their per capita GDP, land size, and population) • GDP • • • • • Kazakhstan Russia Turkmenistan Land Size • Russia • Kazakhstan • Turkmenistan • • • • • • Population • Russia • Kazakhstan • Uzbekistan Economic Characteristics • • Russia and Central Asia Vast land area—Spans two continents, Europe and Asia (covers 11 time zones) Vast areas of tundra, permafrost, taiga, and steppe Varied climate regions Black earth belt (rich chernozem soil) Mountains Caucasus Ural Mountains (divide Europe from Asia) Siberia (the sleeping land), located east of the Urals Major oil, natural gas, and mineral resources Water features • Volga River • Ob River • Amur River • Lake Baikal • Caspian Sea • Aral Sea • Bering Strait • Pacific Ocean • Arctic Ocean Some rivers flow northward to the Arctic Ocean 36 • • • • • • • • • • Cultural Characteristics Russia and Central Asia Transition from communist to • Diverse ethnic groups, customs and free market economies traditions (many of Turkic and Mongol heritage) Farming and industry concentrated in the Fertile Cultural heritage Triangle region, rich, chernozem soils (wheat farming) • Ballet Infrastructure—Trans-Siberian • Fabergé eggs Railroad, systems of rivers and • Music canals and railroads • Icons Energy resources— • Matrioshka dolls Hydroelectric power, oil and • Oriental carpets natural gas • Samovars Russian natural resources not fully developed due to climate, Cultural landscape limited transportation links, and vastness of the country • Russian Orthodox churches Foreign competition for • St. Basil’s Church investment in the region (oil • Red Square pipelines) • Kremlin Widespread pollution • Mosques, minarets Shrinking of the Aral Sea • Siberian villages Political and economic • Soviet-style apartment blocks difficulties after the breakup of the Soviet Union Cities as centers of culture and trade Cotton production in Central Asia • Moscow • • St. Petersburg Novosibirsk Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.4 (Essential Knowledge continued) The student will locate and analyze physical, economic, and cultural characteristics of world regions: Latin America and the Caribbean, Europe, United States and Canada, North Africa and Southwest Asia, Sub-Saharan Africa, Russia and Central Asia, South Asia, Southeast Asia, East Asia, Australia and the Pacific Islands, and Antarctica. Countries South, Southeast, and East Asia South Asia • Afghanistan • Pakistan • Nepal • Bhutan • Bangladesh • India • Sri Lanka • Maldives Southeast Asia • Philippines • Indonesia • Malaysia • Thailand • Cambodia • Burma (Myanmar) • Laos • Vietnam • Singapore • Brunei East Asia • Mongolia • China (People’s Republic of China) • Japan • Taiwan (Republic of China) • North Korea • South Korea Physical Characteristics Economic Characteristics Cultural Characteristics South, Southeast, and East Asia South, Southeast, and East Asia South, Southeast, and East Asia • Influence of mountains— • Varied economies in the region • Areas of extremely dense and Population, settlements, ranging from subsistence/ sparse population movement, climate • Commercial agriculture to • Contrast between rural and high-tech industrial urban areas • Mountains manufacturing • Himalayas • Religious diversity— • Participation in global markets Hinduism, Islam, Buddhism, • Western and Eastern Ghats Christianity, Taoism, Shinto, • Newly industrialized • Mount Fuji Confucianism countries—South Korea, • Varied climate regions ranging Taiwan, Singapore • Respect for ancestors from tropical wet to humid • Japan—Economic leader • Religious conflicts continental (Hindu/Muslim) • China in transition from a • Natural hazards—Monsoons, centrally planned economy typhoons, volcanoes, and earthquakes • Agricultural advancements and Cultural heritage • Silks technology, enabling greater • Influence of water (rivers, food production—“Green • Batik seas, and ocean currents) on Revolution” agriculture, trade, and • Wood and ivory carving transportation • Environmental degradation • Ideograms, unique alphabets • Bodies of water • Deforestation • Jewels • Arabian Sea • Fishing Cities as centers of culture and trade • Indian Ocean • ASEAN (Association of Southeast Asian Nations) • Tokyo • Bay of Bengal • Rice, tropical crops • Beijing • Ganges River • New Delhi • Indus River • Brahmaputra River • Pacific Ocean • Yangtze River (Chaing Jiang) • Mekong River • Yellow River (Huang He) 37 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.4 (Essential Knowledge continued) The student will locate and analyze physical, economic, and cultural characteristics of world regions: Latin America and the Caribbean, Europe, United States and Canada, North Africa and Southwest Asia, Sub-Saharan Africa, Russia and Central Asia, South Asia, Southeast Asia, East Asia, Australia and the Pacific Islands, and Antarctica. Countries Physical Characteristics • • • • Economic Characteristics Cultural Characteristics Cultural landscape Abundant arable land Loess Plateau of Tibet Gobi Desert • • • • • • • • 38 Taj Mahal Angkor Wat Great Wall of China Floating markets Mosques, minarets Pagodas Temples and shrines Terraced rice fields Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.4 (Essential Knowledge continued) The student will locate and analyze physical, economic, and cultural characteristics of world regions: Latin America and the Caribbean, Europe, United States and Canada, North Africa and Southwest Asia, Sub-Saharan Africa, Russia and Central Asia, South Asia, Southeast Asia, East Asia, Australia and the Pacific Islands, and Antarctica. Countries Australia, Pacific Islands, and Antarctica • • • • Australia New Zealand Papua New Guinea Hawaiian archipelago (U.S.) Physical Characteristics Economic Characteristics Australia, Pacific Islands, and Antarctica • • • • • • • Australia, Pacific Islands, and Antarctica Wide range of vegetation, from tropical rain forests to desert scrub Australia mostly desert The Great Dividing Range The Great Barrier Reef Australia’s isolation, resulting in unique animal life Antarctica, the world’s coldest, driest, windiest continent; icecap Pacific islands—Volcanic, coral, or continental • • • • • Air and water travel that bring goods and services to remote areas Dry areas of Australia well suited to cattle and sheep ranching Upset of environmental balance, caused by the introduction of non-native plants and animals Ranching, mining (primary activities) Communication and financial services (tertiary activities) Cultural Characteristics Australia, Pacific Islands, and Antarctica • • • • • • Pacific islands are sparsely populated. Most of Australia’s population lives near the coast. Traditional culture continues to shape life in the Pacific islands. Lifestyles range from subsistence farming to modern city living. Cultures reflect the mix of European and indigenous cultures (e.g., Maori and aborigines). Antarctica has no permanent residents. Cities as centers of culture and trade • Canberra, A.C.T. (Australian Capital Territory) • Sydney • Melbourne Cultural landscape • Sydney Opera House • Cattle and sheep stations (Australia) • Research stations (Antarctica) • Thatched roof dwelling (Pacific islands) 39 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 SAMPLE LESSON TITLE: Plate Tectonics: The Earth’s Moving Surface UNIT III: Physical Geography ENDURING UNDERSTANDINGS: • Efforts to control nature have had mixed results. • Physical and ecological processes shape the Earth’s surface. • Humans both influence and are influenced by their environment. • The development of a region is influenced by many factors, including physical, economic, and cultural characteristics. • The interaction of humans with their environment affects the development of a region. • Different criteria may be used to determine a country’s relative importance. • Elements of the physical environment, such as major bodies of water and mountains, influence the economic and cultural characteristics of regions. CONCEPTUAL UNIT QUESTIONS: “In nature there are neither rewards or punishments – there are consequences.” ~ Robert G. Ingersoll Do you agree or disagree? “Relative to nature humans are not in control, nature still has the upper hand.” ~ National Geographic Video -- Nature’s Fury Do you agree or disagree? KEY CONCEPTS: Geographic Skills, Physical Geography, Environmental Geography SOL OBJECTIVES: WG.2a, WG.2b, WG.4 LESSON DESCRIPTION: Using a combination of individual response, direct instruction, pair and group work, this lesson helps students understand the theory of plate tectonics their role in earthquakes, volcanic activity, and landform formation. Materials/Resources: Construction paper, markers, and tape for sign or labels for students’ freeze frames, physical map of the world and enough copies of the textbook for students to share, Plate Movements Chart (Appendix B), Optional: video tape recorder or camera for extension activity Strategies/Steps: Previewing, collaboration, act outs/freeze frames/simulation. 40 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 Student Action: • respond to the warm up: look at the Tectonic Plate Boundaries map on page 43 of their textbook and answering the following questions: What do the purple regions and red triangles represent? What do the jagged lines and arrows represent? What relationship do you see between these features? Create a list of student responses and use their observations to explain the Plate Tectonic Theory and introduce the terms “Ring of Fire” and “Hot Spots.” • compare the two maps and record their observations on their chart • working in groups, create a way to “act out” an assign plate movement. In these “freeze frames” groups act out how the plates move and will freeze at the final part of the movement showing the result of the movement. • class will watch and try to identify the movement as each group acts out their “freeze frame.” Students in the audience who correctly identifies the movement must explain how the freeze frame exemplifies the particular plate movement. Teacher Action: • distribute the Plate Movements Chart (Appendix B). • use direct instruction to describe the various plate movements • explain plate tectonic theory, ring of fire, and hot spots • monitor and encourage students as they work in pairs to identify current landforms to their related plate movement • place a physical map of the world on the overhead and ask students to compare the Tectonic Plate Boundaries map in the text to the Physical Map on the overhead to find a real world example of each movement. For instance, by looking for land and water plates colliding on the Plate map and comparing it to the physical map, students should identify the Andes Mountains. • explain the freeze frame activity • assign each group a plate movement and resulting formation • circulate to the different groups as they plan their freeze frame. Assessment: observation Adaptation HILT: Spend more time elaborating terms such as spreading, converging, subduction, and faulting. Introduce the use of prefixes, “con” and “sub” to understand the meaning of words. Extension: As an extension activity and form of evaluation, videotape or photograph each freeze frame. If videotaping, show each period a recording of another class and have students work in groups to identify the plate movements. If you take pictures you can assemble like plate movements from each class asking students to write their own captions to the photographs of the pictures they are in. Assemble the pictures in “plate stations” at which groups of students can rotate to each station and analyze the photos. Students should identify each movement and choose one picture at each station that best represents the movement and explain why. 41 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 UNIT IV: Cultural Geography STANDARDS OF LEARNING: This unit will address the following objectives: SOL WG.1 The student will use maps, globes, satellite images photographs, or diagrams to a) obtain geographical information about the world’s countries, cities, and environments; b) apply the concepts of location, scale, map projection, or orientation; c) develop and refine mental maps of world regions; SOL WG.3 The student will apply the concept of a region by a) explaining how characteristics of regions have led to regional labels; b) explaining how regional landscapes reflect the physical environment and the cultural characteristics and of their inhabitants; c) analyzing how cultural characteristics, including the world’s major languages ethnicities, and religions, link or divide regions. SOL WG.6 The student will analyze past and present trends in human migration and cultural interaction as they are influenced by social, economic, political, and environmental factors. SOL WG.9 The student will analyze the global patterns and networks of economic interdependence by a) identifying factors, including comparative advantage that influence economic activities and trade; b) describing ways that economic, social interactions, have changed over time; c) mapping, describing and evaluating the formation of economic unions. SOL WG.10 The student will analyze how the forces of conflict and cooperation affect the division and control of the Earth’s surface by a) explaining and analyzing reasons for the creation of different political divisions; at the local and regional levels; b) analyzing ways cooperation occurs among political jurisdictions is used to solve problems and settle disputes. SOL WG.12 The student will apply geography to interpret the past, understand the present, and plan for the future by a) using geographic knowledge, skills, and perspectives to analyze problems and make decisions; b) relating current events to the physical and human characteristics of places and regions. 42 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 ENDURING UNDERSTANDING: The products of human work and thought, behaviors, beliefs, arts, and institutions are constantly changing because of political, cultural, and economic factors. CONCEPTUAL UNIT QUESTION(s): Does culture play a significant role in the lives of people in an interdependent world? or Does culture still matter? PREVIEW ACTIVITY: Students examine two pictures that contrast the role of women. One picture shows an American fighter pilot along with her crew and the sophisticated technology. The other picture shows a woman in a burkha in an urban landscape. Students respond to these questions initially in their journal and later through class discussion: Describe what you see in each picture. Interpret the role of the woman in her culture; what is her status, what is your evidence? Does culture still matter? SUMMARY OF KEY TERMS/PEOPLE: The following list of terms reflects some of the important vocabulary and individuals students should know to successfully understand course content and pass the SOL exams. acculturation agriculture Americanization autonomy commercial agriculture culture culture hearth culture region culture trait diffusion domestic domestication ethnic group ethnicity fundamentalism globalization information age innovation international jingoism material culture maternal monogamy monotheistic religion nationalism paternal peacekeepers polygamy polytheistic religion quota subsistence agriculture surplus service economy tariff technology terrorism traditional agriculture United Nations (UN) urbanization SOL ESSENTIAL UNDERSTANDINGS, QUESTIONS, CONTENT and SKILLS: The following pages, from the State’s Curriculum Framework, outline the essential understandings, questions, knowledge and skills related to the SOLs. They provide the base from which the content in this unit is studied. 43 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.1a The student will use maps, globes, photographs, and pictures in order to a) obtain geographical information about the world’s countries, cities, and environments; Essential Understandings Geographic information may be acquired from a variety of sources. Essential Questions Essential Knowledge How does using a variety of sources support the process of geographic inquiry? Geographic information supports the process of inquiry into the nature of countries, cities, and environments. Using a variety of sources supports the process of geographic inquiry 44 Variety of sources • GIS (Geographic Information Systems) • Field work • Satellite images • Photographs • Maps, globes • Data bases • Primary sources • Diagrams Essential Skills Gather, classify, and interpret information. Select the appropriate geographic information sources to draw conclusions. Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.1b The student will use maps, globes, satellite images, photographs, or diagrams to b) apply the concepts of location, scale, map projection, or orientation; Essential Understandings Essential Questions Latitude and longitude define absolute location. What are some used of latitude and longitude? Relative location describes the spatial relationships between and among places. How is relative location used to describe places? Areas can be represented using a variety of scales. The amount of detail shown on a map is dependent on the scale used. A directional indicator (e.g., compass rose) identifies map orientation. Essential Knowledge Why are different scales necessary for developing map representations? Why is a directional indicator (e.g., compass rose) necessary on a map? How do maps distort spatial relationships when compared with the globe? Maps distort spatial relationships when compared with the globe. 45 Concepts • Scale • Absolute Location • Latitude • Longitude • Relative Location • Orientation • Map Distortion • Map Projections • Mercator • Robinson • Polar (azimulthal) Essential Skills Use compass rose to identify and use cardinal directions. Locate places using latitude/longitude on maps and globes. Compare maps of different scales. Gather, classify, and interpret information. . Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.1c The student will use maps, globes, photographs, and pictures in order to c) develop and refine mental maps of world regions Essential Understandings Essential Questions Essential Knowledge Mental maps are based on objective knowledge and subjective perceptions. How do people use mental maps to organize information? People develop and refine their mental maps through both personal experience and learning. How are perceptions reflected in mental maps? Mental maps serve as indicators of how well people know the spatial characteristics of certain places. How can mental maps be developed and refined? 46 Essential Skills Uses of mental maps • Carry out daily activities (e.g., route to school, shopping) • Give directions to others • Understand world events Locate places on maps and globes. Ways mental maps can be developed and refined • Comparing sketch maps to maps in atlases or other resources • Describing the location of places in terms of reference points (e.g., the equator, prime meridian) • Describing the location of places in terms of geographic features and land forms (e.g., west of the Mississippi River, north of the Gulf of Mexico) • Describing the location of places in terms of the human characteristics of a place (e.g., languages, types of housing, dress, recreation, customs and traditions) Evaluate information. Interpret maps and globes. Draw maps from memory. Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.3a The student will apply the concept of a region by a) explaining how characteristics of regions have led to regional labels. Essential Understandings Essential Questions Essential Knowledge Essential Skills Regions are areas of Earth’s surface which share unifying characteristics. Why do geographers create and use regions as organizing concepts? Regions are used to simplify the world for study and understanding. Locate areas (regions) on maps and globes. Regions may be defined by physical or cultural characteristics. What are some examples of physical and cultural regions? Interpret regional patterns on maps and globes. Regional labels may reflect changes in people’s perceptions. What are some examples of regional labels that reflect changes in perceptions? Physical regions • Sahara • Taiga • Rainforest • Great Plains • Low Countries Cultural regions • Language • Latin America • Francophone world • Ethnic • Chinatowns • Kurdistan • Religion • Islam • Buddhism • Economic • Wheat Belts • European Union (EU) • Political • North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) • African Union (AU) 47 Draw conclusions and make generalizations about data. Explain cause and effect relationships. Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.3a (continued) The student will apply the concept of a region by a) explaining how characteristics of regions have led to regional labels. Essential Understandings Essential Questions Essential Knowledge • 48 Changes in perceptions • Middle East • Sun Belt • Rust Belt Essential Skills Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.3b The student will apply the concept of a region by b) explaining how regional landscapes reflect physical environment and the characteristics of their inhabitants. Essential Understandings Essential Questions Regional landscapes are influenced by climate and underlying geology. How does the appearance of the landscape reflect the physical environment? Regional landscapes are influenced by the cultural, economic, and political characteristics of their inhabitants. How does the appearance of the landscape reflect the characteristics of the inhabitants? Essential Knowledge Physical Characteristics • Climate affects types of natural vegetation • Landforms affect transportation, population distribution, and the location of cities. Cultural characteristics • Architectural structures • Religious buildings (e.g., mosques, churches, synagogues, temples, pagodas) • Dwellings (e.g., tiled roofs in Mediterranean, chalets in Switzerland, thatched roofs in Pacific Islands, tents and yurts in Central and Southwest Asia, castles in Europe) • Statues and monuments of local, national, or global significance • Taj Mahal (India) • Kaaba (Mecca) • Western Wall (Jerusalem) • Dome of the Rock (Jerusalem) • Church of the Holy Sepulcher (Jerusalem) • Pyramids (Egypt) • Kremlin (Moscow) • Eiffel Tower (Paris) • Washington Monument • White House • Lincoln Memorial • Statue of Liberty 49 Essential Skills Gather, classify, and interpret information. Draw conclusions and make generalizations about data. Analyze photographs and pictures and make inferences. Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.3b (continued) The student will apply the concept of a region by b) explaining how regional landscapes reflect physical environment and the characteristics of their inhabitants. Essential Understandings Essential Questions Essential Knowledge Cultural characteristics cont. • • • • • 50 Virginia State Capitol Building Washington Monument White House Lincoln Memorial Statue of Liberty Essential Skills . Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.3c The student will apply the concept of a region by c) analyzing how cultural characteristics, including the world’s major languages, ethnicities, and religions, link or divide regions. Essential Understandings Cultural differences can link or divide regions. Essential Questions Essential Knowledge How can cultural characteristics link or divide regions? Language • • • • • • Arab world—Arabic Hispanic America—Spanish Brazil—Portuguese Canada—French/English Switzerland—Multiple languages English—World language Ethnic heritage • • • • • Yugoslavia—Serbs, Croats, Bosnians, Albanians Burundi and Rwanda—Hutus and Tutsis United States, Switzerland—Unity in multiple ethnic countries Korea and Japan—Predominantly single ethnicity Cyprus—Greeks and Turks Religion as a unifying force • Hinduism • Buddhism • Judaism • Christianity • Islam 51 Essential Skills Identify and interpret regional patterns on maps. Draw conclusions and make generalizations about information. Explain cause and effect relationships. Compare and contrast differing sets of ideas, beliefs, and behaviors. Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.3c (continued) The student will apply the concept of a region by c) analyzing how cultural characteristics, including the world’s major languages, ethnicities, and religions, link or divide regions. Essential Understandings Essential Questions Essential Knowledge Religion as a divisive force • • • • 52 Conflicts between Hindus and Muslims in Pakistan and India Conflicts between Catholics and Protestants in Northern Ireland Jews, Christians, and Muslims all claiming Jerusalem as their religious heritage site Conflicts between Sunni and Shi’a Essential Skills Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.3c (continued) The student will analyze past and present trends in human migration and cultural interaction as they are influenced by social, economic, political, and environmental factors. Essential Understandings Essential Questions Essential Knowledge Essential Skills Push factors Migrations occur because of social, political, and environmental factors. Migrations have influenced cultural landscapes. Modern transportation and communication are encouraging higher levels of cultural interaction worldwide. How have social, economic, political, and environmental factors influenced migration? How has migration influenced cultural landscapes? How and why do improvements in transportation and communication technology lead to cultural interaction? • • • • • • • • • Overpopulation Religious persecution Lack of job opportunities Agricultural decline Conflict Political persecution Natural hazards—Droughts, floods, famines, volcanic eruptions Limits on personal freedom Environmental degradation Pull factors • • • • • • Religion Economic opportunity Land availability Political freedom Ethnic and family ties Arable land Impact of migrations on regions • • • • 53 Language Religion and religious freedom Customs/traditions Cultural landscape Identify and interpret regional patterns on maps. Identify primary ideas expressed in graphic data. Draw conclusions and make generalizations about data. Explain cause and effect relationships. Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.6 (continued) The student will analyze past and present trends in human migration and cultural interaction as they are influenced by social, economic, political, and environmental factors. Essential Understandings Essential Questions Essential Knowledge Evidence of cultural interaction • • 54 Diffusion of U.S. culture to other regions Popularization of other cultures’ traditions in the United States Essential Skills Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.9a The student will analyze the global patterns and networks of economic interdependence by a) identifying factors, including comparative advantage, that influence economic activities and trade; Essential Understandings Resources are not equally distributed. Essential Questions Essential Knowledge What are some factors that influence economic activities and trade? Economic activities are influenced by availability of resources, cultural values, economic philosophies, and levels of supply and demand for goods and services. Factors that influence economic activity Compare maps and globes and make inferences. • Identify regional patterns on maps and globes. No country has all the resources it needs to survive and grow. • • 55 Essential Skills Access to human, natural, and capital resources • Skills of the work force • Natural resources • Access to new technologies • Transportaion and communication networks • Availability of investment capital Location and ability to exchange goods • Landlocked countries • Coastal and island countries • Proximity to shipping lanes • Access to communication networks Membership in political and economic alliances that provide access to markets—e.g., European Union (EU), North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) Identify primary ideas expressed in graphic data. Gather, classify, and interpret information. Explain cause and effect relationships. Draw conclusions and make generalizations about data. Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.9a (continued) The student will analyze the global patterns and networks of economic interdependence by a) identifying factors, including comparative advantage, that influence economic activities and trade; Essential Understandings Essential Questions Resources are not distributed equally. What is comparative advantage? No country has all the resources it needs to survive and grow. What are the effects of unequal distribution of resources? Nations participate in those economic activities compatible with their human, natural, and capital resources. How do nations use their resources to engage in economic activities and trade? Why do countries engage in trade? International trade fosters interdependence. What is the relationship between comparative advantage and international trade? Essential Knowledge Essential Skills Terms to know • Comparative advantage: Countries will export goods and services that they can produce at lower relative costs than other countries. Compare maps and globes and make inferences. Effects of unequal distribution of resources • Specialization in goods and services that a country can market for profit • Exchange of goods and services (exporting what a country can market for profit; importing what a country cannot produce profitably) Identify primary ideas expressed in graphic data. Some countries’ use of resources • Japan—Highly industrial nation despite limited natural resources • Russia—Numerous resources, many of which are not economically profitable to develop • United States—Diversified economy, abundant natural resources, specialized industries • Côte d’Ivoire—Limited natural resources, cash crops in exchange for manufactured goods • Switzerland—Limited natural resources, production of services on a global scale Draw conclusions and make generalizations about data. 56 Identify regional patterns on maps and globes. Gather, classify, and interpret information. Explain cause and effect relationships. Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.9a (continued) The student will analyze the global patterns and networks of economic interdependence by a) identifying factors, including comparative advantage, that influence economic activities and trade; Essential Understandings Essential Questions Essential Knowledge Reasons why countries engage in trade • • To import goods and services that they need To export goods and services that they can market for profit Effects of comparative advantage on international trade • • • 57 Enables nations to produce goods and services that they can market for profit Influences development of industries (e.g., steel, aircraft, automobile, clothing) Supports specialization and efficient use of human resources Essential Skills Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.9b The student will analyze the global patterns and networks of economic interdependence by b) describing ways that economic, social interactions, have changed over time; mapping, describing and evaluating the formation of economic unions. Essential Understandings Essential Questions Essential Knowledge Economic, social, and therefore spatial relationships change over time. How have economic and social interactions changed over time? Improvements in transportation and communication have promoted globalization. How do spatial patterns reflect economic and social change over time? How have improvements in transportation and communication promoted globalization? 58 Changes over time • Industrial labor systems (e.g., cottage industry, factory, office, telecommunications) • Migration from rural to urban areas • Industrialized countries export labor-intensive work to developing nations • Growth of trade alliances • Growth of service (tertiary) industries • Growth of financial services networks and international banks • Internationalization of product assembly (e.g., vehicles, electronic equipment) • Technology that allows instant communication among people in different countries • Modern transportation networks that allow rapid and efficient exchange of goods and materials (e.g., Federal Express, United Parcel Service, U. S. Postal Service) • Widespread marketing of products (e.g., Fuji film, Nike, United Colors of Benetton) Essential Skills Compare maps and globes and make inferences. Identify regional patterns on maps and globes. Identify primary ideas expressed in graphic data. Gather, classify, and interpret information. Explain cause and effect relationships. Draw conclusions and make generalizations about data. Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.9c The student will analyze the global patterns and networks of economic interdependence by c) mapping, describing and evaluating the formation of economic unions. Essential Understandings As a global society, the world is increasingly interdependent. Economic interdependence fosters the formation of economic unions. Essential Questions What are some ways that global patterns and networks of economic interdependence can be depicted on maps? What are some examples of economic unions? What are the advantages and disadvantages of economic unions? Essential Knowledge Economic interdependence can be depicted through trade, resource, or transportation maps. Examples of economic unions • EU—European Union • NAFTA—North American Free Trade Agreement • ASEAN—Association of Southeast Asian Nations • OPEC—Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries Advantages of economic unions • More efficient industries • Access to larger markets • Access to natural, human, and capital resources without restrictions • Greater influence on world market Disadvantages of economic unions • Closing of some industries • Concentration of some industries in certain countries, leaving peripheral areas behind • Agribusiness replacing family farms • Difficulty in agreeing on common economic policies 59 Essential Skills Compare maps and globes and make inferences. Identify regional patterns on maps and globes. Identify primary ideas expressed in graphic data. Gather, classify, and interpret information. Explain cause and effect relationships. Draw conclusions and make generalizations about data. Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.10a The student will analyze how the forces of conflict and cooperation affect the division and control of the Earth’s surface by a) explaining and analyzing reasons for the creation of different political divisions; Essential Understandings Divisions are regions of the Earth’s surface over which groups of people establish social, economic, and political control. Essential Questions What are some examples of political divisions at the local and regional levels? Political divisions may generate conflict. What are some reasons for political divisions at the local and regional levels? Political divisions may generate cooperation. How do political divisions generate conflict? Why do political divisions cooperate? Essential Knowledge Examples of political divisions • • • • • • • Neighborhoods Election districts School districts Regional districts (e.g., bus lines, waste disposal, conservation districts, planning districts, area code zones) Cities Counties States Reasons for political divisions • • • Desire for government closer to home Need to solve local problems Need to administer resources more efficiently Reasons for conflict • • • • • 60 Boundary disputes Cultural differences Economic differences Competition for scarce resources Political advantages (e.g., gerrymandering) Essential Skills Compare maps and make inferences. Identify regional patterns. Gather, classify, and interpret information. Explain cause and effect relationships. Draw conclusions and make generalizations about data. Participate in problem solving. Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.10a (continued) The student will analyze how the forces of conflict and cooperation affect the division and control of the Earth’s surface by a) explaining and analyzing reasons for the creation of different political divisions. Essential Understandings Essential Questions Essential Knowledge Reasons for cooperation • • • • 61 Natural disasters Economic advantages (attract new businesses) Cultural similarities, ethnic neighborhoods Addressing regional issues (e.g., waste management, magnet schools, transportation) Essential Skills Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.10b The student will analyze how the forces of conflict and cooperation affect the division and control of the Earth’s surface by b) analyzing ways cooperation among political jurisdictions is used to solve problems and settle disputes; Essential Understandings Divisions are regions of the Earth’s surface over which groups of people establish social, economic, and political control. Political divisions may generate conflict. Cooperation may eliminate the need for the division and control of the Earth’s surface. Essential Questions Essential Knowledge What are some examples of political divisions at the national and international levels? Examples of political divisions Compare maps and make inferences. • • Identify regional patterns. What are some reasons for political divisions at the local and regional levels? How do political divisions generate conflict? How do political divisions cooperate to solve problems and settle disputes? Countries Alliances: economic and political • North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) • European Union (EU) • Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) • North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) • United Nations • Organization of American States (OAS) • League of Arab States • Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) • African Union (AU) Reasons for political divisions • • • • 62 Essential Skills Differences in culture, language, religion Retention of historical boundaries Imperial conquest and control Economic similarities and differences Gather, classify, and interpret information. Explain cause and effect relationships. Draw conclusions and make generalizations about data. Participate in problem solving. Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.10b (continued) The student will analyze how the forces of conflict and cooperation affect the division and control of the Earth’s surface by b) analyzing ways cooperation among political jurisdictions is used to solve problems and settle disputes; Essential Understandings Essential Questions Essential Knowledge Reasons for conflict • • • • • 63 Boundary and territorial disputes (Syria/Israel, Western Sahara/Morocco, China/Taiwan, India/Pakistan Cultural differences (language, religion) • Indonesia • Canada (Quebec) • Sudan Economic differences (fertile land, access to fresh water, access to coast, fishing rights, natural resources, different economic philosophies) Ethnic differences • Balkans • Cyprus • Kashmir Nationalism Essential Skills Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.10b (continued) The student will analyze how the forces of conflict and cooperation affect the division and control of the Earth’s surface by b) analyzing ways cooperation among political jurisdictions is used to solve problems and settle disputes; Essential Understandings Essential Questions Essential Knowledge Examples of cooperation • • • • • • • • 64 Humanitarian initiatives—e.g., Red Cross/Red Crescent Economic alliances—e.g., Law of Sea, China and United States, multinational corporations, North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) Cultural alliances—e.g. Francophone world, Commonwealth of Nations Military alliances—e.g., North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) Problem-solving alliances—e.g., Antarctic Treaty, United Nations (UN) peacekeepers Programs to promote international understanding—e.g., Peace Corps Alliances for environmental preservation Foreign aid Essential Skills Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.l2a The student will apply geography to interpret the past, understand the present, and plan for the future by a) using geographic knowledge, skills, and perspectives to analyze problems and make decisions. Essential Understandings An understanding of the practical applications of geography enables students to be informed, active citizens in their communities. Essential Questions Essential Knowledge What are some practical applications of geography? Geographic applications at local and regional levels • • • • 65 Air and water quality monitoring and management Recycling programs Land use and transportation planning Selection of locations for residential and commercial development Essential Skills Organize and interpret information. Use maps and other geographic resources to obtain information and draw conclusions. Participate in problem solving and decision making. Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.12b The student will apply geography to interpret the past, understand the present, and plan for the future by b) relating current events to the physical and human characteristics of places and regions. Essential Understandings Current events are shaped by the physical and human characteristics of the places and regions where they occur. Essential Questions Essential Knowledge How are current events connected to the geographical characteristics of places and regions? Geographic relationships Compare maps and make inferences. • Identify and interpret regional patterns on maps. • 66 Essential Skills How physical characteristics influence current events • Natural hazards (e.g, flooding, earthquakes, volcanoes, drought) • Climate change How human characteristics influence current events • Population distribution • Geographic patterns of ethnic diversity • A sense of place (emotional attachment to specific locations) • Geographic patterns of trade and interdependence (e.g., oil) • Geographic patterns of wealth and poverty (developed and developing nations) Identify primary ideas expressed in graphic data. Gather, classify, and interpret information. Draw conclusions and make generalizations about data. Examine cause and effect relationships. Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 SAMPLE LESSON TITLE: A Parade of Lifestyles UNIT IV: Cultural Geography ENDURING UNDERSTANDING: The products of human work and thought, behaviors, beliefs, arts, and institutions are constantly changing because of political, cultural, and economic factors. CONCEPTUAL UNIT QUESTION: Does culture play a significant role in the lives of people in an interdependent world? or Does culture still matter? KEY CONCEPT(s): Cultural geography, Economic geography, Urban geography, Environmental geography, and Historical geography ESSENTIAL UNDERSTANDING(s): • Cultural differences can link or divide regions. • Migrations occur because of social, political, and environmental factors. • Migrations have influenced cultural landscapes. • Modern transportation and communication are encouraging higher levels of cultural interaction worldwide. • Economic activities are influenced by availability of resources, cultural values, economic philosophies, and levels of supply and demand for goods and services. • Economic, social, and therefore spatial relationships change over time. • Improvements in transportation and communication have promoted globalization. ESSENTIAL QUESTION(s): How can cultural characteristics link or divide regions? How have social, economic, political, and environmental factors influenced migration? How has migration influenced cultural landscapes? How and why do improvements in transportation and communication technology lead to cultural interaction? What are some criteria that influence economic activities? How have economic and social interactions changed over time? How do spatial patterns reflect economic and social change over time? How have improvements in transportation and communication promoted globalization? • • • • • • • • SOL OBJECTIVES: WG.3, WG.6, WG.9, WG.12 LESSON DESCRIPTION: Students explore the historical development of economic activity (from hunter-gatherers to the information age) and its corresponding impact on the lifestyle of a community. Materials/Resources: • Class copies, article “Stages of Economic Development” (Appendices C1, C2) • Class copies, graphic organizer on Stages of Economic Development (Appendices C3, C4) 67 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 • Class copies, graphic organizer on “Which Lifestyle is Best?” (Appendix C5) Strategies: Students begin by reading for homework the article on the four stages of economic development. After completing a graphic organizer on the four stages, students are placed on teams. Each team corresponds to a stage of development. Teams must construct a float illustrating the assigned stage of development. The class conducts a parade with four floats. Students then construct an organizer illustrating the pros and cons of the lifestyles associated with each stage of economic development. Student Action: • complete homework that includes reading an article and responding to its questions (Appendices C1, C2). • complete a graphic organizer (Appendices C3, C4) as part of a whole-class discussion. This organizer depicts the four stages of economic development and their attendant implications for education, shelter, and technology. • in teams, design a float for their assigned stage of development. The float must include a narrator, a banner with a creative subtitle, themed music (e.g. On the Road Again for Hunter-Gatherers), and a tableau consisting of students with props and illustrative behaviors. • participate in a class parade of floats • complete an organizer (Appendix C5) that specifies and illustrates the pros and cons of the lifestyles associated with each stage of economic development. Teacher Action: • assign homework the night before consisting of the article on the four stages of economic development (Appendices C1, C2). • use a whole-class discussion to complete a graphic organizer (Appendices C3,C4) depicting the characteristics of the four stages of • economic development. • form student teams and instruct them on construction of their floats and supervise float construction and the resulting parade. • assign the organizer Which is the Best Lifestyle? (Appendix C5) Assessment: completed student homework, class discussion observation, student cooperation and on-task behavior, float and lifestyle graphic organizer, a suggested rubric that would include: Narrator’s script Banner Appropriate Props 25 points 10 points 15 points Illustrative Movements Preparation Accuracy of Content 15 points 10 points 25 points Adaptation: Students could construct songs about each stage of development, or could form tableaus for each developmental stage. 68 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 69 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 70 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 71 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 72 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 73 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 UNIT V: Economic & Political Geography STANDARDS OF LEARNING: This unit will address the following objectives: SOL WG.5 The student will compare and contrast the distribution, growth rates, and characteristics of human population in terms of settlement patterns and the location of natural and capital resources. SOL WG.7 The student will identify types of natural, human, and capital resources and explain their significance by a) showing their influence on patterns of economic activity and land use. SOL WG.8 The student will distinguish between developed and developing countries and relate the level of economic development to the standard of living and quality of life. SOL WG.9 The student will analyze the global patterns and networks of economic interdependence by a) identifying factors, including comparative advantage, that influence economic activities and trade; b) describing ways that economic and social interactions have changed over time; c) mapping, describing and evaluating the formation of economic unions. SOL WG.10 The student will analyze how the forces of conflict and cooperation affect the division and control of the Earth’s surface by a) explaining and analyzing reasons for the creation of different political divisions; b) analyzing ways cooperation among political jurisdictions is used to solve problems and settle disputes. 74 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 ENDURING UNDERSTANDING: How people manage the consumption and distribution of goods and services will influence their lifestyle. CONCEPTUAL UNIT QUESTION: Does the level of economic development accurately describe a culture’s quality of life? PREVIEW ACTIVITY: Student groups rotate among stations that contain pictures from different cultures. The pictures illustrate the material culture of different peoples and how it varies across countries that have different levels of economic development. Students collect data from each photograph, interpret what they see, and evaluate that culture’s quality of life. A whole class discussion follows where the pictures are ranked from highest to lowest quality of life. One key question to address – What might be missing from this photograph that affects the quality of life (for better OR worse)? The Material World posters and the accompanying lessons inspire this activity. While those posters offer exemplary resources, suitable images may be found in the textbook, online, or from magazines. SUMMARY OF KEY TERMS/PEOPLE: The following list of terms reflects some of the important vocabulary and individuals students should know to successfully understand course content and pass the SOL exams. ASEAN Black Death capital resource Capitalism command economy commercial agriculture Communism comparative advantage developed developing domestication European Union (EU) export forage and foraging fossil fuels free market economy GDP (GNP) Globalization human resource IMF import Industrial Revolution industrialization infant mortality infrastructure life expectancy market material culture Mercosur middle income mixed economy monopoly NAFTA natural resource non-material culture non-renewable resources OAS per capita per capita income population density primary activity/industry quota redistribution of wealth renewable resources scarcity secondary activity/industry Socialism subsistence agriculture surplus tariff technology tertiary activity/industry United Nations (UN) urbanization World Bank WTO ZPG (Zero pop. growth) SOL ESSENTIAL UNDERSTANDINGS, QUESTIONS, CONTENT and SKILLS: The following pages, from the State’s Curriculum Framework, outline the essential understandings, questions, knowledge and skills related to the SOLs. They provide the base from which the content in this unit is studied. 75 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.5 The student will compare and contrast the distribution, growth rates, and characteristics of human population in terms of settlement patterns and the location of natural and capital resources. Essential Understandings Population distribution is described according to location and density. Essential Questions Essential Knowledge What human, environmental, economic, and political factors influence population distribution? Factors that influence population distribution • Characteristics of human populations differ over time and from region to region. What are some characteristics of human populations? Population growth rates are influenced by human, environmental, economic, and political factors. How do human, environmental, economic, and political factors influence population growth rates? • • • • • • Natural resources (oil, arable land, water) Climate (hot/cold; wet/dry) Economic development Government policy Rural/urban settlement Capital resources (transportation, technology) Conflicts (refugees) Characteristics of human population • • • • • • • • • • • 76 Birth and death rates (war, disease, migration) Age distribution Male/female distribution Life expectancy Infant mortality Urban/rural GDP Ethnicity Language Religion Education Essential Skills Compare maps and make inferences. Identify and interpret regional patterns on maps. Draw conclusions and make generalizations about data. Explain cause and effect relationships. Interpret charts and graphs. Interpret population pyramids. Analyze data to determine patterns. Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.5 (continued) The student will compare and contrast the distribution, growth rates, and characteristics of human population in terms of settlement patterns and the location of natural and capital resources. Essential Understandings Essential Questions Essential Knowledge Factors that influence growth rates • • • • • • 77 Modern medicine and hygiene Education Industrialization and urbanization Economic development Government policy Role of women in society Essential Skills Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.7a The student will identify types of natural, human, and capital resources and explain their significance by a) showing their influence on patterns of economic activity and land use. Essential Understandings Essential Questions Essential Knowledge Natural substances become resources if and when they become useful to humans. How do human needs and availability of technology affect the value of natural resources? The value of resources has changed over time. How has the value of resources changed over time? Natural, human, and capital resources influence human activity in regions. How do natural, human, and capital resources influence patterns of economic activity and land use in regions? Economic activity can be classified as primary, secondary, or tertiary. Use of energy resources and technology (as it has changed over time) • Wood (deforestation) • Coal (pollution, mining problems, competition with oil and gas) • Petroleum (transportation, environmental considerations) • Nuclear (contamination/waste) • Solar, wind (cost, aesthetics) Natural resources • Renewable—Soil, water, forests • Nonrenewable—Fossil fuels (oil, coal, natural gas) and metals (gold, iron, copper, bauxite) Human resources • Level of education • Skilled and unskilled laborers • Entrepreneurial and managerial abilities Capital resources • Availability of money for investment • Level of infrastructure • Availability and use of tools, machines, and technologies 78 Essential Skills Compare maps and globes and make inferences. Interpret regional patterns on maps and globes. Identify primary ideas expressed in graphic data. Gather, classify, and interpret information. Draw conclusions and make generalizations about information. Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.7a (continued) The student will identify types of natural, human, and capital resources and explain their significance by a) showing their influence on patterns of economic activity and land use. Essential Understandings Resources are not distributed equally. The location of resources influences economic activity and patterns of land use. Essential Questions Essential Knowledge What are some examples of primary, secondary, and tertiary economic activities? Levels of economic activity • • • Primary—Dealing directly with resources (fishing, farming, forestry, mining) Secondary—Manufacturing and processing (steel mills, automobile assembly, sawmills) Tertiary—Services (transportation, retail trade, informational technology services) Effects of unequal distribution of resources • • • • • 79 Interdependence of nations/trade in goods, services, and capital resources Uneven economic development Energy producers and consumers Imperialism Conflict over control of resources Essential Skills Gather, classify and interpret information. Analyze and evaluate information. Explain cause and effect relationships. Sequence information. Draw conclusions and make generalizations from data. Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.7a (continued) The student will identify types of natural, human, and capital resources and explain their significance by a) showing their influence on patterns of economic activity and land use. Essential Understandings Essential Questions Essential Knowledge Patterns of land use 80 • Economic activities that require extensive areas of land (e.g., agriculture) vs. those that require limited area (e.g., manufacturing) • Land uses that are compatible with each other (open space and residential) vs. land uses that are not compatible (e.g., landfills and residential) Essential Skills Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.7b The student will identify types of natural, human, and capital resources and explain their significance by b) evaluating perspectives and consequences regarding the use of resources. Essential Understandings The use of a resource depends on a nation’s culture, values, access to technology, and governmental priorities as they change over time. Essential Questions Essential Knowledge How and why do different cultures develop different perspectives on the use of resources? What are some costs and benefits in the use of resources? Social and economic priorities that influence a culture’s perspective on resources • Economic development priorities • Environmental conservation priorities • Priorities of indigenous minorities Examples of technologies that have created demand for particular resources • Steam engine – and for coal • Internal combustion engine (cars and trucks) – and for gasoline (petroleum) • Computer chips and for skilled labor Costs • Resource depletion • Environmental degradation • Health problems Benefits • Production of goods and services • Employment opportunities • Development of technologies 81 Essential Skills Gather, classify, and interpret information. Draw conclusions and make generalizations from data. Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.8 The student will distinguish between developed and developing countries and relate the level of economic development to the standard of living and quality of life. Essential Understandings Essential Questions Essential Knowledge Levels of economic development vary from country to country and from place to place within countries. How and why does economic development vary from one part of the world to another? Many criteria are used to assess the standard of living and quality of life. What factors influence the standards of living and quality of life? Resources and technology influence economic development and quality of life. How do resources and technology influence economic development and quality of life? Differences between developing and developed nations Explain charts comparing two or more concepts. • • Identify primary ideas expressed in graphic data. • • • • Access to natural resources Access to capital resources (investment in technology and infrastructure) Numbers and skills of human resources Levels of economic development Standards of living and quality of life Relationships between economic development and quality of life Indicators of economic development • • • • 82 Essential Skills Urban/rural ratio Labor force characteristics (primary, secondary, tertiary sectors) GDP per capita Educational achievement Gather, classify, and interpret information. Explain cause and effect relationships. Draw conclusions and make generalizations about data. Interpret population pyramids. Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.8 (continued) The student will distinguish between developed and developing countries and relate the level of economic development to the standard of living and quality of life. Essential Understandings Essential Questions Essential Knowledge Indicators of standards of living and quality of life • • • • • • 83 Population growth rate (natural increase) Population age distribution Literacy rate Life expectancy Infant mortality Percentage of urban population Essential Skills Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.9a The student will analyze the global patterns and networks of economic interdependence by a) identifying factors, including comparative advantage, that influence economic activities. Essential Understandings Resources are not equally distributed. Essential Questions Essential Knowledge What are some factors that influence economic activities and trade? Economic activities are influenced by availability of resources, cultural values, economic philosophies, and levels of supply and demand for goods and services. No country has all the resources it needs to survive and grow. 84 Essential Skills Factors that influence economic activity Compare maps and globes and make inferences. • Access to human, natural, and capital resources • Skills of the work force • Natural resources • Access to new technologies • Transportaion and communication networks • Availability of investment capital • Location and ability to exchange goods • Landlocked countries • Coastal and island countries • Proximity to shipping lanes • Access to communication networks • Membership in political and economic alliances that provide access to markets—e.g., European Union (EU), North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) Identify regional patterns on maps and globes. Identify primary ideas expressed in graphic data. Gather, classify, and interpret information. Explain cause and effect relationships. Draw conclusions and make generalizations about data. Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.9a (continued) The student will analyze the global patterns and networks of economic interdependence by a) identifying factors, including comparative advantage, that influence economic activities. Essential Understandings Essential Questions Essential Knowledge Resources are not distributed equally. What is comparative advantage? No country has all the resources it needs to survive and grow. What are the effects of unequal distribution of resources? Nations participate in those economic activities compatible with their human, natural, and capital resources. How do nations use their resources to engage in economic activities and trade? International trade fosters interdependence. Why do countries engage in trade? What is the relationship between comparative advantage and international trade? Terms to know • Comparative advantage: countries will export goods and services that they can produce at lower relative costs than other countries. Compare maps and globes and make inferences. Effects of unequal distribution of resources • Specialization in goods and services that a country can market for profit • Exchange of goods and services (exporting what a country can market for profit; importing what a country cannot produce profitably) Identify primary ideas expressed in graphic data. Some countries’ use of resources • Japan—Highly industrial nation despite limited natural resources • Russia—Numerous resources, many of which are not economically profitable to develop • United States—Diversified economy, abundant natural resources, specialized industries • Côte d’Ivoire—Limited natural resources, cash crops in exchange for manufactured goods • Switzerland—Limited natural resources, production of services on a global scale 85 Essential Skills Identify regional patterns on maps and globes. Gather, classify, and interpret information. Explain cause and effect relationships. Draw conclusions and make generalizations about data. Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.9a (continued) The student will analyze the global patterns and networks of economic interdependence by a) identifying factors, including comparative advantage, that influence economic activities. Essential Understandings Essential Questions Essential Knowledge Reasons why countries engage in trade • • To import goods and services that they need To export goods and services that they can market for profit Effects of comparative advantage on international trade • • • 86 Enables nations to produce goods and services that they can market for profit Influences development of industries (e.g., steel, aircraft, automobile, clothing) Supports specialization and efficient use of human resources Essential Skills Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.9b The student will analyze the global patterns and networks of economic interdependence by b) describing ways that economic and social interactions have changed over time. Essential Understandings Essential Questions Essential Knowledge Economic, social, and therefore spatial relationships change over time. How have economic and social interactions changed over time? Improvements in transportation and communication have promoted globalization. How do spatial patterns reflect economic and social change over time? Changes over time • • • How have improvements in transportation and communication promoted globalization? • • • • • • • 87 Industrial labor systems (e.g., cottage industry, factory, office, telecommunications) Migration from rural to urban areas Industrialized countries export labor-intensive work to developing nations Growth of trade alliances Growth of service (tertiary) industries Growth of financial services networks and international banks Internationalization of product assembly (e.g., vehicles, electronic equipment) Technology that allows instant communication among people in different countries Modern transportation networks that allow rapid and efficient exchange of goods and materials (e.g., Federal Express, United Parcel Service, U. S. Postal Service) Widespread marketing of products (e.g., Fuji film, Nike, United Colors of Benetton) Essential Skills Compare maps and globes and make inferences. Identify regional patterns on maps and globes. Identify primary ideas expressed in graphic data. Gather, classify, and interpret information. Explain cause and effect relationships. Draw conclusions and make generalizations about data. Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.9c The student will analyze the global patterns and networks of economic interdependence by c) mapping, describing and evaluating the formation of economic unions. Essential Understandings As a global society, the world is increasingly interdependent. Economic interdependence fosters the formation of economic unions. Essential Questions Essential Knowledge What are some ways that global patterns and networks of economic interdependence can be depicted on maps? Economic interdependence can be depicted through trade, resource, or transportation maps. Examples of economic unions • EU—European Union • NAFTA—North American Free Trade Agreement • ASEAN—Association of Southeast Asian Nations • OPEC—Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries What are some examples of economic unions? What are the advantages and disadvantages of economic unions? Advantages of economic unions • More efficient industries • Access to larger markets • Access to natural, human, and capital resources without restrictions • Greater influence on world market Disadvantages of economic unions • Closing of some industries • Concentration of some industries in certain countries, leaving peripheral areas behind • Agribusiness replacing family farms • Difficulty in agreeing on common economic policies 88 Essential Skills Compare maps and globes and make inferences. Identify regional patterns on maps and globes. Identify primary ideas expressed in graphic data. Gather, classify, and interpret information. Explain cause and effect relationships. Draw conclusions and make generalizations about data. Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.10a The student will analyze how the forces of conflict and cooperation affect the division and control of the Earth’s surface by a) explaining and analyzing reasons for the creation of different political divisions. Essential Understandings Divisions are regions of the Earth’s surface over which groups of people establish social, economic, and political control. Essential Questions Essential Knowledge What are some examples of political divisions at the local and regional levels? Political divisions may generate conflict. What are some reasons for political divisions at the local and regional levels? Political divisions may generate cooperation. How do political divisions generate conflict? Why do political divisions cooperate? Examples of political divisions • Neighborhoods • Election districts • School districts • Regional districts (e.g., bus lines, waste disposal, conservation districts, planning districts, area code zones) • Cities • Counties • States Reasons for political divisions • Desire for government closer to home • Need to solve local problems • Need to administer resources more efficiently Reasons for conflict • Boundary disputes • Cultural differences • Economic differences • Competition for scarce resources • Political advantages (e.g., gerrymandering) 89 Essential Skills Compare maps and make inferences. Identify regional patterns. Gather, classify, and interpret information. Explain cause and effect relationships. Participate in problem solving. Draw conclusions and make generalizations about data. Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.10a (continued) The student will analyze how the forces of conflict and cooperation affect the division and control of the Earth’s surface by a) explaining and analyzing reasons for the creation of different political divisions. Essential Understandings Essential Questions Essential Knowledge Reasons for cooperation • Natural disasters • Economic advantages (attract new businesses) • Cultural similarities, ethnic neighborhoods • Addressing regional issues (e.g., waste management, magnet schools, transportation) 90 Essential Skills Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.10b The student will analyze how the forces of conflict and cooperation affect the division and control of the Earth’s surface by b) analyzing ways cooperation among political jurisdictions is used to solve problems and settle disputes. Essential Understandings Divisions are regions of the Earth’s surface over which groups of people establish social, economic, and political control. Political divisions may generate conflict. Cooperation may eliminate the need for the division and control of the Earth’s surface. Essential Questions Essential Knowledge What are some examples of political divisions at the national and international levels? Examples of political divisions Compare maps and make inferences. • • Identify regional patterns. What are some reasons for political divisions at the local and regional levels? How do political divisions generate conflict? How do political divisions cooperate to solve problems and settle disputes? Countries Alliances: economic and political • North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) • European Union (EU) • Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) • North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) • United Nations (UN) • Organization of American States (OAS) • League of Arab States • Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) • African Union (AU) Reasons for political divisions • • • • 91 Essential Skills Differences in culture, language, religion Retention of historical boundaries Imperial conquest and control Economic similarities and differences Gather, classify, and interpret information. Explain cause and effect relationships. Participate in problem solving. Draw conclusions and make generalizations about data. Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.10b (continued) The student will analyze how the forces of conflict and cooperation affect the division and control of the Earth’s surface by b) analyzing ways cooperation among political jurisdictions is used to solve problems and settle disputes. Essential Understandings Essential Questions Essential Knowledge Reasons for conflict • • • • • 92 Boundary and territorial disputes (Syria/Israel, Western Sahara/Morocco, China/Taiwan, India/Pakistan) Cultural differences (language, religion) • Indonesia • Canada (Quebec) • Sudan Economic differences (fertile land, access to fresh water, access to coast, fishing rights, natural resources, different economic philosophies) Ethnic differences • Balkans • Cyprus • Kashmir Nationalism Essential Skills Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.10b (continued) The student will analyze how the forces of conflict and cooperation affect the division and control of the Earth’s surface by b) analyzing ways cooperation among political jurisdictions is used to solve problems and settle disputes. Essential Understandings Essential Questions Essential Knowledge Examples of cooperation • • • • • • • • 93 Humanitarian initiatives—e.g., Red Cross/Red Crescent Economic alliances—e.g., Law of Sea, China and United States, multinational corporations, North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) Cultural alliances—e.g., Francophone world, Commonwealth of Nations Military alliances—e.g., North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) Problem-solving alliances—e.g., Antarctic Treaty, United Nations (UN) peacekeepers Programs to promote international understanding—e.g., Peace Corps Alliances for environmental preservation Foreign aid Essential Skills Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 SAMPLE LESSON TITLE: Who Decides? (Exploring three economic systems; communism, socialism, capitalism) UNIT V: Economic Geography ENDURING UNDERSTANDING: How people manage the consumption and distribution of goods and services will influence their lifestyle. CONCEPTUAL UNIT QUESTION: Does the level of economic development accurately describe a culture’s quality of life? KEY CONCEPT(s): Economic geography, Political geography, Historical geography SOL OBJECTIVES: WG.7, WG.9 LESSON DESCRIPTION: Students explore the three types of economic systems through simulation, discussion, and examination of appropriate cultural examples. Students begin by responding to a journal question (Appendix D1); It forces them to consider who should decide what is an equitable distribution of resources. Students then participate in a series of simulations (Appendix D2), with the object being to play by the rules, win a certain number of tokens, and then claim a prize (a treat). The class then completes an organizer (Appendices D3, D4, D5) describing the three types of economic systems and correlates them with the three simulations. Homework provides case studies from key regions. It contrasts capitalism and communism, illustrating the key role of incentives. Materials/Resources: transparency, journal question, warmup (Appendix D1), tokens (5 per student), treats (10 per class), economic systems simulation (Appendix D2), transparencies, graphic organizer on economic systems (Appendices D3, D4, D5), class copies, graphic organizer on Economic Systems (Appendices D3, D4, D5), class copies, homework instructions (Appendix D6) Strategies: journal responses, simulation Student Action: • respond to the journal question (see attachment). (Appendix D1) • share their responses in a whole-class discussion that revolves around this question: Who should decide? • participate in the simulation (Appendix D2) • complete the graphic organizer (Appendix D3). • work on homework that expands upon their understanding of the three economic systems (Appendix D6). 94 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 Teacher Action: • lead class discussion on student responses to the journal question. • prepares students for the simulations. Note this preparation precedes EACH simulation: • have students clear desks • have students receive five tokens each (all tokens of equal value) • explain the rules of the simulation (Appendix D2) • Game 1 – Students try to earn 10 tokens so they may claim a prize (a treat). Students earn tokens gambling against each other by playing rock-paper-scissors. All bets must be equal and declared in advance. Ties must be replayed. • Game 2 – Same as Game 1 except several randomly selected students will never go broke. The teacher will always replace their tokens if they lose all of them. • Game 3 – Same as Game 1 except once all tokens are redistributed, teacher declares the game over. After each round, debrief the class: • Who were the winners? Who were the losers? Was it fair? Explain. • What was the teacher’s role in the game? • Introduce students to the three economic systems using the graphic organizer (Appendices D3, D4, D5), and drawing parallels with each round; • Game 1 – Free Market; role of government is to ensure everyone plays by the rules. • Game 2 – Mixed Economy; role of government is to protect several key industries but it distorts the economy and encourages unnecessary risks • Game 3 – Command Economy; role of government is to decide the outcome; no one wins, but no one loses either. Assign homework (Appendix D6). Assessment: Journal response (Appendix D1), class discussion, simulation (Appendix D2), homework (Appendix D6), and the attendant discussion reviewing the exercise. Adaptation: Since one of the keys to the failure of command and mixed economies is their lack of incentives, a quick simulation that models this failure really enhances student understanding. Such a simulation may be more effective than the text-based homework. 95 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 96 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 97 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 98 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 99 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 100 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 101 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 UNIT VI: North America STANDARDS OF LEARNING: This unit will address the following objectives: SOL WG.4 The student will locate and analyze physical, economic, and cultural characteristics of world regions. SOL WG.9 The student will analyze the global patterns and networks of economic interdependence by a) identifying criteria that influence economic activities. d) describing and evaluating the formation of economic unions. SOL WG.10 The student will analyze how the forces of conflict and cooperation affect the division and control of the Earth’s surface by b) explaining and analyzing reasons for the different spatial divisions at the national and international levels; c) analyzing ways cooperation occurs to solve problems and settle disputes. ENDURING UNDERSTANDING: Human achievement of often but not exclusively connected to natural resources. CONCEPTUAL UNIT QUESTION: Which has a greater impact on America’s development, physical or cultural characteristics?* *Teacher’s notes: Physical characteristics refer to North America’s location between the Pacific and Atlantic ocean providing (a) isolation from enemies in the early formation of nations and (b) two coastal lines for trade development. Cultural characteristics refer to democratic government and free trade particularly, in the United States and Canada. PREVIEW ACTIVITY: Draw a Venn Diagram on the board. In the space where the circles overlap, have students write words that suggest ways in which Canada and Unites States are alike. In the other sections have students list the differences between the two. Encourage students to consider physical and cultural features, as well as governments, language, and religion. This activity can also be completed in students’ journal or interactive notebooks. 102 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 SUMMARY OF KEY TERMS/PEOPLE: The following list of terms reflects some of the important vocabulary and individuals students should know to successfully understand course content and pass the SOL exams. canal capital emigration exports FTA GDP GNP immigrate imports interdependence investor Maquiladoras megalopolis migration NAFTA NATO quota revenue secede separatism strait tariff transcontinental treaty SOL ESSENTIAL UNDERSTANDINGS, QUESTIONS, CONTENT and SKILLS: The following pages, from the State’s Curriculum Framework, outline the essential understandings, questions, knowledge and skills related to the SOLs. They provide the base from which the content in this unit is studied. 103 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.4 Essential Knowledge The student will locate and analyze physical, economic, and cultural characteristics of world regions: Latin America and the Caribbean, Europe, United States and Canada, North Africa and Southwest Asia, Sub-Saharan Africa, Russia and Central Asia, South, SE, and East Asia, Australia & Antarctica. Countries Physical Characteristics Economic Characteristics United States and Canada United States Canada United States and Canada • Abundant natural resources • Continental Divide • Rivers • Mississippi • St. Lawrence • Colorado • Columbia • Rio Grande • Other water features • Gulf of Mexico • Great Lakes • Arctic Ocean • Pacific Ocean • Atlantic Ocean • Hudson Bay • Land forms • Appalachian Mountains • Pacific Coastal Ranges • Basin and Range • Rocky Mountains • Great Plains • Interior lowlands • Atlantic and Gulf coastal plains • Canadian Shield • Grand Canyon • Columbia Plateau • Colorado Plateau United States and Canada United States and Canada • Major exporters of technology, • Colonized by the Europeans consumer goods, information systems, • Multicultural societies and foodstuffs • Increasingly diverse populations • Highly developed infrastructures • High literacy rates • Highly diversified economies • High standard of living • Rich supply of mineral, energy, and • Highly urbanized forest resources • Canada’s struggle to maintain a national • North American Free Trade Agreement identity (NAFTA) • Highly mobile populations • Multinational corporations • World’s longest unfortified border between • Center of world financial markets (New the United States and Canada York Stock Exchange) • Democratic forms of government • Sustained economic growth • Arts that reflect the cultural heritage of • Widening gap between rich and poor multicultural societies • Export of U.S. culture via the global • North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) marketplace (e.g., McDonald’s, Coca Cities as centers of culture and trade Cola, music, blue jeans) • Toronto • Montreal • Ottawa • Quebec • Vancouver, British Columbia • Washington, D.C. • Chicago • New York City • Los Angeles • Houston 104 Cultural Characteristics Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.4 (Essential Knowledge continued) The student will locate and analyze physical, economic, and cultural characteristics of world regions: Latin America and the Caribbean, Europe, United States and Canada, North Africa and Southwest Asia, Sub-Saharan Africa, Russia and Central Asia, South Asia, Southeast Asia, East Asia, Australia and the Pacific Islands, and Antarctica. Countries Physical Characteristics • Economic Characteristics Varied climate regions—Ranging from tundra in Alaska to tropical wet in Hawaii 105 Cultural Characteristics Cultural landscape • • • • • • • • U.S. Capitol building Golden Gate Bridge Independence Hall St. Louis Gateway Arch Wheat fields Skyscrapers, shopping malls Bilingual signs Influence of the automobile (e.g., gas stations, motels, interstate highways, drive-up services) Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.9a The student will analyze the global patterns and networks of economic interdependence by a) identifying criteria that influence economic activities. Essential Understandings Resources are not equally distributed. Economic activities are influenced by availability of resources, cultural values, economic philosophies, and levels of supply and demand for goods and services. Essential Questions What are some criteria that influence economic activities? Essential Knowledge Essential Skills Factors that influence economic activity Compare maps and globes and make inferences. • Identify regional patterns on maps and globes. No country has all the resources it needs to survive and grow. • • 106 Access to human, natural, and capital resources • Skills of the work force • Natural resources • Access to new technologies • Transportaion and communication networks • Availability of investment capital Location and ability to exchange goods • Landlocked countries • Coastal and island countries • Proximity to shipping lanes • Access to communication networks Membership in political and economic alliances that provide access to markets—e.g., European Union (EU), North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) Identify primary ideas expressed in graphic data. Gather, classify, and interpret information. Explain cause and effect relationships. Draw conclusions and make generalizations about data. Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.9d The student will analyze the global patterns and networks of economic interdependence by d) describing and evaluating the formation of economic unions. Essential Understandings Essential Questions Essential Knowledge As a global society, the world is increasingly interdependent. What are some examples of economic unions? Economic interdependence fosters the formation of economic unions. What are the advantages and disadvantages of economic unions? Examples of economic unions • • Essential Skills Compare maps and globes and make inferences. EU—European Union Identify regional patterns on maps and NAFTA—North American Free globes. Trade Agreement • ASEAN—Association of Southeast Identify primary ideas expressed in Asian Nations • OPEC—Organization of Petroleum graphic data. Exporting Countries Gather, classify, and interpret information. Advantages of economic unions • • • • Explain cause and effect relationships. More efficient industries Access to larger markets Draw conclusions and make Access to natural, human, and generalizations about data. capital resources without restrictions Greater influence on world market Disadvantages of economic unions • • • • 107 Closing of some industries Concentration of some industries in certain countries, leaving peripheral areas behind Agribusiness replacing family farms Difficulty in agreeing on common economic policies Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.10b, c The student will analyze how the forces of conflict and cooperation affect the division and control of the Earth’s surface by b) explaining and analyzing reasons for the different political divisions at the national and international levels; c) analyzing ways cooperation occurs to solve problems and settle disputes. Essential Understandings Essential Questions Essential Knowledge Divisions are regions of the Earth’s What are some examples of spatial surface over which groups of people divisions at the national and establish social, economic, and political international levels? control. What are some reasons for spatial Political divisions may generate divisions at the local and regional conflict. levels? Examples of spatial divisions • • Cooperation may eliminate the need for How do spatial divisions generate the division and control of the Earth’s conflict? surface. How do spatial divisions cooperate to solve problems and settle disputes? • • • 108 Compare maps and make inferences. Identify regional patterns. Countries Alliances: economic and political Gather, classify, and interpret • North Atlantic Treaty information. Organization (NATO) • European Union (EU) Explain cause and effect relationships. • Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) Draw conclusions and make • North American Free Trade generalizations about data. Agreement (NAFTA) • United Nations Participate in problem solving. • Organization of American States (OAS) • League of Arab States • Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) • African Union (AU) Reasons for spatial divisions • Essential Skills Differences in culture, language, religion Retention of historical boundaries Imperial conquest and control Economic similarities and differences Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.10b, c (continued) The student will analyze how the forces of conflict and cooperation affect the division and control of the Earth’s surface by b) explaining and analyzing the different spatial divisions at the national and international levels. c) analyzing ways cooperation occurs to solve problems and settle disputes. Essential Understandings Essential Questions Essential Knowledge Examples of cooperation • • • • • • • • 109 Humanitarian initiatives—e.g., Red Cross/Red Crescent Economic alliances—e.g., Law of Sea, China and United States, multinational corporations, North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) Cultural alliances—e.g., Francophone world, Commonwealth of Nations Military alliances—e.g., North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) Problem-solving alliances—e.g., Antarctica Treaty, United Nations (UN) peacekeepers Programs to promote international understanding—e.g., Peace Corps Alliances for environmental preservation Foreign aid Essential Skills Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 SAMPLE LESSON TITLE: NAFTA Conference UNIT VI: North America KEY CONCEPT(s): Geographic Skills, Place Geography, Economic Geography, Physical Geography, and Cultural Geography ENDURING UNDERSTANDING(s): Human achievement of often but not exclusively connected to natural resources. CONCEPTUAL UNIT QUESTION: Which has a greater impact on a country’s development, physical or cultural characteristics? SOL OBJECTIVES: WG.4; WG.9a; WG.9d; WG.10b, c LESSON DESCRIPTION: The goal is for students to understand the interrelationships between the US, Canada, and Mexico through examination of NAFTA. Students will hold a conference with representatives of the US, Canada, and Mexico. The members will discuss current issues and problems they have with the NAFTA trade agreement. Materials/Resources: Internet access to CIA World Factbook (www.cia.gov), and the World Almanac Statesmen Yearbook, current textbook, country books from the media center on Canada, the US, and Mexico, The US Department of Commerce for NAFTA simulation (Appendix E1), research questions to NAFTA simulation (Appendices E2, E3) Strategies: simulation, individual and group research and synthesis, role playing, and note taking Student Action: • form a staff to research their nations. Each staff will consist of people who have different occupations. • select an identity and find information that is important to his or her perspective. • take a position (pro or con) on the treaty. • read sheets on Roles for NAFTA Simulation and the Research Questions prior to selecting roles. • create a visual which will become an integral part of their speech. • present a speech and presentation on their position. 110 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 Teacher Action: • divide students into three groups: Canada, the United States, and Mexico. • monitor student progress in research, note taking, and creation of visual and speech. Assessment: visual, speech, research, note taking Adaptation: HILT: provide note-taking sheet for students to use when collecting research. Students can use a T-chart to list the pros and cons of the treaty from the perspective of their role. Extensions: • Write a letter to your congressman to express your thoughts on NAFTA. • Create an opinion ballot to vote on the current real life issues facing NAFTA. 111 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 112 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 113 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 114 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 UNIT VII: Latin America STANDARDS OF LEARNING: This unit will address the following objectives: SOL WG.1 The student will use maps, globes, photographs, and pictures in order to c) develop and refine mental maps of world regions; SOL WG.3 The student will apply the concept of a region by a) explaining how characteristics of regions have led to regional labels; c) analyzing how cultural characteristics, including the world’s major languages, ethnicities, and religions, link or divide regions. SOL WG.4 The student will locate and analyze physical, economic, and cultural characteristics of world regions: Latin America and the Caribbean SOL WG.6 The student will analyze past and present trends in human migration and cultural interaction as they are influenced by social, economic, political, and environmental factors. 115 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 ENDURING UNDERSTANDING: When cultures interact they sometimes adopt or modify each other’s customs or characteristics. CONCEPTUAL UNIT QUESTION: What does it mean to be “Latin”? or Did Colonialism help or hinder the development of Latin America? PREVIEW ACTIVITY: List the characteristics that make a country “Latin American”. SUMMARY OF KEY TERMS/PEOPLE: The following list of terms reflects some of the important vocabulary and individuals students should know to successfully understand course content and pass the SOL exams. archipelago basin campesino canopy cash crop caudillo cay Colombian Exchange colonialism conquistadores cordillera ejido El Nino estuary Evo Morales favela gasahol gauchos guerrilla hacienda hurricane Hugo Chavez irrigation isthmus land redistribution latifundio leeward Llanos maquiladoras mestizo migrant worker mulatto NAFTA pampas peninsula piedmont rain shadow effect savanna selva sertao service industry sinkhole subsistence farming sugar cane timber line tropical storm vertical zonation windward SOL ESSENTIAL UNDERSTANDINGS, QUESTIONS, CONTENT and SKILLS: The following pages, from the State’s Curriculum Framework, outline the essential understandings, questions, knowledge and skills related to the SOLs. They provide the base from which the content in this unit is studied. 116 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.1c The student will use maps, globes, photographs, and pictures in order to c) develop and refine mental maps of world regions; Essential Understandings A map is a visual representation of geographic information. Essential Questions Essential Knowledge Essential Skills What are ways that maps show information? Standard ways that maps show information Select the appropriate geographic resource to draw conclusions. What are the major types of thematic maps? • • • • • Compare and contrast information found on different types of maps. Symbols Color Lines Boundaries Contours Types of thematic maps • • • • • • • 117 Population (e.g., distribution and density) Economic activity Resource Climate Vegetation Physical Political Compare maps and make inferences. Draw conclusions and make inferences about data. Identify and interpret regional patterns on maps. Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.3a The student will apply the concept of a region by a) explaining how characteristics of regions have led to regional labels. Essential Understandings Essential Questions Essential Knowledge Essential Skills Regions are areas of Earth’s surface which share unifying characteristics. Why do geographers create and use regions as organizing concepts? Regions are used to simplify the world for study and understanding. Locate areas (regions) on maps and globes. Regions may be defined by physical or cultural characteristics. What are some examples of physical and cultural regions? Physical regions Interpret regional patterns on maps and globes. Regional labels may reflect changes in people’s perceptions. What are some examples of regional labels that reflect changes in perceptions? • Cultural regions Draw conclusions and make generalizations about data. • Explain cause and effect relationships. • 118 Rainforest Language • Latin America Religion Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.3c The student will apply the concept of a region by c) analyzing how cultural characteristics, including the world’s major languages, ethnicities and religions, link or divide regions. Essential Understandings Cultural differences can link or divide regions. Essential Questions Essential Knowledge How can cultural characteristics link or divide regions? Language • • Hispanic America—Spanish Brazil—Portuguese Essential Skills Identify and interpret regional patterns on maps. Draw conclusions and make generalizations about information. Religion as a unifying force Explain cause and effect relationships. • Christianity Compare and contrast differing sets of ideas, beliefs, and behaviors. 119 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.4 The student will locate and analyze physical, economic, and cultural characteristics of world regions: Latin America and the Caribbean . . . , Countries Physical Characteristics Latin America and the Caribbean Mexico and Central America: Mexico, Belize, Guatemala, El Salvador, Honduras, Nicaragua, Costa Rica, Panama Latin America and the Caribbean • Major mountain ranges—Andes, Sierra Madres • Wildlife migration patterns (e.g., Monarch butterflies, raptors) • Rainforests • Coastal desert—Atacama • Reversed seasons south of the equator • Amazon River Basin • Grasslands: pampas, llanos • Tropical climates predominant • Volcanoes and earthquakes • Archipelagoes • Vertical zonation (tierra caliente, tierra templada, tierra fria) South America: Colombia, Venezuela, Guyana, Suriname, French Guiana, Ecuador, Peru, Bolivia, Brazil, Paraguay, Argentina, Uruguay, Chile Caribbean: Cuba, Haiti, Jamaica, Dominican Republic, Puerto Rico (U.S.) Economic Characteristics Cultural Characteristics Latin America and the Caribbean Diverse economies Subsistence farming Plantation agriculture Slash and burn agriculture Cash crops and food crops Haciendas Cattle ranges, gauchos Deforestation Destruction of rainforests Oil resources, Ecuador, Venezuela, and Mexico • Heavy smog, pollution—Mexico City • Disparity of income distribution • North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA)—Mexico, Canada, United States. • Diverse mineral resources (e.g., copper in Chile, iron ore in Venezuela and Brazil) Latin America and the Caribbean Indian civilizations African traditions Influence of European colonization Predominance of Roman Catholic religion • Rigid social structure • Mestizos • Location of settlements: coastal in South America • Megacities, squatter settlements • Rapid population growth • Out-migration Cultural heritage • Music—African influences, calypso, steel drum bands, reggae • Traditional dances • Spanish, Portuguese languages Cultural landscapes • Pyramids, cathedrals • Haciendas, ejidos (communal land) • Machu Picchu • Tikal • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Cities as centers of culture and trade • Mexico City • Rio de Janeiro • Buenos Aires • Santiago 120 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.6 The student will analyze past and present trends in human migration and cultural interaction as they are influenced by social, economic, political, and environmental factors. Essential Understandings Migrations occur because of social, political, and environmental factors. Migrations have influenced cultural landscapes. Modern transportation and communication are encouraging higher levels of cultural interaction worldwide. Essential Questions Essential Knowledge How have social, economic, political, and environmental factors influenced migration? How has migration influenced cultural landscapes? How and why do improvements in transportation and communication technology lead to cultural interaction? Push factors • • • • • • • • • Overpopulation Religious persecution Lack of job opportunities Agricultural decline Conflict Political persecution Natural hazards—Droughts, floods, famines, volcanic eruptions Limits on personal freedom Environmental degradation Pull factors • • • • • • Religion Economic opportunity Land availability Political freedom Ethnic and family ties Arable land Impact of migrations on regions • • • • 121 Language Religion and religious freedom Customs/traditions Cultural landscape Essential Skills Identify and interpret regional patterns on maps. Identify primary ideas expressed in graphic data. Draw conclusions and make generalizations about data. Explain cause and effect relationships. Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 SAMPLE LESSON TITLE: Latin American Movement Map UNIT VII: Latin America ENDURING UNDERSTANDING: When cultures interact they sometimes adopt or modify each other’s customs or characteristics. CONCEPTUAL UNIT QUESTION(s): What does it mean to be “Latin”? or Did Colonialism help or hurt the development of Latin America? KEY CONCEPT(s): Physical Geography, Urban and Rural Geography, Interaction SOL OBJECTIVES: WG.1, WG.4, WG.6 LESSON DESCRIPTION: Working in small groups, students will create a series of maps illustrating movement in Latin America, based on individual readings from the textbook. Maps will include physical features of the region, major transportation routes through the region migration towards and away from an urban area. This lesson is adapted from World Geography Today. Materials/Resources: World Geography Today, Unit 3 (pp186-265), construction paper, coloring materials, Latin America map (Appendix F) Strategies: work in cooperative groups; read and respond to questions individually; present their finished projects as a group. Student Action • read textbook section on his/her region. • answer Section Review questions. • work in cooperative groups. • create maps. • present. 122 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 Teacher Action: • assign groups. • give text assignments. • monitor groups. • evaluate presentations. Assessment: Maps and presentations Adaptation: GT: Make three predictions about the future of your area if current movement trends continue. Special Education: Use outline maps; key word list. HILT: Create word wall for the unit. 123 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 124 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 UNIT VIII: South, Southeast, and East Asia STANDARDS OF LEARNING: This unit will address the following objectives: SOL WG.1 The student will use maps, globes, satellite images, photographs, or diagrams to a) obtain geographical information about the world’s countries, cities, and environments. SOL WG.2 The student will analyze how selected physical and ecological processes shape the Earth’s surface by a) identifying regional climatic patterns and weather phenomena and their effects on people and places. b) describing how humans influence the environment and are influenced by it. c) explaining how technology affects one’s ability o modify the environment and adapt to it. SOL WG.3 The student will apply the concept of a region by a) explaining how characteristics of regions have led to regional labels. b) explaining how regional landscapes reflect the physical environment and characteristics of their inhabitants. c) analyzing how cultural characteristics, including the world’s major languages, ethnicities, and religions, link or divide regions. SOL WG.4 The student will locate and analyze physical, economic, and cultural characteristics of world regions: Latin America and the Caribbean, Europe, the United States and Canada, North Africa and Southwest Asia, Sub-Saharan Africa, Russia and Central Asia, South Asia, Southeast Asia, East Asia, Australia and the Pacific Islands, and Antarctica. 125 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 ENDURING UNDERSTANDING: Geographic areas are linked together by political, cultural, and/or economic characteristics. CONCEPTUAL UNIT QUESTION(s): Is Asia a true region? or Has Globalization had a greater positive or negative impact on Asia? PREVIEW ACTIVITY: Divide students into cooperative learning groups. Have them examine photos, postcards, maps, travel magazines and images of several of the nations in this region. Examples of cultural landscape images are the Taj Mahal, Angkor Wat, Great Wall of China, floating markets, Silk Road, temples, shrines, and terraced rice fields. Examples of physical images may include the Gobi Desert, loess, and the Plateau of Tibet. Each group analyzes the images and sorts them by physical and cultural geography. The students will create image groups based on their own criteria. Next they will locate the place of origin of the images. The teacher will lead a large group discussion that focuses on the images, how the students group them and where they are located in the world SUMMARY OF KEY TERMS/PEOPLE: The following list of terms reflects some of the important vocabulary and individual students should know to successfully understand course content and pass the SOL exams. abdicate buffer state Great Wall of China joint family system Shinto alluvial plain caste system of India green revolution Khyber Pass sphere of influence ancestors Christianity heterogeneity monsoon subcontinent Angkor Wat Confucianism Himalayas mosques Taj Mahal aquaculture cottage industry Hindi nationalism Taoism ASEAN crop rotation Hinduism non-violent resistance temple atheism deforestation homogeneous pagoda terraced fields autonomous region demilitarized zone (DMZ) Hong Kong, Macao partition theocrat Batik dynasty ideograms proliferation typhoon boycott floating markets intensive farming reincarnation warlord Buddhism Gandhi Islam seismic Western and Eastern Ghats SOL ESSENTIAL UNDERSTANDINGS, QUESTIONS, CONTENT and SKILLS: The following pages, from the State’s Curriculum Framework, outline the essential understandings, questions, knowledge and skills related to the SOLs. They provide the base from which the content in this unit is studied. 126 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.1a The student will use maps, globes, satellite images, photographs, or diagrams to a) obtain geographical information about the world’s countries, cities, and environments. Essential Understandings Essential Questions Essential Knowledge Essential Skills Geographic information may be acquired from a variety of sources. How does using a variety of sources support the process of geographic inquiry? Variety of sources • GIS (Geographic Information Systems) • Field work • Satellite images • Photographs • Maps, globes • Data bases • Primary sources Gather, classify, and interpret information. Geographic information supports the process of inquiry into the nature of countries, cities, and environments. Using a variety of sources supports the process of geographic inquiry. 127 Select the appropriate geographic information sources to draw conclusions. Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.2a The student will analyze how selected physical and ecological processes shape the Earth’s surface by a) identifying regional climatic patterns and weather phenomena and their effects on people and places. Essential Understandings Essential Questions Essential Knowledge Essential Skills Climate is defined by certain characteristics. What are the common characteristics that define climate? Compare maps and make inferences. Climate patterns result from the interplay of common elements. What are the elements that influence regional climate patterns? Climate characteristics • Temperature • Precipitation • Seasons (hot/cold; wet/dry) Climate regions have distinctive vegetation. What vegetation is characteristic of key climate zones? Certain weather phenomena are unique Where do specific types of weather to specific regions. phenomena occur? Climate and weather phenomena affect What effects do climate and weather how people live in different regions. phenomena have on people living in different regions? Climate elements • Influence of latitude • Influence of winds • Influence of elevation • Proximity to water • Influence of ocean currents Interpret the idea, concepts, or events expressed by pictures, or other graphic media. Apply latitude to identify climate zones. Interpret charts, diagrams, and climographs. World climate regions Select the appropriate geographic • Low latitudes—e.g., tropical wet, resource to draw conclusions. tropical wet and dry, arid, semiarid, highland • Middle latitudes—e.g., semiarid, arid, Mediterranean (dry summer subtropical) humid continental, marine west coast, highland • High latitudes—e.g., subarctic, tundra, icecap Vegetation regions • Rain forest • Savanna • Desert • Steppe • Middle latitude forests • Taiga • Tundra 128 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.2a (continued) The student will analyze how selected physical and ecological processes shape the Earth’s surface by a) identifying regional climatic patterns and weather phenomena and their effects on people and places. Essential Understandings Essential Questions Essential Knowledge Weather phenomena • • • • Monsoons—South and Southeast Asia Typhoons—Pacific Oceans Hurricanes—Atlantic Ocean Tornadoes—United States Effects of climate • • • • 129 Crops Clothing Housing Natural hazards Essential Skills Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.2b The student will analyze how selected physical and ecological processes shape the Earth’s surface by b) describing how humans influence the environment and are influenced by it. Essential Understandings Essential Questions Physical and ecological processes shape the Earth’s surface. How have physical and ecological processes shaped the Earth’s surface? Humans both influence and are influenced by their environment. Essential Knowledge Physical and ecological processes • Earthquakes • Floods What are some ways humans influence • Volcanoes their environment? • Erosion • Deposition How are humans influenced by their environment? Human impact on environment Water diversion/management • Aral Sea • Colorado River • Aswan High Dam • Canals • Reservoirs • Irrigation Changing landscapes • Agricultural terracing (e.g., China, Southeast Asia) • Polders (e.g., Netherlands) • Deforestation (e.g., Nepal, Brazil, Malaysia) • Desertification (e.g., Africa, Asia) Environmental changes • Acid rain (e.g., forests in Germany, Scandinavia, China and Eastern North America) • Pollution (e.g., Mexico City, Chernobyl, oil spills) 130 Essential Skills Gather, classify, and interpret information. Draw conclusions and make generalizations about data. Explain cause and effect relationships. Identify and interpret regional patterns on maps. Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.3a The student will apply the concept of a region by a) explaining how characteristics of regions have led to regional labels. Essential Understandings Essential Questions Regions are areas of Earth’s surface which share unifying characteristics. Why do geographers create and use regions as organizing concepts? Regions may be defined by physical or What are some examples of physical cultural characteristics. and cultural regions? Essential Knowledge Essential Skills Regions are used to simplify the world for study and understanding. Locate areas (regions) on maps and globes. Physical regions Interpret regional patterns on maps and globes. • • • • • Regional labels may reflect changes in What are some examples of regional people’s perceptions. labels that reflect changes in perceptions? Sahara Taiga Rainforest Great Plains Low Countries Cultural regions • • • • • 131 Language • Latin America • Francophone world Ethnic • Chinatowns • Kurdistan Religion • Islam • Buddhism Economic • Wheat Belts • European Union (EU) Political • North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) • African Union (AU) Draw conclusions and make generalizations about data. Explain cause and effect relationships. Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.3a (continued) The student will apply the concept of a region by a) explaining how characteristics of regions have led to regional labels. Essential Understandings Essential Questions − Essential Knowledge Changes in perceptions • • • 132 Middle East Sun Belt Rust Belt Essential Skills Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.3b The student will apply the concept of a region by b) explaining how regional landscapes reflect the physical environment and the characteristics of their inhabitants. Essential Understandings Essential Questions Regional landscapes are influenced by How does the appearance of the climate and underlying geology. landscape reflect the physical environment? Regional landscapes are influenced by the cultural, economic, and political How does the appearance of the characteristics of their inhabitants. landscape reflect the characteristics of the inhabitants? Essential Knowledge Essential Skills Physical characteristics • Climate affects types of natural vegetation. • Landforms affect transportation, population distribution, and the location of cities. Gather, classify, and interpret information. Analyze photographs and pictures and make inferences. Cultural characteristics Draw conclusions and make generalizations about data. Architectural structures • Religious buildings (e.g., mosques, churches, synagogues, temples, pagodas) • Dwellings (e.g., tiled roofs in Mediterranean, chalets in Switzerland, thatched roofs in Pacific Islands, tents and yurts in Central and Southwest Asia, castles in Europe) Statues and monuments of local, national, or global significance • • • • • • • • • • • • • 133 Taj Mahal (India) Kaaba (Mecca) Western Wall (Jerusalem) Dome of the Rock (Jerusalem) Church of the Holy Sepulcher (Jerusalem) Pyramids (Egypt) Kremlin (Moscow) Eiffel Tower (Paris) Virginia State Capitol Building Washington Monument White House Lincoln Memorial Statue of Liberty Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.3c The student will apply the concept of a region by c) analyzing how cultural characteristics, including the world’s major languages, ethnicities, and religions, link or divide regions. Essential Understandings Essential Questions Essential Knowledge Cultural differences can link or divide How can cultural characteristics link or Language regions. divide regions? • Arab world—Arabic • Hispanic America—Spanish • Brazil—Portuguese • Canada—French/English • Switzerland—Multiple languages • English—World language Ethnic heritage • • • • • Yugoslavia—Serbs, Croats, Bosnians, Albanians Burundi and Rwanda—Hutus and Tutsis United States, Switzerland— Unity in multiple ethnic countries Korea and Japan— Predominantly single ethnicity Cyprus—Greeks and Turks Religion as a unifying force • • • • • 134 Hinduism Buddhism Judaism Christianity Islam Essential Skills Identify and interpret regional patterns on maps. Explain cause and effect relationships. Compare and contrast differing sets of ideas, beliefs, and behaviors. Draw conclusions and make generalizations about information. Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.3c (continued) The student will apply the concept of a region by c) analyzing how cultural characteristics, including the world’s major languages, ethnicities, and religions, link or divide regions. Essential Understandings Essential Questions Essential Knowledge Religion as a divisive force • • • • 135 Conflicts between Hindus and Muslims in Pakistan and India Conflicts between Catholics and Protestants in Northern Ireland Jews, Christians, and Muslims all claiming Jerusalem as their religious heritage site Conflicts between Sunni and Shi’a Essential Skills Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.4 Essential Knowledge The student will locate and analyze physical, economic, and cultural characteristics of world regions: South Asia, Southeast Asia, East Asia . . . Countries Physical Characteristics Economic Characteristics Cultural Characteristics South, Southeast, and East Asia South Asia • • • • • • • • Afghanistan Pakistan Nepal Bhutan Bangladesh India Sri Lanka Maldives Southeast Asia • • • • • • • • • • Philippines Indonesia Malaysia Thailand Cambodia Burma (Myanmar) Laos Vietnam Singapore Brunei East Asia • Mongolia • China (People’s Republic of China) • Japan • Taiwan (Republic of China) • North Korea • South Korea South, Southeast, and East Asia • • • • • • • • • South, Southeast, and East Asia Influence of mountains— Population, settlements, movement, climate Mountains Himalayas Western and Eastern Ghats Mount Fuji Varied climate regions ranging from tropical wet to humid continental Natural hazards— Monsoons, typhoons, volcanoes, and earthquakes Influence of water (rivers, seas, and ocean currents) on agriculture, trade, and transportation Bodies of water • Arabian Sea • Indian Ocean • Bay of Bengal • Ganges River • Indus River • Brahmaputra River • Pacific Ocean • Yangtze River (Chaing Jiang) • Mekong River • Yellow River (Huang He) 136 • • • • • • • • • • • • South, Southeast, and East Asia Varied economies in the • Areas of extremely dense and region ranging from sparse population subsistence/ • Contrast between rural and commercial agriculture to urban areas high-tech industrial • Religious diversity— manufacturing Hinduism, Islam, Buddhism, Participation in global Christianity, Taoism, Shinto, markets Confucianism Newly industrialized • Caste system in India countries—South Korea, • Respect for ancestors Taiwan, Singapore • Religious conflicts Japan—Economic leader (Hindu/Muslim) China in transition from a centrally planned economy Cultural heritage Agricultural advancements and technology, enabling • Silks greater food production— • Batik “Green Revolution” • Wood and ivory carving Environmental degradation • Ideograms, unique alphabets Deforestation • Jewels Fishing ASEAN (Association of Cities as centers of culture and trade Southeast Asian Nations) Rice, tropical crops • Tokyo • Beijing • New Delhi Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.4 (Essential Knowledge continued) The student will locate and analyze physical, economic, and cultural characteristics of world regions: Latin America and the Caribbean, Europe, United States and Canada, North Africa and Southwest Asia, Sub-Saharan Africa, Russia and Central Asia, South Asia, Southeast Asia, East Asia, Australia and the Pacific Islands, and Antarctica. Countries Physical Characteristics • • • • Economic Characteristics Cultural Characteristics Cultural landscape Abundant arable land Loess Plateau of Tibet Gobi Desert • • • • • • • • 137 Taj Mahal Angkor Wat Great Wall of China Floating markets Mosques, minarets Pagodas Temples and shrines Terraced rice fields Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 SAMPLE LESSON TITLE: Postcards from Asia UNIT VIII: South, Southeast, and East Asia ENDURING UNDERSTANDING: Geographic areas are linked together by political, cultural, and/or economic characteristics. CONCEPTUAL UNIT QUESTION: Is Asia a true region? KEY CONCEPT(s): Geographic Skills, Place Geography, Physical Geography, Cultural Geography SOL OBJECTIVES: WG.1a, WG.2a, b, c, WG.3a, b, c, WG.4 LESSON DESCRIPTION: Through media center research, students will explore an Asian country and be able to identify the physical and cultural characteristics that make this country unique. Their product will be a finished postcard. The postcards will be used to study the region. As a warm-up the students will write an answer to the unit question in their geography journal and a discussion will follow. The students will select and research a nation using a variety of resources keeping a log of both the sites as well as the information is gathered. They will take an imaginary journey to their country and create a postcard that reflects the essential understanding of their nation. The writing will include the application of the five themes of geography. They will peer edit their postcards. Materials/Resources: 5x8 index cards, atlases, old magazines, almanacs, world holiday and festivals books, world game books, colored pencils, encyclopedias, cookbooks, Culturegrams, travel magazines, colored pencils, markers, Internet sites, craft books, geography journals, Write Source 2000 textbook. Strategies: prewriting, discussion, research and peer editing Student Action: • select an Asian country to research. • use the Internet and print materials to explore this country. Focus on the location and place, and the physical and cultural geography of the nation. • take notes in your geography journal. • keep a log of your research and resources. • create a postcard of your nation to send home documenting your imaginary journey. Use Write Source 2000 textbook to get help with letter writing skills. • edit your work. Peers edit postcards. • create an image, drawing, painting, graphic design, map or collage that is representative of your nation. • label your country on the front of the card. • review the assignment to assess your work. • provide a written bibliography using the Write source 2000 text as a resource. 138 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 Teacher Action: • facilitate the warm-up discussion. • provide resources for lesson. • provide guidance during the research process. • check daily logs and note taking skills in the geography journals. • create a rubric to assess final product. • assess bibliography. Assessment: notes in journal, on-going bibliography, drafts and final post card Adaptation: Teacher may provide set-by-step help during the writing process. Teacher may help students to web their facts, provide extra support during the research process, and organize their written postcard. Examples of bibliographies may be available for reference. Students may design a Web page to display postcards. They may scan their images, and written card to share their work with the global community. Extension: This activity can be used in any region of the world. 139 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 UNIT IX: Africa STANDARDS OF LEARNING: This unit will address the following objectives: SOL WG.1 The student will use maps, globes, satellite images, photographs, or diagrams to c) develop and refine mental maps of world regions; d) create and compare political, physical, and thematic maps; SOL WG.4 The student will locate and analyze physical, economic, and cultural characteristics of world regions: …North Africa and Southwest Asia, Sub-Saharan Africa… SOL WG.8 The student will distinguish between developed and developing countries and relate the level of economic development to the standard of living and quality of life. SOL WG.9 The student will analyze the global patterns and networks of economic interdependence by a) identifying factors, including comparative advantage, that influence economic activities and trade. 140 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 ENDURING UNDERSTANDING: Exploitation of human and natural resources increases dependence and decreases independence. CONCEPTUAL UNIT QUESTION: Has Africa’s cultural history helped or hindered its economic development? PREVIEW ACTIVITY: What do you know about Africa? T/F Quiz, from World Geography Today: Creative Teaching Strategies. SUMMARY OF KEY TERMS/PEOPLE: The following list of terms reflects some of the important vocabulary and individuals students should know to successfully understand course content and pass the SOL exams. African National Congress African Union (AU) ancestor worship apartheid barter bazaar Berbers caravans cataract colonialism coup deforestation desertification diversify drought ebola virus enclave erg escarpment ethnocracy fellaheen forage/foraging FW de Klerk Harambee IMF imperialism irrigation Jomo Kenyatta landlocked leaching malnutrition mercenary Muammar Qaddafi Nelson Mandela Gamal Abdul Nasser pyrethrum refugee Rift Valley Robert Mugabe sahel sanction segregation souk villagization wadi watershed World Bank SOL ESSENTIAL UNDERSTANDINGS, QUESTIONS, CONTENT and SKILLS: The following pages, from the State’s Curriculum Framework, outline the essential understandings, questions, knowledge and skills related to the SOLs. They provide the base from which the content in this unit is studied. 141 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.1c The student will use maps, globes, satellite images, photographs, or diagrams to c) develop and refine mental maps of world regions. Essential Understandings Essential Questions Essential Knowledge Mental maps are based on objective knowledge and subjective perceptions. How do people use mental maps to organize information? People develop and refine their mental maps through both personal experience and learning. How are perceptions reflected in mental maps? Uses of mental maps • Mental maps serve as indicators of how well people know the spatial characteristics of certain places. How can mental maps be developed and refined? • • Locate places on maps and globes. Interpret maps and globes. Draw maps from memory. Evaluate information. Ways mental maps can be developed and refined • • • • 142 Carry out daily activities (e.g., route to school, shopping) Give directions to others Understand world events Essential Skills Comparing sketch maps to maps in atlases and other resources Describing the location of places in terms of reference points (e.g., the equator, prime meridian) Describing the location of places in terms of geographic features and land forms (e.g., west of the Mississippi River, North of the Gulf of Mexico) Describing the location of places in terms of human characteristics (e.g., languages, types of housing, dress, recreation, customs and traditions) Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.1d The student will use maps, globes, satellite images, photographs, or diagrams to d) create and compare political, physical, and thematic maps. Essential Understandings A map is a visual representation of geographic information. Essential Questions Essential Knowledge Essential Skills What are ways that maps show information? Standard ways that maps show Information Select the appropriate geographic resource to draw conclusions. What are the major types of thematic maps? • • • • • Compare and contrast information found on different types of maps. Symbols Color Lines Boundaries Contours Types of thematic maps • • • • • • • • • • 143 Population Economic activity Resource Language Ethnicity Climate Precipitation Vegetation Physical Political Compare maps and make inferences. Draw conclusions and inferences about data. Identify and interpret regional patterns on maps. Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.4 The student will locate and analyze physical, economic, and cultural characteristics of world regions: Latin America and the Caribbean, Europe, United States and Canada, North Africa and Southwest Asia, Sub-Saharan Africa, Russia and Central Asia, South Asia, Southeast Asia, East Asia, Australia and the Pacific Islands, and Antarctica. Essential Understandings Essential Questions Essential Knowledge The development of a region is influenced by many factors, including physical, economic and cultural characteristics. In what ways do physical, economic, and cultural characteristics influence regional development? The interaction of humans with their environment affects the development of a region. What are some ways that human interaction with the environment affects the development of a region? Different criteria may be used to determine a country’s relative importance. What are some criteria that may be used to determine a country’s relative importance? Elements of the physical environment, such as major bodies of water and mountains, influence the economic and cultural characteristics of regions. What impact do elements of the physical environment, such as major bodies of water and mountains, have on countries? Human interaction with environment • • Deforestation – Congo Basin Desertification – Sahara / Sahel Criteria for determining relative importance • • • • GDP (Gross Domestic Product) Land size Population size Resources Essential Skills Explain charts comparing two or more concepts. Identify primary ideas expressed in graphic data. Gather, classify, and interpret information. Draw conclusions and make generalizations about data. Explain cause and effect relationships. 144 Impact of physical elements Example: Water • Zambezi River—Water power Identify and locate regions, continents, oceans, and major features on maps and globes. Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.4 (Essential Knowledge continued) The student will locate and analyze physical, economic, and cultural characteristics of world regions: Latin America and the Caribbean, Europe, United States and Canada, North Africa and Southwest Asia, Sub-Saharan Africa, Russia and Central Asia, South Asia, Southeast Asia, East Asia, Australia and the Pacific Islands, and Antarctica. Countries Physical Characteristics Economic Characteristics Cultural Characteristics Sub-Saharan Africa Sub-Saharan Africa Sub-Saharan Africa Sub-Saharan Africa Location of countries with particular emphasis on countries listed (determined by their per capita GDP, land size, and population) • • • • • • GDP South Africa Gabon Botswana • • • Land Size • Democratic Republic of Congo • Sudan • Chad • Mozambique • Madagascar Population • Nigeria • Ethiopia • Democratic Republic of Congo • South Africa • Tanzania • Kenya • • • • • • • Continent composed of a huge plateau, escarpments River transportation impeded by waterfalls and rapids Location of equator through middle of region; similar climate patterns north and south of the equator Smooth coastline; few harbors Large number of landlocked states Storehouse of mineral wealth Limited fertility of rainforest soils Kalahari and Namib Deserts Bodies of water • Nile River • Zambezi River • Niger River • Congo River • Atlantic Ocean • Indian Ocean • Red Sea • Lake Victoria • Lake Tanganyika Nature preserves and national parks 145 • • • • • • • • • • • • • Large percentage of population engaged in agriculture (primary activity) Subsistence agriculture Nomadic herding Slash and burn agriculture Plantation agriculture Cash crops and food crops Poorly developed infrastructure Large number of landlocked states Substantial mineral wealth (diamonds, gold, alloys) Major exporters of raw materials Wide range of per capita income Productivity that lags behind population growth Desertification Demographics typical of developing economies • Low per capita GDP • Low life expectancy • High population growth rate • High infant mortality • Large percentage of population under age 15 • Low literacy rates • • • Uneven population distribution Many ethnic groups—Languages, customs Large numbers of refugees Knowledge of history through oral tradition Country names related to historical empires—Mali, Ghana, Zimbabwe Diversity of Africans reflected in cultural heritage • Masks • Sculpture • Dance • Music • Colorful dress • Jewelry Cities as centers of culture and trade • Lagos • Dakar • Johannesburg Cultural landscape • Markets • Churches • Mosques, minarets • Villages • Modern city cores Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.8 The student will distinguish between developed and developing countries and relate the level of economic development to the standard of living and quality of life. Essential Understandings Essential Questions Essential Knowledge Levels of economic development vary from country to country and from place to place within countries. How and why does economic development vary from one part of the world to another? Many criteria are used to assess the standard of living and quality of life. What factors influence the standards of living and quality of life? Resources and technology influence economic development and quality of life. How do resources and technology influence economic development and quality of life? Differences between developing and developed nations • Access to natural resources • Access to capital resources (investment in technology and infrastructure) • Numbers and skills of human resources • Levels of economic development • Standards of living / quality of life • Relationships between economic development and quality of life Essential Skills Explain charts comparing two or more concepts. Identify primary ideas expressed in graphic data. Gather, classify, and interpret information. Draw conclusions and make generalizations about data. Explain cause and effect relationships. Indicators of economic development • Urban/rural ratio • Labor force characteristics (primary, secondary, tertiary sectors) • GDP per capita • Educational achievement Indicators of standards of living and quality of life • Population growth rate (natural increase) • Population age distribution • Literacy rate • Life expectancy • Infant mortality • Percentage of urban population 146 Interpret population pyramids. Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.9c The student will analyze the global patterns and networks of economic interdependence by c) describing ways that economic and social interactions have changed over time. Essential Understandings Economic, social, and therefore spatial relationships change over time. Essential Questions Essential Knowledge How have economic and social interactions changed over time? Changes over time Industrial labor systems (e.g., cottage industry, factory, office, telecommunications) • Migration from rural to urban areas • Industrialized countries export labor-intensive work to developing nations • Growth of trade alliances • Growth of service (tertiary) industries • How do spatial patterns reflect economic and social change over time? Essential Skills Compare maps and globes and make inferences. Identify regional patterns on maps and globes. Identify primary ideas expressed in graphic data. Gather, classify, and interpret information. Explain cause and effect relationships. Draw conclusions and make generalizations about data. 147 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 SAMPLE LESSON TITLE: Colonialism: Cause and Effect UNIT IX: Africa ENDURING UNDERSTANDING: Exploitation of human and natural resources increases dependence and decreases independence. CONCEPTUAL UNIT QUESTION: Has Africa’s cultural history helped or hindered its economic development? KEY CONCEPT(s): Interaction; historical geography; cultural geography SOL OBJECTIVES: WG.4, WG.9a LESSON DESCRIPTION: Students will differentiate between causes and effects of colonialism in Africa, and will analyze their effects on Africa. Materials/Resources: cause and effect list (Appendices G1, G2), overhead transparencies of Africa (1800’s and 1960’s), definition of colonialism, and the 3Gs (God, glory and gold), T-chart for causes and effects, Venn diagrams of effects Strategies: History Alive! Preview activity, cause vs. effect comparison Student Action: • define and discuss colonialism • read cause/effect list (Appendices G1, G2) • sort and fill in t-chart • compare effects (positive/negative) • fill in Venn diagram. Teacher Action: • lead discussion of colonialism • pass out cause/effect list (Appendices G1, G2)and t-chart • monitor student progress with t-chart • review Venn diagrams to check for student understanding Assessment: T charts, Venn diagrams, discussion Adaptation: GT: Correlate causes and effects, using color-coding. Special Education: As a class, highlight causes, then fill in T-chart. HILT: Skim text for unknown vocabulary, and define in the margins. 148 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 149 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 150 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 UNIT X: Southwest Asia and North Africa STANDARDS OF LEARNING: This unit will address the following objectives: SOL WG.4 The student will locate and analyze physical, economic, and cultural characteristics of world regions: Latin America and the Caribbean, Europe, United States and Canada, North Africa and Southwest Asia, Sub-Saharan Africa, Russia and Central Asia, South Asia, Southeast Asia, East Asia, Australia and the Pacific Islands, and Antarctica. SOL WG.9 The student will analyze the global patterns and networks of economic interdependence by c) mapping, describing, and evaluating the formation of economic unions. SOL WG.10 The student will analyze how the forces of conflict and cooperation affect the division and control of the Earth’s surface by a) explaining and analyzing reasons for the creation of different political divisions. b) analyzing ways cooperation among political jurisdictions is used to solve problems and settle disputes. SOL WG.12 The student will apply geography to interpret the past, understand the present, and plan for the future by a) using geographic knowledge, skills, and perspectives to analyze problems and make decisions. ENDURING UNDERSTANDING: A state of confusion or an identity crisis exists in a place when cultural characteristics conflict but physical characteristics remain the same. CONCEPTUAL UNIT QUESTION(s): What are sources of conflict and unity in Southwest Asia (The Middle East)? Can conflict be resolved peacefully? Should resources be shared equally? What roles do place characteristics play in the conflict and unity in the Middle East? Teacher’s notes: Place characteristics include water, oil, and religion. How does access to fresh water and oil impact the economic and political development of this region? How has it been a source of unity, like with OPEC, and how has it been a source of conflict, such as the war between Iraq and Kuwait? This region is also the birthplace of Judaism, Christianity, and Islam. How has this impacted the people who lived historically and today and their interactions with each other? 151 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 PREVIEW ACTIVITY: Open the unit by asking students to reflect on why they think it is important to study this region. Record student responses on the board or overhead as they students share their thoughts. Use student responses to elaborate on or introduce the unit question. For those teachers using Interactive Notebooks, have students create a Middle East Unit page in their notebooks listing why they think it’s important to learn about the Middle East and what they’d like to learn about the region. A sample assignment follows: On page 35R of your Geography Notebook create a title page for our Unit on the Middle East. • Title the page “The Middle East” • In one paragraph explain why you think it is important to learn about the Middle East. • List what you’d like to learn more about the Middle East. • Add relevant drawings, designs, and pictures to decorate you page. • Make sure your page is colorful, use at least four colors. For those teachers who do not use Interactive Notebooks, this assignment could be modified into a brief essay response or a mini-pamphlet. SUMMARY OF KEY TERMS/PEOPLE: The following list of terms reflects some of the important vocabulary and individuals students should know to successfully understand course content and pass the SOL exams. arable conflict Intifada Mosque/Masjid sect autonomy deport Islam Muslim secularism bazaar desalination Judaism OPEC theocracy bias embargo mandate partition Zionist Christianity guest workers minaret propaganda Zoroastrianism collaborate Hamas monotheism Qu’ran (Koran) SOL ESSENTIAL UNDERSTANDINGS, QUESTIONS, CONTENT and SKILLS: The following pages, from the State’s Curriculum Framework, outline the essential understandings, questions, knowledge and skills related to the SOLs. They provide the base from which the content in this unit is studied. 152 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.4 Essential Knowledge The student will locate and analyze physical, economic, and cultural characteristics of world regions: North Africa and Southwest Asia . . . , Countries Physical Characteristics Economic Characteristics Cultural Characteristics North Africa and Southwest Asia (Middle East) Location of countries with particular emphasis on countries listed (determined by their per capita GDP, land size, and population) GDP • • • • Kuwait United Arab Emirates Qatar Israel Land Size • Algeria • Saudi Arabia • Libya Population • Iran • Turkey • Egypt North Africa and Southwest Asia North Africa and Southwest Asia North Africa and Southwest Asia (Middle East) (Middle East) (Middle East) • Crossroads of Europe, Africa, • Heavy reliance on primary • Rapid urbanization and Asia economic activity (oil drilling, • Modernization centered in agriculture, pastoralism) urban areas while traditional • Desert and semiarid climates— Sahara, sahel, • Major producers of world’s oil life continues in rural areas steppes • Oil revenues—Positive and • Large percentage of • Mountains negative effects population under age 15 • Atlas • Water—The region’s most • Population unevenly • Taurus precious resource distributed • Zagros • Great variation in standard of • Arab countries and Arabic • Water Features living—Ranging from language • Mediterranean Sea relatively high to poverty• Non-Arab countries: Turkey, • Red Sea stricken Iran, Israel • Black Sea • Regional conflicts, political • Birthplace of three major • Arabian Sea unrest that affects tourism monotheistic religions— • Persian/Arabian Gulf • Aswan High Dam—Positive Judaism, Christianity, and • Strait of Hormuz and negative effects Islam • Bosporus Strait • Suez Canal—Enhanced • Conflict over Palestine • Dardanelles Strait shipping routes in the region • Nomadic lifestyles • Nile River • Guest workers • Art that reflects the diversity • Tigris River • Trade important to region of religions (stained glass, • Euphrates River from earliest time geometric tiles, calligraphy, • Jordan River mosaics, prayer rugs) • Wide range of per capita • Seasonal flooding, alluvial income and levels of soils, delta regions, oases, Cities as centers of culture and trade development wadis • Baghdad • Contemporary trade routes (sea lanes) • Cairo • Organization of Petroleum • Istanbul Exporting Countries (OPEC) • Jerusalem • Mecca • Tehran 153 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.4 (Essential Knowledge continued) The student will locate and analyze physical, economic, and cultural characteristics of world regions: Latin America and the Caribbean, Europe, United States and Canada, North Africa and Southwest Asia, Sub-Saharan Africa, Russia and Central Asia, South Asia, Southeast Asia, East Asia, Australia and the Pacific Islands, and Antarctica. Countries Physical Characteristics Economic Characteristics Cultural Characteristics Cultural landscape • • • • • • • • • • 154 Mosques, minarets Church of the Holy Sepulcher Hagia Sophia Bazaars, suqs Western Wall Dome of the Rock Kaaba Pyramids Oil rigs Walled cities Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.9c The student will analyze the global patterns and networks of economic interdependence by c) mapping, describing and evaluating the formation of economic unions. Essential Understandings Essential Questions Essential Knowledge As a global society, the world is increasingly interdependent. What are some examples of economic Examples of economic unions unions? • EU—European Union • NAFTA—North American Economic interdependence fosters the What are the advantages and Free Trade Agreement formation of economic unions. disadvantages of economic unions? • ASEAN—Association of Southeast Asian Nations • OPEC—Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries Advantages of economic unions • More efficient industries • Access to larger markets • Access to natural, human, and capital resources without restrictions • Greater influence on world market Disadvantages of economic unions • Closing of some industries • Concentration of some industries in certain countries, leaving peripheral areas behind • Agribusiness replacing family farms • Difficulty in agreeing on common economic policies 155 Essential Skills Compare maps and globes and make inferences. Identify regional patterns on maps and globes. Identify primary ideas expressed in graphic data. Gather, classify, and interpret information. Explain cause and effect relationships. Draw conclusions and make generalizations about data. Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.10a The student will analyze how the forces of conflict and cooperation affect the division and control of the Earth’s surface by a) explaining and analyzing reasons for the creation of different political divisions. Essential Understandings Essential Questions Divisions are regions of the Earth’s surface over which groups of people establish social, economic, and political control. What are some examples of spatial divisions at the local and regional levels? Essential Knowledge Essential Skills Examples of political divisions Political divisions may generate conflict. What are some reasons for political divisions at the local and regional levels? Political divisions may generate cooperation. How do political divisions generate conflict? • • • • • • • Why do political divisions cooperate? Compare maps and make inferences. Neighborhoods Election districts School districts Regional districts (e.g., bus lines, waste disposal, conservation districts, planning districts, area code zones) Cities Counties States Reasons for political divisions • • • Desire for government closer to home Need to solve local problems Need to administer resources more efficiently Reasons for conflict • • • • • 156 Boundary disputes Cultural differences Economic differences Competition for scarce resources Political advantages (e.g., gerrymandering) Identify regional patterns. Gather, classify, and interpret information. Explain cause and effect relationships. Participate in problem solving. Draw conclusions and make generalizations about data. Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.10a (continued) The student will analyze how the forces of conflict and cooperation affect the division and control of the Earth’s surface by a) explaining and analyzing reasons for the creation of different political divisions. Essential Understandings Essential Questions Essential Knowledge Reasons for cooperation • • • • 157 Natural disasters Economic advantages (attract new businesses) Cultural similarities, ethnic neighborhoods Addressing regional issues (e.g., waste management, magnet schools, transportation) Essential Skills Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.10b The student will analyze how the forces of conflict and cooperation affect the division and control of the Earth’s surface by b) analyzing ways cooperation among political jurisdictions is used to solve problems and settle disputes. Essential Understandings Essential Questions Essential Knowledge Essential Skills Divisions are regions of the Earth’s surface over which groups of people establish social, economic, and political control. What are some examples of spatial divisions at the national and international levels? Examples of spatial divisions Compare maps and make inferences. Spatial divisions may generate conflict. Cooperation may eliminate the need for the division and control of the Earth’s surface. • • • What are some reasons for spatial divisions at the local and regional levels? • • How do spatial divisions generate conflict? • How do spatial divisions cooperate to solve problems and settle disputes? • • • • − • • • Countries Alliances: economic and political North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) European Union (EU) Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) Commonwealth of Nations United Nations Red Cross/Red Crescent Organization of American States (OAS) League of Arab States Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) African Union (AU) Reasons for spatial divisions • • • • 158 Differences in culture, language, religion Retention of historical boundaries Imperial conquest and control Economic similarities and differences Identify regional patterns. Gather, classify, and interpret information. Explain cause and effect relationships. Draw conclusions and make generalizations about data. Participate in problem solving. Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.10b (continued) The student will analyze how the forces of conflict and cooperation affect the division and control of the Earth’s surface by b) analyzing ways cooperation among political jurisdictions is used to solve problems and settle disputes. Essential Understandings Essential Questions Essential Knowledge Reasons for conflict • • • • • 159 Boundary and territorial disputes (Syria/Israel, Western Sahara/Morocco, China/Taiwan, India/Pakistan, Iraq/Kuwait) Cultural differences (language, religion) • Indonesia • Canada (Quebec) • Ireland • Sudan Economic differences (fertile land, access to fresh water, access to coast, fishing rights, natural resources, different economic philosophies) Ethnic differences • Balkans • Cyprus • Rwanda and Burundi • Kashmir Nationalism Essential Skills Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.10b (continued) The student will analyze how the forces of conflict and cooperation affect the division and control of the Earth’s surface by b) analyzing ways cooperation among political jurisdictions is used to solve problems and settle disputes. Essential Understandings Essential Questions Essential Knowledge Examples of cooperation • • • • • • • • 160 Humanitarian initiatives—e.g., Red Cross/Red Crescent Economic alliances—e.g., Law of Sea, China and United States, multinational corporations, North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) Cultural alliances—e.g., Francophone world, Commonwealth of Nations Military alliances—e.g., North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) Problem-solving alliances—e.g., Antarctica Treaty, United Nations (UN) peacekeepers Programs to promote international understanding—e.g., Peace Corps Alliances for environmental preservation Foreign aid Essential Skills Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.l2a The student will apply geography to interpret the past, understand the present, and plan for the future by a) using geographic knowledge, skills, and perspectives to analyze problems and make decisions. Essential Understandings Essential Questions An understanding of the practical What are some practical applications applications of geography enables of geography? students to be informed, active citizens in their communities. Essential Knowledge Essential Skills Geographic applications at local and Organize and interpret information. regional levels Use maps and other geographic resources to obtain information and • Air and water quality monitoring and management draw conclusions. • Recycling programs Participate in problem solving and • Land use and transportation decision making. planning • Selection of locations for residential and commercial development 161 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 SAMPLE LESSON TITLE: Understanding Christianity, Islam, and Judaism (History Alive! WH-10-6, Activity 1.2) UNIT X: Southwest Asia and North Africa ENDURING UNDERSTANDING: A state of confusion or an identity crisis exists in a place when cultural characteristics conflict but physical characteristics remain the same. CONCEPTUAL UNIT QUESTION: What roles do place characteristics play in the conflict and unity in the Middle East? Teacher’s notes: Place characteristics include water, oil, and religion. How does access to fresh water and oil impact the economic and political development of this region? How has it been a source of unity, like with OPEC, and how has it been a source of conflict, such as the war between Iraq and Kuwait? This region is also the birthplace of Judaism, Christianity, and Islam. How has this impacted the people who lived historically and today and their interactions with each other? KEY CONCEPT(s): Place Geography, Cultural Geography, Historical Geography ESSENTIAL QUESTION(s): • What are some examples of political divisions at the local and regional levels? • How do political divisions generate conflict? SOL OBJECTIVES: WG.4; WG.9d; WG.10a; WG.10b, c; WG.l2a LESSON DESCRIPTION: This History Alive! Lesson is a skill builder activity that introduces students to the three major religions in the Middle East: Christianity, Islam, and Judaism. Working in pairs, students read background information that introduces several topics -- God, key beliefs, holy book, practices and rituals, worship services, and branches -- about one of the three religions. Then, pairs design spoke diagrams depicting aspects of the religion. Students examine each others’ diagrams and record the information they discover about each religions – to create Venn diagrams showing the similarities among and unique characteristics of the three religions. Materials/Resources: History Alive! “Understanding Christianity, Islam, and Judaism.” (WH-10-6, Activity 1.2), “Comparing Religions” Venn diagram from Teen Newsweek, October 1, 2001. This Venn Diagram includes18 statements at the bottom of the page, that apply to one, two, or all of the religions. This resource is a useful adaptation for integrated and HILT classes, or to curb time from the overall lesson. See Appendix H. Strategies: History Alive! skill builder activity, students work in mixed ability pairs and then later in larger groups of three to four. Students research and record information. Venn diagrams and spoke diagrams used to collect and display information. 162 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 Student Action: • work in mixed ability pairs to read • create a Spoke Diagram of the information on a single religion of Judaism, Christianity, or Islam. • view these spoke diagrams in order to read and record information about all three religions on a chart. • work in groups of at least three, in which there is a student “expert” from each religion. • using their notes from all three religions and more detailed knowledge of a single religion, the group will work together to fill in a Venn Diagram comparing the similarities and differences between the three religions. Teacher Action: • assign mixed ability pairs • distribute readings to each pairs so that one-third of the class is reading about Judaism, one-third Christianity, and the other third Islam. • create three stations, so students may rotate around the room and fill out a chart collecting data on all three religions. • play music from each religion, for students to listen to and compare (History Alive! Provides an excellent recording). • assigns groups of three students to work on completing Venn Diagram. Assessment: observation Adaptation: “Comparing Religions” Venn diagram from Teen Newsweek, October 1, 2001. This Venn Diagram includes 18statements at the bottom of the page that apply to one, two, or all of the religions. This resource is a useful adaptation for integrated and HILT classes, or to curb time from the overall lesson. See Appendix H. HILT: As a preview activity, elaborate on student’s prior knowledge of religion with such prompts as: “Describe the importance of religion in your life. Describe how you practice your religion. List religious events/holidays. What do you like the most about your religion?” Provide students with a map of Asia to familiarize them with the area. Identify Israel and Saudi Arabia. Prior to the spoke diagram, students use a t-chart to note key and new words. 163 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 164 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 UNIT XI: Polar Regions STANDARDS OF LEARNING: This unit will address the following objectives: SOL WG.2 The student will analyze how selected physical and ecological processes shape the Earth’s surface by a) identifying regional climatic patterns and weather phenomena and their effects on people and places. SOL WG.4: The student will locate and analyze physical, economic, and cultural characteristics of world regions: Latin America and the Caribbean, Europe, United States and Canada, North Africa and Southwest Asia, Sub-Saharan Africa, Russia and Central Asia, South Asia, Southeast Asia, East Asia, Australia and the Pacific Islands, and Antarctica. ENDURING UNDERSTANDING: Human and environmental interaction will impact a place permanently. CONCEPTUAL UNIT QUESTION: Should Antarctica remain a “continent for science and peace” or become a natural resource for economic development? PREVIEW ACTIVITY: "No person who has not spent a period of his life in those 'stark and sullen solitudes that sentinel the Pole' will understand fully what trees and flowers, sunflecked turf and running streams mean to the soul of a man." - Ernest Shackleton "If Antarctica were music it would be Mozart. Art, and it would be Michelangelo. Literature, and it would be Shakespeare. And yet it is something even greater; the only place on earth that is still as it should be. May we never tame it." - Andrew Denton "The continent has become a symbol of our time. The test of man's willingness to pull back from the destruction of the Antarctic wilderness is the test also of his willingness to avert destruction globally. If he cannot succeed in Antarctica he has little chance of success elsewhere." - Edwin Mickleburgh Students will read and listen to each quote. Next, in their journal, they will record their impression of Antarctica as seen through the eyes of each writer. Finally, they will share their ideas with the class. 165 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 SUMMARY OF KEY TERMS/PEOPLE: The following list of terms reflects some of the important vocabulary and individuals students should know to successfully understand course content and pass the SOL exams. Antarctic Circle Antarctic Treaty Arctic Circle Arctic Ocean biodiversity boreal forest circumpolar circumpolar current climate depletion ecosystem endangered fossil fuel geology glacier global climate change habitats high latitudes ice cap ice floe icebreaker indigenous katabatic wind krill Madrid Protocol magnetic pole migratory neutrality ozone hole polar polar desert preservation refuge sea ice Southern Ocean tundra SOL ESSENTIAL UNDERSTANDINGS, QUESTIONS, CONTENT and SKILLS: The following pages, from the State’s Curriculum Framework, outline the essential understandings, questions, knowledge and skills related to the SOLs. They provide the base from which the content in this unit is studied. 166 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.4 The student will locate and analyze physical, economic, and cultural characteristics of world regions: Latin America and the Caribbean, Europe, United States and Canada, North Africa and Southwest Asia, Sub-Saharan Africa, Russia and Central Asia, South Asia, Southeast Asia, East Asia, Australia and the Pacific Islands, and Antarctica. Essential Understandings Essential Questions Essential Knowledge Essential Skills Australia, Pacific Islands, and Antarctica • Australia • New Zealand • Papua New Guinea • Hawaiian archipelago (U.S.) Australia, Pacific Islands, and Antarctica • Wide range of vegetation, from tropical rain forests to desert scrub • Australia mostly desert • The Great Dividing Range • The Great Barrier Reef • Australia’s isolation, resulting in unique animal life • Antarctica, the world’s coldest, driest, windiest continent; icecap • Pacific islands—Volcanic, coral, or continental Australia, Pacific Islands, and Antarctica • Air and water travel that bring goods and services to remote areas • Dry areas of Australia well suited to cattle and sheep ranching • Upset of environmental balance, caused by the introduction of nonnative plants and animals • Ranching, mining (primary activities) • Communication and financial services (tertiary activities) Australia, Pacific Islands, and Antarctica • Pacific islands are sparsely populated. • Most of Australia’s population lives near the coast. • Traditional culture continues to shape life in the Pacific islands. • Lifestyles range from subsistence farming to modern city living. • Cultures reflect the mix of European and indigenous cultures (e.g., Maori and aborigines). • Antarctica has no permanent residents. Cities as centers of culture and trade Canberra, A.C.T. (Australian Capital Territory) • Sydney • Melbourne • Cultural landscape Sydney Opera House Cattle and sheep stations (Australia) • Research stations (Antarctica) • Thatched roof dwelling (Pacific islands) • • 167 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.2a The student will analyze how selected physical and ecological processes shape the Earth’s surface by a) identifying regional climatic patterns and weather phenomena and their effects on people and places. Essential Understandings Essential Questions Climate is defined by certain characteristics. What are the common characteristics that define climate? Climate patterns result from the interplay of common elements. What are the elements that influence regional climate patterns? Climate regions have distinctive vegetation. What vegetation is characteristic of key climate zones? Certain weather phenomena are unique to specific regions. Where do specific types of weather phenomena occur? Climate and weather phenomena affect how people live in different regions. What effects do climate and weather phenomena have on people living in different regions? 168 Essential Knowledge Essential Skills Climate characteristics Temperature Precipitation Seasons (hot/cold; wet/dry) Compare maps and make inferences. • • • Climate elements Influence of latitude Influence of winds Influence of elevation Proximity to water Influence of ocean currents • • • • • World climate regions Low latitudes—e.g., tropical wet, tropical wet and dry, arid, semiarid, highland • Middle latitudes—e.g., semiarid, arid, Mediterranean (dry summer subtropical) humid continental, marine west coast, highland • High latitudes—e.g., subarctic, tundra, icecap Vegetation regions • Rain forest • Savanna • Desert • Steppe • Middle latitude forests • Taiga • Tundra • Interpret the idea, concepts, or events expressed by pictures, or other graphic media. Apply latitude to identify climate zones. Interpret charts, diagrams, and climographs. Select the appropriate geographic resource to draw conclusions. Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 SAMPLE LESSON TITLE: Global Decisions about Antarctica - a Simulation and Debate UNIT XI: Polar Regions ENDURING UNDERSTANDING: Human and environmental interaction will impact a place permanently. CONCEPTUAL UNIT QUESTION: Should Antarctica remain a “continent for science and peace” or become a natural resource for economic development? KEY CONCEPT(s): Geographic Skills, Place Geography, Physical Geography, Political Geography, Environmental Geography SOL OBJECTIVES: WG.2; WG.4 LESSON DESCRIPTION: This is a simulation to discuss and debate the future use of the natural resources of Antarctica. The students will predict the impact of human-environment interaction on the global community. The students will participate in research to record and gather information concerning Antarctica, the historic agreements, and geographic facts concerning the continent. They will use the internet to locate and access real world Web sites where scientists and government officials provide accurate facts and detailed information. They will analyze their findings and develop a point of view about the future use of the region. They will work in groups and debate the future use of Antarctica. Materials/Resources: Polar projections, books, magazine articles and Web sites on Antarctica, a copies of the Madrid Protocol, and the Antarctic Treaty, VHS video Eyewitness: Arctic and Antarctic, National Geographic photo pack Oceania and Antarctica, National Science Foundation materials US Antarctica, rubric, peer checking form, and evaluation form and Helgren and Sager. World Geography Today. Holt, Rhinehart and Winston: Austin, 2003. Student Action: • select one of the cooperative learning groups. • researchers read, record and analyze facts about Antarctica. • keep a daily learning log. • work in a group to share information and develop a position. • students take on role of their group and present their findings. • debate the future use of the continent. • Present a proposal with visual reinforcement 169 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 Teacher Action: • divide the class into four cooperative learning groups: an ecotourism company, research scientists, representatives from global mining companies, and global environmentalists. • go over the simulation and explain the rubric. • provide and review the research resources and materials. • circulate around the room to monitor the groups and provide guidance. • facilitate the simulation Assessment: peer checking form, evaluation form, and self-assessment rubric Adaptation: The Eyewitness: Arctic and Antarctica video is excellent for visual learners, HILTEX students and Special Education students. It provides detailed information, historic geography, and beautiful images. GT students can write or email questions to the Antarctica scientists concerning their work and experiences. They can write a science fiction story about their vision of Antarctica in future years. 170 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 UNIT XII: Europe –This unit focuses on contemporary issues of trade and national identity. Students closely examine the cultures of selected countries. Students also study the physical and cultural geography of the region. Students will learn the place geography of Western and Eastern Europe. STANDARDS OF LEARNING: This unit will address the following objectives: SOL WG.1 The student will use maps, globes, satellite images, photographs, or diagrams to a) obtain geographical information about the world’s countries, cities, and environments; b) apply the concepts of location, scale, map projection, or orientation; c) develop and refine mental maps of world regions; d) create and compare political, physical, and thematic maps. SOL WG.3 The student will apply the concept of a region by a) explaining how characteristics of regions have led to regional labels; b) explaining how regional landscapes reflect the physical environment and the characteristics of their inhabitants; c) analyzing how cultural characteristics, including the world’s major languages, ethnicities, and religions, link or divide regions. SOL WG.4 The student will locate and analyze physical, economic, and cultural characteristics of world regions: Latin America and the Caribbean, Europe, United States and Canada, North Africa and Southwest Asia, Sub-Saharan Africa, Russia and Central Asia, South Asia, Southeast Asia, East Asia, Australia and the Pacific Islands, and Antarctica. SOL WG.9 The student will analyze the global patterns and networks of economic interdependence by a) identifying factors, including comparative advantage, that influence economic activities and trade; b) describing ways that economic and social interactions have changed over time; c) mapping, describing and evaluating the formation of economic unions. SOL WG.10 The student will analyze how the forces of conflict and cooperation affect the division and control of the Earth’s surface by a) explaining and analyzing reasons for the creation of different political divisions; b) analyzing ways cooperation among political jurisdictions is used to solve problems and settle disputes. SOL WG.12 The student will apply geography to interpret the past, understand the present, and plan for the future by a) using geographic knowledge, skills, and perspectives to analyze problems and make decisions; b) relating current events to the physical and human characteristics of places and regions. 171 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 ENDURING UNDERSTANDING: Economic interdependence may encourage trust or promote domination. CONCEPTUAL UNIT QUESTION: Is Europe a region of increasing unity or disunity? PREVIEW ACTIVITY: Student groups examine regional maps from the textbook and teacher-created placards with pictures or headlines addressing European topics (e.g. the EU, World Bank protests, immigration, the Balkans). Each student group examines this material for evidence of conflict or cooperation within contemporary European culture. Students record their evidence on a T-chart with one column labeled Conflict, the other Cooperation. Students then enter a whole class discussion focused on the unit question. Following the discussion, students should draw a spectrum labeled ‘European (dis)unity?’ The left side of the spectrum will be marked disunity, the right side unity. The student will determine where to place key events or ideas from the T-chart. One item from each half of the spectrum should be illustrated in color. As an option, students may turn the spectrum into a see-saw, thermometer, or a balance and indicate an initial response to the unit question. SUMMARY OF KEY TERMS/PEOPLE: The following list of terms reflects some of the important vocabulary and individuals students should know to successfully understand course content and pass the SOL exams. alliance annex arable autonomy, nationalism balance of power balance of trade Benelux chancellor Chunnel city state communism confederation constitutional monarchy dialect dike, polder economic association Eurasia euro European Union (EU, EC, EEC) famine fjord geyser Gulf Stream Holocaust imperialism Industrial Revolution iron curtain loch microstate multilingual navigable neutral Nordic parliamentary democracy Partnership for Peace (PFP) passport peat peninsula quota red army regional specialization Renaissance reunification romance languages socialism tariff nationalize NATO natural boundary pope primate city prime minister UN United Kingdom (UK) USSR SOL ESSENTIAL UNDERSTANDINGS, QUESTIONS, CONTENT and SKILLS: The following pages, from the State’s Curriculum Framework, outline the essential understandings, questions, knowledge and skills related to the SOLs. They provide the base from which the content in this unit is studied. 172 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.1a The student will use maps, globes, satellite images, photographs, or diagrams to a) obtain geographical information about the world’s countries, cities, and environments. Essential Understandings Essential Questions Essential Knowledge Essential Skills Geographic information may be acquired from a variety of sources. How does using a variety of sources support the process of geographic inquiry? Variety of sources Gather, classify, and interpret information. • Geographic information supports the process of inquiry into the nature of countries, cities, and environments. • • • • • • Using a variety of sources supports the process of geographic inquiry. 173 GIS (Geographic Information Select the appropriate geographic Systems) information sources to draw Field work conclusions. Satellite images Photographs Maps, globes Data bases Primary sources Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.1b The student will use maps, globes, satellite images, photographs, or diagrams to b) apply the concepts of location, scale, map projection or orientation. Essential Understandings Essential Questions Latitude and longitude define absolute What are some uses of latitude and location. longitude? Relative location describes the spatial relationships between and among places. Areas can be represented using a variety of scales. The amount of detail shown on a map is dependent on the scale used. A directional indicator (e.g., compass rose) identifies map orientation. Essential Knowledge Essential Skills Concepts Use compass rose to identify and use cardinal directions. • • How is relative location used to describe places? Why are different scales necessary for developing map representations? Why is a directional indicator (e.g., compass rose) necessary on a map? How do maps distort spatial relationships when compared with the globe? Maps distort spatial relationships when compared with the globe. 174 • • • Scale Absolute location • Latitude • Longitude Relative location Orientation Map distortion • Mercator • Robinson • Polar Locate places using latitude/longitude on maps and globes. Compare maps of different scales. Gather, classify, and interpret information. Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.1c The student will use maps, globes, photographs, and pictures in order to c) develop and refine mental maps of the world regions. Essential Understandings Essential Questions Mental maps are based on objective How do people use mental maps to knowledge and subjective perceptions. organize information? People develop and refine their mental How are perceptions reflected in maps through both personal experience mental maps? and learning. How can mental maps be developed Mental maps serve as indicators of and refined? how well people know the spatial characteristics of certain places. Essential Knowledge Essential Skills Uses of mental maps Locate places on maps and globes. • • • Carry out daily activities (e.g., route to school, shopping) Give directions to others Understand world events Interpret maps and globes. Draw maps from memory. Evaluate information. Ways mental maps can be developed and refined • • • • 175 Comparing sketch maps to maps in atlases or other resources Describing the location of places in terms of reference points (e.g., the equator, prime meridian) Describing the location of places in terms of geographic features and land forms (e.g., west of the Mississippi River, north of the Gulf of Mexico) Describing the location of places in terms of the human characteristics of a place (e.g., languages, types of housing, dress, recreation, customs and traditions) Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.1d The student will use maps, globes, photographs, and pictures in order to d) create and compare political, physical, and thematic maps. Essential Understandings Essential Questions Essential Knowledge Essential Skills A map is a visual representation of geographic information. What are the ways that maps show information? Standard ways that maps show Information Select the appropriate geographic resource to draw conclusions. • • • • • What are the major types of thematic maps? Symbols Color Lines Boundaries Contours Types of thematic maps • • • • • • • • • • 176 Population (e.g., distribution and density) Economic activity Resource Language Ethnicity Climate Precipitation Vegetation Physical Political Compare and contrast information found on different types of maps. Compare maps and make inferences. Draw conclusions and make inferences about data. Identify and interpret regional patterns on maps. Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.3a The student will apply the concept of a region by a) explaining how characteristics of regions have led to regional labels. Essential Understandings Essential Questions Essential Knowledge Regions are areas of Earth’s surface which share unifying characteristics. Why do geographers create and use regions as organizing concepts? Regions are used to simplify the world Locate areas (regions) on maps and for study and understanding. globes. Regions may be defined by physical or What are some examples of physical cultural characteristics. and cultural regions? Physical regions • • • • • Regional labels may reflect changes in What are some examples of regional people’s perceptions. labels that reflect changes in perceptions? Sahara Taiga Rainforest Great Plains Low Countries Cultural regions • • • • • 177 Language • Latin America • Francophone world Ethnic • Chinatowns • Kurdistan Religion • Islam • Buddhism Economic • Wheat Belts • European Union (EU) Political • North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) • African Union (AU) Essential Skills Interpret regional patterns on maps and globes. Draw conclusions and make generalizations about data. Explain cause and effect relationships. Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.3a (continued) The student will apply the concept of a region by a) explaining how characteristics of regions have led to regional labels. Essential Understandings Essential Questions Essential Knowledge Changes in perceptions • • • 178 Middle East Sun Belt Rust Belt Essential Skills Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.3b The student will apply the concept of a region by b) explaining how regional landscapes reflect the physical environment and the characteristics of their inhabitants. Essential Understandings Essential Questions Essential Knowledge Regional landscapes are influenced by How does the appearance of the Physical characteristics climate and underlying geology. landscape reflect the physical • Climate affects types of natural vegetation. environment? • Landforms affect transportation, population Regional landscapes are influenced by distribution, and the location of cities. the cultural, economic, and political How does the appearance of the characteristics of their inhabitants. landscape reflect the characteristics of Cultural characteristics the inhabitants? • Architectural structures • Religious buildings (e.g., mosques, churches, synagogues, temples, pagodas) • Dwellings (e.g., tiled roofs in Mediterranean, chalets in Switzerland, thatched roofs in Pacific Islands, tents and yurts in Central and Southwest Asia, castles in Europe) • Statues and monuments of local, national, or global significance • Taj Mahal (India) • Kaaba (Mecca) • Western Wall (Jerusalem) • Dome of the Rock (Jerusalem) • Church of the Holy Sepulcher (Jerusalem) • Pyramids (Egypt) • Kremlin (Moscow) • Eiffel Tower (Paris) • Virginia State Capitol Building • Washington Monument • White House • Lincoln Memorial • Statue of Liberty 179 Essential Skills Gather, classify, and interpret information. Analyze photographs and pictures and make inferences. Draw conclusions and make generalizations about data. Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.3c The student will apply the concept of a region by c) analyzing how cultural characteristics, including the world’s major languages, ethnicities, and religions, link or divide regions. Essential Understandings Essential Questions Essential Knowledge Cultural differences can link or divide How can cultural characteristics link or Language regions. divide regions? • Arab world—Arabic • Hispanic America—Spanish • Brazil—Portuguese • Canada—French/English • Switzerland—Multiple languages • English—World language Ethnic heritage • Yugoslavia—Serbs, Croats, Bosnians, Albanians • Burundi and Rwanda—Hutus and Tutsis • United States, Switzerland— Unity in multiple ethnic countries • Korea and Japan— Predominantly single ethnicity • Cyprus—Greeks and Turks Religion as a unifying force • Hinduism • Buddhism • Judaism • Christianity • Islam Religion as a divisive force • Sunni vs. Shi’a 180 Essential Skills Identify and interpret regional patterns on maps. Explain cause and effect relationships. Compare and contrast differing sets of ideas, beliefs, and behaviors. Draw conclusions and make generalizations about information. Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.4 The student will locate and analyze physical, economic, and cultural characteristics of world regions: Latin America and the Caribbean, Europe, United States and Canada, North Africa and Southwest Asia, Sub-Saharan Africa, Russia and Central Asia, South Asia, Southeast Asia, East Asia, Australia and the Pacific Islands, and Antarctica. Essential Understandings Essential Questions The development of a region is In what ways do physical, economic, influenced by many factors, including and cultural characteristics influence physical, economic and cultural regional development? characteristics. What are some ways that human The interaction of humans with their interaction with the environment environment affects the development affects the development of a region? of a region. What are some criteria that may be Different criteria may be used to used to determine a country’s relative determine a country’s relative importance? importance. What impact do elements of the Elements of the physical environment, physical environment, such as major such as major bodies of water and bodies of water and mountains, have mountains, influence the economic and on countries? cultural characteristics of regions. Essential Knowledge Essential Skills See attached charts for specific information concerning physical, economic, and cultural characteristics. Explain charts comparing two or more concepts. Human interaction with environment Criteria for determining relative importance • GDP (Gross Domestic Product) • Land size • Population size • Resources Impact of physical elements Example: Water Example: Mountains 181 Identify primary ideas expressed in graphic data. Gather, classify, and interpret information. Draw conclusions and make generalizations about data. Explain cause and effect relationships. Identify and locate regions, continents, oceans, and major features on maps and globes. Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.4 (Essential Knowledge continued) The student will locate and analyze physical, economic, and cultural characteristics of world regions: Latin America and the Caribbean, Europe, United States and Canada, North Africa and Southwest Asia, Sub-Saharan Africa, Russia and Central Asia, South Asia, Southeast Asia, East Asia, Australia and the Pacific Islands, and Antarctica. Countries Europe Location of countries with particular emphasis on countries listed (determined by their per capita GDP, land size, and population) GDP • • • Norway Switzerland Luxembourg Land Size • Ukraine • France • Spain Population • Germany • United Kingdom • Italy • France Physical Characteristics Economic Characteristics Cultural Characteristics Europe Europe • Part of large landmass Europe called Eurasia • Mountain regions—Tourism, • Birthplace of Industrial recreation, and mineral resources Revolution • Peninsulas • Areas threatened by air and water • Many ethnic groups— • Iberian pollution Languages, religions, customs • Italian • Forests (Black Forest) • Sporadic conflict among • Scandinavian groups (wars, revolutions) • Cities (Venice) • Jutland • Birthplace of western • Rivers (Rhine, Danube, Seine) • Islands culture— Greece and Rome • Development of industrial and • Great Britain • Spread of European culture to transportation centers near mineral • Ireland many other parts of the world deposits, coal and iron ore • Sicily (exploration, colonization, • Ruhr valley • Fjords imperialism) • Po valley • Mountains • Highly urbanized • Rivers and canals serving as major • Alps • One of the world’s most transportation links • Pyrenees densely populated areas • Oil reserves in the North Sea • North European plain • North Atlantic Treaty • Well-educated workforce— Industrial • Rivers Organization (NATO) and technological societies, banking in • Danube Switzerland • Rhine Cities as centers of culture and trade • Advanced farming techniques, high • Seine • Berlin crop yields, fertile soils, black earth • Volga • London (chernozem) • Seas • Paris • Well-developed infrastructure • Adriatic • Madrid • The Chunnel • Aegean • Rome • Differences in Western and Eastern • Mediterranean • Athens European industrial development due to • Baltic differing economic systems in prior years • Warsaw • Black • European Union • North 182 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.4 (Essential Knowledge continued) The student will locate and analyze physical, economic, and cultural characteristics of world regions: Latin America and the Caribbean, Europe, United States and Canada, North Africa and Southwest Asia, Sub-Saharan Africa, Russia and Central Asia, South Asia, Southeast Asia, East Asia, Australia and the Pacific Islands, and Antarctica. Countries Physical Characteristics • • • • Economic Characteristics Oceans • Atlantic • Arctic Strait of Gibraltar Varied climate regions—Tundra to Mediterranean Effects of the North Atlantic Drift and prevailing westerlies on Europe’s climates 183 • • • • • Cultural Characteristics Cultural landscape Trade important, especially to island nations; interdependence • Notre Dame, Arc de Triomphe, Louvre, Eiffel Large role of government in some Tower economies (Sweden and Denmark). • Colosseum, Leaning Tower of Pisa, St. Peter’s Basilica Replacement of communism with capitalism in Eastern Europe. • Parthenon Reclaimed land—Polders in • Westminster Abbey, Big Ben Netherlands • Windmills Demographics typical of • Castles developed economies • High per capita GDP • High life expectancy • Low population growth rate • Low infant mortality • Low percentage of population under age 15 • High literacy rate Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.9a The student will analyze the global patterns and networks of economic interdependence by a) identifying factors, including comparative advantage, that influence economic activities and trade. Essential Understandings Essential Questions Essential Knowledge Essential Skills Resources are not equally distributed. What are some factors that influence economic activities and trade? Factors that influence economic Activity Compare maps and globes and make inferences. Economic activities are influenced by availabiltiy of resources, cultural values, economic philosophies, and levels of supply and demand for goods and services. • No country has all the resources it needs to survive and grow. • • 184 Access to human, natural, and capital resources • Skills of the work force • Natural resources • Access to new technologies • Transportaion and communication networks • Availability of investment capital Location and ability to exchange goods • Landlocked countries • Coastal and island countries • Proximity to shipping lanes • Access to communication networks Membership in political and economic alliances that provide access to markets—e.g., European Union (EU), North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) Identify regional patterns on maps and globes. Identify primary ideas expressed in graphic data. Gather, classify, and interpret information. Explain cause and effect relationships. Draw conclusions and make generalizations about data. Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.9b The student will analyze the global patterns and networks of economic interdependence by b) identifying factors, including comparative advantage, that influence economic activities and trade. Essential Understandings Essential Questions Essential Knowledge Essential Skills Resources are not distributed equally. What is comparative advantage? Terms to know • Comparative advantage: Countries will export goods and services that they can produce at lower relative costs than other countries. Compare maps and globes and make inferences. Effects of unequal distribution of resources • Specialization in goods and services that a country can market for profit • Exchange of goods and services (exporting what a country can market for profit; importing what a country cannot produce profitably) Identify primary ideas expressed in graphic data. No country has all the resources it needs to survive and grow. Nations participate in those economic activities compatible with their human, natural, and capital resources. International trade fosters interdependence. What are the effects of unequal distribution of resources? How do nations use their resources to engage in economic activities? Why do countries engage in trade? What is the relationship between comparative advantage and international trade? Identify regional patterns on maps and globes. Gather, classify, and interpret information. Explain cause and effect relationships. Draw conclusions and make generalizations about data Some countries’ use of resources • Japan—Highly industrial nation despite limited natural resources • Russia—Numerous resources, many of which are not economically profitable to develop • United States—Diversified economy, abundant natural resources, specialized industries • Côte d’Ivoire—Limited natural resources, cash crops in exchange for manufactured goods • Switzerland—Limited natural resources, production of services on a global scale 185 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.9b (continued) The student will analyze the global patterns and networks of economic interdependence by b) identifying factors, including comparative advantage, that influence economic activities and trade. Essential Understandings Essential Questions Essential Knowledge Reasons why countries engage in trade • To import goods and services that they need • To export goods and services that they can market for profit Effects of comparative advantage on international trade • Enables nations to produce goods and services that they can market for profit • Influences development of industries (e.g., steel, aircraft, automobile, clothing) • Supports specialization and efficient use of human resources 186 Essential Skills Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.9c The student will analyze the global patterns and networks of economic interdependence by c) mapping, describing and evaluating the formation of economic unions. Essential Understandings Essential Questions As a global society, the world is increasingly interdependent. What are some ways that global patterns and networks of economic interdependence can be depicted on Economic interdependence fosters the maps? formation of economic unions. What are some examples of economic unions? Essential Knowledge Essential Skills Economic interdependence can be depicted through trade, resource, or transportation maps. Compare maps and globes and make inferences. Examples of economic unions • • What are the advantages and disadvantages of economic unions? • • EU—European Union NAFTA—North American Free Trade Agreement ASEAN—Association of Southeast Asian Nations OPEC—Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries Advantages of economic unions • • • • More efficient industries Access to larger markets Access to natural, human, and capital resources without restrictions Greater influence on world market Disadvantages of economic unions • • • • 187 Closing of some industries Concentration of some industries in certain countries, leaving peripheral areas behind Agribusiness replacing family farms Difficulty in agreeing on common economic policies Identify regional patterns on maps and globes. Identify primary ideas expressed in graphic data. Gather, classify, and interpret information. Explain cause and effect relationships. Draw conclusions and make generalizations about data. Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.10a The student will analyze how the forces of conflict and cooperation affect the division and control of the Earth’s surface by a) explaining and analyzing reasons for the creation of different political divisions. Essential Understandings Essential Questions Essential Knowledge Essential Skills Divisions are regions of the Earth’s surface over which groups of people establish social, economic, and political control. What are some examples of political divisions at the local and regional levels? Examples of political divisions Compare maps and globes and make inferences. Political divisions may generate conflict. What are some reasons for political divisions at the local and regional levels? Political divisions may generate cooperation. How do political divisions generate conflict? • • • • • • • Why do political divisions cooperate? Neighborhoods Election districts School districts Regional districts (e.g., bus lines, waste disposal, conservation districts, planning districts, area code zones) Cities Counties States Reasons for political divisions • • • Desire for government closer to home Need to solve local problems Need to administer resources more efficiently Reasons for conflict • • • • • 188 Boundary disputes Cultural differences Economic differences Competition for scarce resources Political advantages (e.g., gerrymandering) Identify regional patterns on maps and globes. Identify primary ideas expressed in graphic data. Gather, classify, and interpret information. Explain cause and effect relationships. Draw conclusions and make generalizations about data. Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.10a (continued) The student will analyze how the forces of conflict and cooperation affect the division and control of the Earth’s surface by a) explaining and analyzing reasons for the creation of different political divisions. Essential Understandings Essential Questions Essential Knowledge Reasons for cooperation • • • • 189 Natural disasters Economic advantages (attract new businesses) Cultural similarities, ethnic neighborhoods Addressing regional issues (e.g., waste management, magnet schools, transportation) Essential Skills Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.10b The student will analyze how the forces of conflict and cooperation affect the division and control of the Earth’s surface by b) analyzing ways cooperation among political jurisdictions is used to solve problems and settle disputes. Essential Understandings Essential Questions Essential Knowledge Essential Skills Divisions are regions of the Earth’s surface over which groups of people establish social, economic, and political control. What are some examples of political divisions at the national and international levels? Examples of political divisions Compare maps and make inferences. Political divisions may generate conflict. Cooperation may eliminate the need for the division and control of the Earth’s surface. • • What are some reasons for political divisions at the local and regional levels? How do political divisions generate conflict? How do political divisions cooperate to solve problems and settle disputes? − Countries Alliances: economic and political • North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) • European Union (EU) • Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) • North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) • United Nations (UN) • Organization of American States (OAS) • League of Arab States • Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) • African Union (AU) Reasons for political divisions • • • • 190 Differences in culture, language, religion Retention of historical boundaries Imperial conquest and control Economic similarities and differences Identify regional patterns. Gather, classify, and interpret information. Explain cause and effect relationships. Participate in problem solving. Draw conclusions and make generalizations about data. Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.10b (continued) The student will analyze how the forces of conflict and cooperation affect the division and control of the Earth’s surface by b) analyzing ways cooperation among political jurisdictions is used to solve problems and settle disputes. Essential Understandings Essential Questions Essential Knowledge − Reasons for conflict − • • • • • 191 Boundary and territorial disputes (Syria/Israel, Western Sahara/Morocco, China/Taiwan, India/Pakistan, Iraq/Kuwait) Cultural differences (language, religion) • Indonesia • Canada (Quebec) • Sudan Economic differences (fertile land, access to fresh water, access to coast, fishing rights, natural resources, different economic philosophies) Ethnic differences • Balkans • Cyprus • Kashmir Nationalism Essential Skills Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.12a The student will apply geography to interpret the past, understand the present, and plan for the future by a) using geographic knowledge, skills, and perspectives to analyze problems and make decisions. Essential Understandings Essential Questions Essential Knowledge An understanding of the practical What are some practical applications applications of geography enables of geography? students to be informed, active citizens in their communities. Essential Skills Geographic applications at local and Organize and interpret information. regional levels Use maps and other geographic • Air and water quality resources to obtain information and monitoring and management draw conclusions. • Recycling programs • Land use and transportation Participate in problem solving and planning decision making. • Selection of locations for residential and commercial development 192 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.12b The student will apply geography to interpret the past, understand the present, and plan for the future by b) relating current events to the physical and human characteristics of places and regions. Essential Understandings Current events are shaped by the physical and human characteristics of the places and regions where they occur. Essential Questions Essential Knowledge How are current events connected to the geographical characteristics of places and regions? Geographic relationships Compare maps and make inferences. • Identify and interpret regional patterns on maps. • 193 Essential Skills How physical characteristics influence current events • Natural hazards (e.g, flooding, earthquakes, volcanoes, drought) • Climate change How human characteristics influence current events • Population distribution • Geographic patterns of ethnic diversity • A sense of place (emotional attachment to specific locations) • Geographic patterns of trade and interdependence (e.g., oil) • Geographic patterns of wealth and poverty (developed and developing nations) Identify primary ideas expressed in graphic data. Gather, classify, and interpret information. Draw conclusions and make generalizations about data. Examine cause and effect relationships. Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 SAMPLE LESSON TITLE: The Case for a Divided Europe? UNIT XII: Europe ENDURING UNDERSTANDING: Economic interdependence may encourage trust or promote domination. CONCEPTUAL UNIT QUESTION: Is Europe a region of increasing unity or disunity? KEY CONCEPT(s): Geographic Skills, Cultural Geography, Economic Geography, Political Geography, Historical Geography SOL OBJECTIVES: WG.1, WG.3, WG.4, WG.9, WG.10,WG.12 LESSON DESCRIPTION: Europe is on trial for disunity. A jury will decide its fate (increasing disunity = guilt, increasing unity = innocence) once the prosecution (Europe is guilty) and defense (Europe is innocent) present their respective cases using witnesses (experts on various topics). A judge will preside. All roles are played by students. Materials/Resources: N/A Strategies simulation, role-play Student Action: • receive their assigned roles. • either research their position (witnesses) or organize their presentation (prosecution and defense). The judge and jury prepare the classroom props. • role-play the trial. • write their response to the unit question using evidence and argumentation gleaned from both the trial and prior learning. Teacher Action: • assigns roles. • supervises research, preparation, and stage setup. • facilitates the trial and assesses preparation and participation. Assessment: preparation, participation, writing Adaptation: Teacher may use this as a regular lesson judging NATO or EU expansion. 194 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 UNIT XIII: Russia & Central Asia STANDARDS OF LEARNING: This unit will address the following objectives: SOL WG.4: The student will locate and analyze physical, economic, and cultural characteristics of world regions: Latin America and the Caribbean, Europe, United States and Canada, North Africa and Southwest Asia, Sub-Saharan Africa, Russia and Central Asia, South Asia, Southeast Asia, East Asia, Australia and the Pacific Islands, and Antarctica. SOL WG.7 The student will identify natural, human, and capital resources and explain their significance by a) showing patterns of economic activity and land use. ENDURING UNDERSTANDING: Changes to the earth’s ecological balance have positive and negative consequences for humans. CONCEPTUAL UNIT QUESTION: Is the global community responsible for helping to clean up the environment in Russia, Central Asia and other parts of the world? Provide support, facts and details for your point of view. PREVIEW ACTIVITY: “Government cannot close its eyes to the pollution of waters, to the erosion of soil, to the slashing of forests any more than it can close its eyes to the need for slum clearance and schools.” Franklin D. Roosevelt (1882-1945) Work with a partner to create a chart reflecting the following different points of view of nations; e.g., economic conditions, needs of population, and environmental conditions. Provide examples of reasons why governments would agree or disagree with the quote. Facilitate a discussion using the students’ written responses. SUMMARY OF KEY TERMS/PEOPLE: The following list of terms reflects some of the important vocabulary and individuals students should know to successfully understand course content and pass the SOL exams. Aral Sea coup heavy industry nationalism soviet Bolshevik Revolution czar Kremlin nuclear power St. Petersburg Catherine the Great entrepreneur Lake Baykal perestroika steppe Chernobyl ethnic minority lethal Peter the Great Taiga Chernozem Eurasia light industry plutonium toxic command economy fossil fuel meltdown privatization Trans-Siberian Railroad communism free market economy mineral Red Square tundra contaminate genocide Moscow Siberia Ural Mountains Cossacks glasnost capitalism SOL ESSENTIAL UNDERSTANDINGS, QUESTIONS, CONTENT and SKILLS: The following pages, from the State’s Curriculum Framework, outline the essential understandings, questions, knowledge and skills related to the SOLs. They provide the base from which the content in this unit is studied. 195 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.4 The student will locate and analyze physical, economic, and cultural characteristics of world regions: Latin America and the Caribbean, Europe, United States and Canada, North Africa and Southwest Asia, Sub-Saharan Africa, Russia and Central Asia, South Asia, Southeast Asia, East Asia, Australia and the Pacific Islands, and Antarctica. Essential Understandings Essential Questions Russia and Central Asia Location of countries with particular emphasis on countries listed (determined by their per capita GDP, land size, and population) Russia and Central Asia Russia and Central Asia • Vast land area—Spans two • Transition from communist to Russia and Central Asia continents, Europe and Asia free market economies • Diverse ethnic groups, (covers 11 time zones) customs and traditions (many • Farming and industry of Turkic and Mongol • Vast areas of tundra, concentrated in the Fertile heritage) permafrost, taiga, and steppe Triangle region, rich, chernozem soils (wheat • Varied climate regions Cultural heritage farming) • Black earth belt (rich • Ballet • Infrastructure—Transchernozem soil) Siberian Railroad, systems of • Fabergé eggs • Mountains rivers and canals and railroads • Music • Caucasus • Energy resources— • Icons • Ural Mountains (divide Hydroelectric power, oil and • Matrioshka dolls Europe from Asia) natural gas • Oriental carpets • Siberia (the sleeping land), • Russian natural resources not located east of the Urals • Samovars fully developed due to • Major oil, natural gas, and climate, limited transportation Cultural landscape mineral resources links, and vastness of the • Russian Orthodox churches • Water features country • St. Basil’s Church • Volga River • Foreign competition for • Red Square • Ob River investment in the region (oil • Kremlin • Amur River pipelines) • Mosques, minarets • Lake Baikal • Widespread pollution • Siberian villages • Caspian Sea • Shrinking of the Aral Sea • Soviet-style apartment blocks • Aral Sea • Political and economic • Bering Strait difficulties after the breakup Cities as centers of culture and trade • Pacific Ocean of the Soviet Union • Moscow • Arctic Ocean • Cotton production in Central • St. Petersburg • Some rivers flow northward to Asia • Novosibirsk the Arctic Ocean GDP • Kazakhstan • Russia • Turkmenistan Land Size • Russia • Kazakhstan • Turkmenistan Population • Russia • Kazakhstan • Uzbekistan Essential Knowledge 196 Essential Skills Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.7a The student will identify types of natural, human, and capital resources and explain their significance by a) showing patterns of economic activity and land use. Essential Understandings Essential Questions Essential Knowledge Natural substances become resources if and when they become useful to humans. How do human needs and availability Use of energy resources and of technology affect the value of technology (as it has changed over natural resources? time) • Wood (deforestation) The value of resources has changed How has the value of resources • Coal (pollution, mining problems, over time. changed over time? competition with oil and gas) • Petroleum (transportation, Natural, human, and capital resources How do natural, human, and capital environmental considerations) influence human activity in regions. resources determine economic activity • Nuclear (contamination/waste) in regions? • Solar, wind (cost, aesthetics) Economic activity can be classified as primary, secondary, or tertiary. Natural resources • • Compare maps and globes and make inferences. Interpret regional patterns on maps and globes. Identify primary ideas expressed in graphic data. Gather, classify, and interpret information. Renewable—Soil, water, forests Draw conclusions and make generalizations about information. Nonrenewable—Fossil fuels (oil, coal, natural gas) and metals (gold, iron, copper, bauxite) Human resources • Level of education • Skilled and unskilled laborers • Entrepreneurial and managerial abilities Capital resources • Availability of money for investment • Level of infrastructure • Availability and use of tools, machines, and technologies 197 Essential Skills Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 SAMPLE LESSON TITLE: Environment Versus Economic Debate in Russia and Central Asia UNIT XIII: Russia, & Central Asia ENDURING UNDERSTANDING: Changes to the earth’s ecological balance have positive and negative consequences for humans. CONCEPTUAL UNIT QUESTION: Is the global community responsible for helping to clean up the environment in Russia, Central Asia and other parts of the world? Provide support, facts and details for your point of view. KEY CONCEPT(S): Geographic Skills, Place Geography, Physical Geography, Cultural Geography, Economic Geography, Political Geography, Historic Geography, Environmental Geography SOL OBJECTIVES: WG.4; WG.7a. Lesson Description: The collapse of the Soviet Union brought into sharp focus the grim economic picture facing the countries that once made up this superpower. Faced with shortages and environmental problems of all kinds, the current government has little or no economic resources to dispose safely of the nuclear waste from superfluous weaponry. We will gather to discuss and debate two major issues facing Russia and the impact these issues have on the nations of the world. Our agenda will include future plans and proposals for cleaning up the environment, and economic conditions that face Russia. A group visual and speech will be part of the debate. Banners, posters, propaganda are acceptable. The teacher will divide students into four groups representing the United States, Russia, European nations, and environmental organizations from Northern Eurasia. • If you are representing a nation, form a staff which consists of some of the following members: economic specialist, Minister of Future Planning, investors, political advisors, business advisors, top leader, workers, citizens and industrialists. Research the economic and environmental problems facing the former Russia and the neighboring countries. • If you are a member of an environmental organization, make sure to research and record information concerning the environmental damage that was done during the Cold War. (e.g., Aral Sea) After completing your research, you will debate the economic and ethical issues concerning the environment that face the world as a result of both the Cold War and the break-up of the Soviet Union. 198 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 Materials/Resources: Internet sites, encyclopedias, newspaper, magazine articles and other reference materials on Russia and nuclear energy, environmental issues facing Northern Eurasia, Lake Baykal, the Aral Sea, Chernobyl, and cotton production in Central Asia, BBC videos; Chernobyl: Ten Days For Disaster and Russia's Deep Secret. Strategies: research, role-playing, visual reinforcement Student Action: • will research independently and develop a point of view. • work in assigned groups to analyze, understand and discuss the economic, environmental and global issues facing nations. • defend their views during a debate. • prepare visual reinforcement for debate Teacher Action: • provide online resources and guidance during the research process. • divide the class into small groups. • facilitate the debate. Assessment: independent research, group participation, team contributions, and ability to communicate, final product and speech. Adaptation: The students read Z for Zachariah in 8th grade English and study nuclear energy in science. The core teachers are using an APS County interdisciplinary unit called Interactions: Humans, Nuclear Energy and The Environment. In geography classes, the students will view part of two BBC videos “Chernobyl: Ten Days For Disaster” and “Russia's Deep Secret”. They will also be reading and identifying current news concerning the use of nuclear energy in the world. 199 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 UNIT XIV: Australia and Oceania—This unit focuses on the theme of Human-Environment Interaction (HEI) and examines the legacy of European culture. Students also study the physical and cultural geography of the region. Students will learn the place geography, too. STANDARDS OF LEARNING: This unit will address the following objectives: SOL WG.1 The student will use maps, globes, satellite images, photographs, or diagrams to a) obtain geographical information about the world’s countries, cities, and environment; b) apply the concepts of location, scale, map projection, or orientation; SOL WG.2 The student will analyze how selected physical and ecological processes shape the Earth’s surface by a) identifying regional climatic patterns and weather phenomena and their effects on people and places; b) describing how humans influence the environment and are influenced by it; c) explaining how technology affects one’s ability to modify the environment and adapt to it. SOL WG.4 The student will locate and analyze physical, economic, and cultural characteristics of world regions: Latin America and the Caribbean, Europe, United States and Canada, North Africa and Southwest Asia, Sub-Saharan Africa, Russia and Central Asia, South Asia, Southeast Asia, East Asia, Australia and the Pacific Islands, and Antarctica. SOL WG.6 The student will analyze past and present trends in human migration and cultural interaction as they are influenced by social, economic, political, and environmental factors. SOL WG.7 The student will identify types of natural, human, and capital resources and explain their significance by b) showing their influence on patterns of economic activity and land use c) evaluating perspectives and consequences regarding the use of resources. SOL WG.12 The student will apply geography to interpret the past, understand the present, and plan for the future by a) using geographic knowledge, skills, and perspectives to analyze problems and make decisions; b) relating current events to the physical and human characteristics of places and regions. 200 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 ENDURING UNDERSTANDING: The changing interaction between human and physical factors shapes regional culture. CONCEPTUAL UNIT QUESTION: What shapes life in Oceania more, nature or culture? PREVIEW ACTIVITY: Student groups examine photographs of Oceania that include a map of the region and images of its physical and cultural geography. For example, the Outback, a volcanic island, Maoris , Aborigines, Sydney, and kangaroos. Each student group develops a consensus response to the naturenurture unit question and marks their position on the blackboard. Class discussion illustrates views with supporting evidence. Students write a brief journal response justifying their personal views. Students then create a human spectrum to demonstrate these views. The teacher designates one end of a wall as ‘nature’ and the opposite end of the same wall as ‘culture’. Students stand along the spectrum in accordance with the relative weight they have attached to that factor. If a student believes nature and culture are balanced forces in our lives, the student would stand in the middle. Students return to their seats and reflect on the relative position of their views. SUMMARY OF KEY TERMS/PEOPLE: The following list of terms reflects some of the important vocabulary and individuals students should know to successfully understand course content and pass the SOL exams. Abel Tasman Aboriginal Aborigine alien species ANZUS artesian well atoll biogeography breadfruit Captain Bligh continental island coral island cyclone Easter Island EEZ endemic species geyser James Cook lagoon Maori marsupial Melanesian Micronesian moai mutiny Oceania orographic effect penal colony Polynesian station The Bounty trust territory volcanic island SOL ESSENTIAL UNDERSTANDINGS, QUESTIONS, CONTENT and SKILLS: The following pages, from the State’s Curriculum Framework, outline the essential understandings, questions, knowledge and skills related to the SOLs. They provide the base from which the content in this unit is studied. 201 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.1a The student will use maps, globes, satellite images, photographs, or diagrams to a) obtain geographical information about the world’s countries, cities, and environment. Essential Understandings Essential Questions Essential Knowledge Essential Skills Geographic information may be acquired from a variety of sources. What are some uses of latitude and longitude? Variety of sources Gather, classify, and interpret information. Geographic information supports the process of inquiry into the nature of countries, cities, and environments. How is relative location used to describe places? • • • • • Using a variety of sources supports the process of geographic inquiry. 202 Field work Satellite images Photographs Maps, globes Diagrams Select the appropriate geographic information sources to draw conclusions. Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.1b The student will use maps, globes, photographs, and pictures in order to b) apply the concepts of location, scale, map projection, or orientation. Essential Understandings Essential Questions Essential Knowledge Essential Skills Latitude and longitude define absolute location. What are some uses of latitude and longitude? Concepts Use compass rose to identify and use cardinal directions. Relative location describes the spatial relationships between and among places. Areas can be represented using a variety of scales. How is relative location used to describe places? The amount of detail shown on a map is dependent on the scale used. Why is a directional indicator (e.g.,) necessary on a map? A directional indicator (e.g., compass rose) identifies map orientation. How do maps distort spatial relationships when compared with the globe? • • Why are different scales necessary for developing map representations? Maps distort spatial relationships when compared with the globe. . 203 • • • • Scale Absolute Location • Latitude • Longitude Relative Location Orientation Map Distortion Map Projections • Mercator • Robinson • Polar Locate places using latitude/longitude on maps and globes. Compare maps of different scales. Gather, classify, and interpret information. Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.1c The student will use maps, globes, photographs, and pictures in order to c) develop and refine mental maps of world regions; Essential Understandings Essential Questions Essential Knowledge Essential Skills Mental maps are based on objective knowledge and subjective perceptions. How do people use mental maps to organize information? Uses of mental maps Locate places on maps and globes. • Interpret maps and globes. People develop and refine their mental maps through both personal experience and learning. How are perceptions reflected in mental maps? Mental maps serve as indicators of how well people know the spatial characteristics of certain. • • How can mental maps be developed and refined? Draw maps from memory. Evaluate information. Ways mental maps can be developed and refined • • • • 204 Carry out daily activities (e.g., route to school, shopping) Give directions to others Understand world events Comparing sketch maps to maps in atlases or other resources Describing the location of places in terms of reference points (e.g., the equator, prime meridian) Describing the location of places in terms of geographic features and land forms (e.g., west of the Mississippi River, north of the Gulf of Mexico) Describing the location of places in terms of the human characteristics of a place (e.g., languages, types of housing, dress, recreation, customs and traditions) Select the appropriate geographic resource to draw conclusions. Compare and contrast information found on different types of maps. Compare maps and make inferences. Draw conclusions and make inferences about data. Identify and interpret regional patterns on maps. Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.1d The student will use maps, globes, photographs, and pictures in order to d) create and compare political, physical, and thematic maps. Essential Understandings Essential Questions Essential Knowledge Essential Skills A map is a visual representation of geographic information. What are ways that maps show information? Standard ways that maps show information Select the appropriate geographic resource to draw conclusions. What are the major types of thematic maps? • • • • • Compare and contrast information found on different types of maps. Symbols Color Lines Contours Boundries Types of thematic maps • • • • • • • • • • 205 Population (e.g., distribution and density) Economic Activity Resource Language Ethnicity Climate Precipitation Vegetation Physical Political Compare maps and make inferences. Draw conclusions and make inferences about data. Identify and interpret regional patterns on maps. Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.2a The student will analyze how selected physical and ecological processes shape the Earth’s surface by a) identifying regional climatic patterns and weather phenomena and their effects on people and places. Essential Understandings Essential Questions Essential Knowledge Essential Skills Climate is defined by certain characteristics. What are the common characteristics that define climate? Climate characteristics Compare maps and make inferences. Climate patterns result from the interplay of common elements. What are the elements that influence regional climate patterns? • • • Interpret the idea, concepts, or events expressed by pictures, or other graphic media. Climate regions have distinctive vegetation. What vegetation is characteristic of key climate zones? Certain weather phenomena are unique to specific regions. Where do specific types of weather phenomena occur? Climate and weather phenomena affect how people live in different regions. What effects do climate and weather phenomena have on people living in different regions? Climate elements • • • • • Influence of latitude Influence of winds Influence of elevation Proximity to water Influence of ocean currents World climate regions • • 206 Temperature Precipitation Seasons (hot/cold; wet/dry) Low latitudes—e.g., tropical wet, tropical wet and dry, arid, semiarid, highland Middle latitudes—e.g., semiarid, arid, Mediterranean (dry summer subtropical) humid continental, marine west coast, highland Apply latitude to identify climate zones. Interpret charts, diagrams, and climographs. Select the appropriate geographic resource to draw conclusions. Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.2a (continued) The student will analyze how selected physical and ecological processes shape the Earth’s surface by a) identifying regional climatic patterns and weather phenomena and their effects on people and places. Essential Understandings Essential Questions Essential Knowledge Vegetation regions • • • • • • • Rain forest Savanna Desert Steppe Middle latitude forests Taiga Tundra Weather phenomena • Typhoons—Pacific Oceans Effects of climate • • • • 207 Crops Clothing Housing Natural hazards Essential Skills Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.2b The student will analyze how selected physical and ecological processes shape the Earth’s surface by b) describing how humans influence the environment and are influenced by it. Essential Understandings Essential Questions Essential Knowledge Essential Skills Physical and ecological processes shape the Earth’s surface. How have physical and ecological processes shaped the Earth’s surface? Physical and ecological processes Gather, classify, and interpret information. Humans both influence and are influenced by their environment. What are some ways humans influence their environment? How are humans influenced by their environment? • • • • • Earthquakes Floods Volcanic eruptions Erosion Deposition Human impact on environment • • • Water diversion/management • Aral Sea • Colorado River • Aswan High Dam • Canals • Reservoirs • Irrigation Landscape changes • Agricultural terracing (e.g., in China, Southeast Asia) • Polders (e.g., in The Netherlands) • Deforestation (e.g., in Nepal, Brazil, Malaysia) • Desertification (e.g., in Africa, Asia) Environmental changes • Acid rain (e.g., forests in Germany, Scandinavia, China, Eastern North America) • Pollution (e.g., in Mexico City, Chernobyl; oil spills) 208 Draw conclusions and make generalizations about data. Explain cause and effect relationships. Identify and interpret regional patterns on maps. Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.2c The student will analyze how selected physical and ecological process shape the Earth’s surface by c) explaining how technology affects one’s ability to modify the environment and adapt to it. Essential Understandings Essential Questions Essential Knowledge Essential Skills Technology has expanded people’s capability to modify and adapt to their physical environment. How has the use of technology expanded the capacity of people to modify and adapt to their environment? Influence of technology Draw conclusions and make inferences about data. • • • • • Agriculture (e.g., fertilizers, mechanization) Energy usage (e.g., fossil fuels, nuclear) Transportation (e.g., road building, railways) Automobiles (e.g., parking lots, suburbs) Airplanes (e.g., airport expansion, noise) Environmental impact on humans • • • • • 209 Settlement patterns Housing materials Agricultural activity Types of recreation Transportation patterns Gather, classify, and interpret information. Explain cause and effect relationships. Identify and interpret regional patterns on maps. Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.4 The student will locate and analyze physical, economic, and cultural characteristics of world regions: Latin America and the Caribbean, Europe, United States and Canada, North Africa and Southwest Asia, Sub-Saharan Africa, Russia and Central Asia, South Asia, Southeast Asia, East Asia, Australia and the Pacific Islands, and Antarctica. Essential Understandings Essential Questions Essential Knowledge Essential Skills The development of a region is influenced by many factors, including physical, economic and cultural characteristics. In what ways do physical, economic, and cultural characteristics influence regional development? See attached charts for specific information concerning physical, economic, and cultural characteristics. Explain charts comparing two or more concepts. What are some ways that human interaction with the environment affects the development of a region? Human interaction with environment Identify primary ideas expressed in graphic data. Criteria for determining relative importance Gather, classify, and interpret information. • • • • Draw conclusions and make generalizations about data. The interaction of humans with their environment affects the development of a region. Different criteria may be used to determine a country’s relative importance. Elements of the physical environment, such as major bodies of water and mountains, influence the economic and cultural characteristics of regions. What are some criteria that may be used to determine a country’s relative importance? What impact do elements of the physical environment, such as major bodies of water and mountains, have on countries? GDP (Gross Domestic Product) Land size Population size Resources Impact of physical elements Example: Water Example: Mountains 210 Explain cause and effect relationships. Identify and locate regions, continents, oceans, and major features on maps and globes. Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.4 (continued) The student will locate and analyze physical, economic, and cultural characteristics of world regions: Latin America and the Caribbean, Europe, United States and Canada, North Africa and Southwest Asia, Sub-Saharan Africa, Russia and Central Asia, South Asia, Southeast Asia, East Asia, Australia and the Pacific Islands, and Antarctica. Countries Physical Characteristics Economic Characteristics Cultural Characteristics Australia, Pacific Islands, and Antarctica • Australia • New Zealand • Papua New Guinea Australia, Pacific Islands, and Antarctica Australia, Pacific Islands, and Antarctica Australia, Pacific Islands, and Antarctica • • • • • • • • • Wide range of vegetation, from tropical rain forests to desert scrub Australia mostly desert The Great Dividing Range The Great Barrier Reef Australia’s isolation, resulting in unique animal life Antarctica, the world’s coldest, driest, windiest continent; icecap Pacific islands—Volcanic, coral, or continental • • • Air and water travel that bring goods and services to remote areas Dry areas of Australia well suited to cattle and sheep ranching Upset of environmental balance, caused by the introduction of nonnative plants and animals Ranching, mining (primary activities) • • • • • Pacific islands are sparsely populated. Most of Australia’s population lives near the coast. Traditional culture continues to shape life in the Pacific islands. Lifestyles range from subsistence farming to modern city living. Cultures reflect the mix of European and indigenous cultures (e.g., Maori and aborigines). Antarctica has no permanent residents. Cities as centers of culture and trade • Canberra, A.C.T. (Australian Capital Territory) • Sydney • Melbourne Cultural landscape • Sydney Opera House • Cattle and sheep stations (Australia) • Research stations (Antarctica) • Thatched roof dwelling (Pacific islands) 211 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.6 The student will analyze past and present trends in human migration and cultural interaction as they are influenced by social, economic, political, and environmental factors. Essential Understandings Essential Questions Essential Knowledge Essential Skills Migrations occur because of social, political, and environmental factors. How have social, economic, political, and environmental factors influenced migration? Push factors Identify and interpret regional patterns on maps. Migrations have influenced cultural landscapes. Modern transportation and communication are encouraging higher levels of cultural interaction worldwide. How has migration influenced cultural landscapes? How and why do improvements in transportation and communication technology lead to cultural interaction? • • • • • • • • • Overpopulation Religious persecution Lack of job opportunities Agricultural decline Conflict Political persecution Natural hazards—Droughts, floods, famines, volcanic eruptions Limits on personal freedom Environmental degradation Pull factors • • • • • • Religion Economic opportunity Land availability Political freedom Ethnic and family ties Arable land Impact of migrations on regions • • • • 212 Language Religion and religious freedom Customs/traditions Cultural landscape Identify primary ideas expressed in graphic data. Draw conclusions and make generalizations about data. Explain cause and effect relationships. Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.6 (continued) The student will analyze past and present trends in human migration and cultural interaction as they are influenced by social, economic, political, and environmental factors. Essential Understandings Essential Questions Essential Knowledge Evidence of cultural interaction • • 213 Diffusion of U.S. culture to other regions Popularization of other cultures’ traditions in the United States Essential Skills Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.7a The student will identify types of natural, human, and capital resources and explain their significance by a) showing their influence on patterns of economic activity and land use Essential Understandings Essential Questions Essential Knowledge Essential Skills Natural substances become resources if and when they become useful to humans. How do human needs and availability of technology affect the value of natural resources? Use of energy resources and technology (as it has changed over time) Compare maps and globes and make inferences. The value of resources has changed over time. How has the value of resources changed over time? • • Natural, human, and capital resources influence human activity in regions. How do natural, human, and capital resources determine economic activity in regions? • Economic activity can be classified as primary, secondary, or tertiary. • • Wood (deforestation) Coal (pollution, mining problems, competition with oil and gas) Petroleum (transportation, environmental considerations) Nuclear (contamination/waste) Solar, wind (cost, aesthetics) Natural resources • • Renewable—Soil, water, forests Nonrenewable—Fossil fuels (oil, coal, natural gas) and metals (gold, iron, copper, bauxite) Human resources • • • 214 Level of education Skilled and unskilled laborers Entrepreneurial and managerial abilities Interpret regional patterns on maps and globes. Identify primary ideas expressed in graphic data. Gather, classify, and interpret information. Draw conclusions and make generalizations about information. Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.7a (continued) The student will identify types of natural, human, and capital resources and explain their significance by a) showing their influence on patterns of economic activity and land use. Essential Understandings Essential Questions Essential Knowledge Essential Skills Resources are not distributed equally. What are some examples of primary, secondary, and tertiary economic activities? Capital resources Gather, classify and interpret information. The location of resources influences economic activity and patterns of land use. • • • Analyze and evaluate information. Draw conclusions and make generalizations from data. Levels of economic activity Explain cause and effect relationships. • Sequence information. • • 215 Availability of money for investment Level of infrastructure Availability and use of tools, machines, and technologies Primary—Dealing directly with resources (fishing, farming, forestry, mining) Secondary—Manufacturing and processing (steel mills, automobile assembly, sawmills) Tertiary—Services (transportation, retail trade, informational technology services) Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.7a (continued) The student will identify types of natural, human, and capital resources and explain their significance by a) showing their influence on patterns of economic activity and land use. Essential Understandings Essential Questions Essential Knowledge Effects of unequal distribution of resources • • • • • Interdependence of nations/trade in goods, services, and capital resources Uneven economic development Energy producers and consumers Imperialism Conflict over control of resources Patterns of land use • • 216 Proximity of economic activity and natural resources: coal, steel; grain, cattle; fishing, ocean; hydroelectric power, aluminum smelting Non-proximity of resources to economic activity: Japan—Limited natural resources, major manufacturing region; United Arab Emirates (UAE)—Oil, lack of industry Essential Skills Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.7b The student will identify types of natural, human, and capital resources and explain their significance by b) evaluating perspectives and consequences regarding the use of resources. Essential Understandings Essential Questions Essential Knowledge Essential Skills The use of a resource depends on a nation’s culture, values, access to technology, and governmental priorities as they change over time. How and why do different cultures develop different perspectives on the use of resources? Social and economic priorities that influence a culture’s perspective on resources Gather, classify, and interpret information. What are some costs and benefits in the use of resources? • • • Economic development priorities Environmental conservation priorities Priorities of indigenous minorities Examples of technologies that have created demand for particular resources • • • Steam engine—Demand for coal Internal combustion engine (cars and trucks)—Demand for gasoline (petroleum) Computer chips—Demand for skilled labor Costs • • • 217 Resource depletion Environmental degradation Health problems Draw conclusions and make generalizations from data. Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.12a The student will apply geography to interpret the past, understand the present, and plan for the future by a) using geographic knowledge, skills, and perspectives to analyze problems and make decisions. Essential Understandings Essential Questions Essential Knowledge Essential Skills An understanding of the practical applications of geography enables students to be informed, active citizens in their communities. What are some practical applications of geography? Benefits Organize and interpret information. • • • Use maps and other geographic resources to obtain information and draw conclusions. Production of goods and services Employment opportunities Development of technologies Geographic applications at local and regional levels • • • • • • • 218 Recycling programs Conversion of land from agricultural use Water sources (e.g., dams, reservoirs, wells, pipelines, ocean) Air quality Mass transit City planning and zoning laws Energy use Participate in problem solving and decision making. Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.12b The student will apply geography to interpret the past, understand the present, and plan for the future by b) relating current events to the physical and human characteristics of places and regions. Essential Understandings Essential Questions Essential Knowledge Essential Skills Current events are shaped by the physical and human characteristics of the places and regions where they occur. How are current events connected to the geographical characteristics of places and regions? Geographic relationships Compare maps and make inferences. • Identify and interpret regional patterns on maps. • 219 How physical characteristics influence current events • Natural hazards (e.g, flooding, earthquakes, volcanoes, drought) • Climate change How human characteristics influence current events • Population distribution • Geographic patterns of ethnic diversity • A sense of place (emotional attachment to specific locations) • Geographic patterns of trade and interdependence (e.g., oil) • Geographic patterns of wealth and poverty (developed and developing nations) Identify primary ideas expressed in graphic data. Gather, classify, and interpret information. Draw conclusions and make generalizations about data. Examine cause and effect relationships. Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 SAMPLE LESSON TITLE: Top Concepts for Oceania UNIT XIV: Australia and Oceania ENDURING UNDERSTANDING: The changing interaction between human and physical factors shapes regional culture. CONCEPTUAL UNIT QUESTION: What shapes life in Oceania more, nature or culture? KEY CONCEPT(s): Geographic Skills, Place Geography, Physical Geography, Cultural Geography, Economic Geography, Urban Geography, Environmental Geography, Historical Geography SOL OBJECTIVES: WG.1, WG.2, WG.4, WG.6, WG.7, WG.12 LESSON DESCRIPTION: Use a combination of direct instruction and student illustrations to introduce central concepts of Oceania Materials/Resources: Journal Question, warmup on a transparency, class copies, Oceania Concepts (Appendices I1, I2), class copy, exemplary illustrations, conceptual aids (direct instruction), craft sticks (for voting) Strategies: respond to journal questions, discuss concepts and illustrate concepts; use globes, textbook, maps, models videos and demonstrations. Select favorite illustration. Student Action: • respond to the following journal question: What does Oceania mean? • receive Oceania Concepts. • complete assignment for homework (read & illustrate) • peruse illustrations by their peers and cast votes with craft sticks. 220 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 Teacher Action: • lead a brief class discussion to answer this question, using a wall map and text maps as necessary. • proceed to use direct instruction to introduce concepts 1-5: • Concept 1 – Use a globe to emphasize region’s size and physical characteristics. • Concept 2 – Use the textbook map and cultural images to illustrate the four regions and their boundaries. • Concept 3 – Use actual models/video to illustrate the three island types. Review orographic effect. • Concept 4 – Use pictures/video to demonstrate unique flora and fauna. • Concept 5 – Use classroom demonstration (standing on chair/desk) and EEZ map • explain the assignment – illustrate two of the remaining five concepts. • demonstrate through use of exemplars • answer any questions and lead a class discussion on favorite images and their relationship to the concepts. Assessment: peer assessment of illustration using the following criteria: Accuracy of representation, clarity of caption restating the concept or symbol, quality of effort 221 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 222 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 223 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 UNIT XV: Local Geography STANDARDS OF LEARNING: This unit will address the following objectives: SOL WG.6 The student will analyze past and present trends in human migration and cultural interaction as they are influenced by social, economic, political, and environmental factors. WG.7 The student will identify types of natural, human, and capital resources and explain their significance by a) showing their influence on patterns of economic activity and land use. WG.11 The student will analyze the patterns of urban development by a) applying the concepts of site and situation to major cities in each region. b) explaining how the functions of towns and cities have changed over time. c) describing the unique influence of urban areas and some challenges they face. WG.12 The student will apply geography to interpret the past, understand the present, and plan for the future by a) using geographic knowledge, skills, and perspectives to analyze problems and make decisions. b) relating current events to the physical and human characteristics of places and regions. 224 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 ENDURING UNDERSTANDING: Geographic changes occur as a result of how human and natural resources are used. CONCEPTUAL UNIT QUESTION: What does it mean to be a community? PREVIEW ACTIVITY: List the characteristics of a community. Pair/Share: Review your list with your partner. Brainstorm what makes Arlington a community. Create a mini-poster using words and symbols to demonstrate your understanding of Arlington as a community. SUMMARY OF KEY TERMS/PEOPLE: The following list of terms reflects some of the important vocabulary students should know to successfully understand course content and pass the SOL exams. advocate capital resources census community corridor demographics development distribution economic activity economics employment ethnicity facility forecast human resources income influence infrastructure interaction jurisdiction labor land use local metropolitan migration national origin pattern per capita income planning commission politics population profile projection resident residential resource retail revenue rural service industry site site situation suburban taxes Transit Authority unemployment urban zone SOL ESSENTIAL UNDERSTANDINGS, QUESTIONS, CONTENT and SKILLS: The following pages, from the State’s Curriculum Framework, outline the essential understandings, questions, knowledge and skills related to the SOLs. They provide the base from which the content in this unit is studied. 225 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.6 The student will analyze past and present trends in human migration and cultural interaction as they are influenced by social, economic, political, and environmental factors. Essential Understandings Essential Questions Essential Knowledge Migrations occur because of social, economic, political, and environmental factors. How have social, economic, political, and environmental factors influenced migration? Migrations have influenced cultural landscapes. How has migration influenced cultural landscapes? Modern transportation and communication are encouraging higher levels of cultural interaction worldwide. How and why do improvements in transportation and communication technology lead to cultural interaction? Push factors • • • • • • • • • Overpopulation Religious persecution Lack of job opportunities Agricultural decline Conflict Political persecution Natural hazards—Droughts, floods, famines, volcanic eruptions Limits on personal freedom Environmental degradation Pull factors • • • • • • Religion Economic opportunity Land availability Political freedom Ethnic and family ties Arable land Impact of migrations on regions • • • • 226 Language Religion and religious freedom Customs/traditions Cultural landscape Essential Skills Identify and interpret regional patterns on maps. Identify primary ideas expressed in graphic data. Draw conclusions and make generalizations about data. Explain cause and effect relationships. Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.6 (continued) The student will analyze past and present trends in human migration and cultural interaction as they are influenced by social, economic, political, and environmental factors. Essential Understandings Essential Questions Essential Knowledge Evidence of cultural interaction • • 227 Diffusion of U.S. culture to other regions Popularization of other cultures’ traditions in the United States Essential Skills Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.7a The student will identify types of natural, human, and capital resources and explain their significance by a) showing their influence patterns of economic activity and land use. Essential Understandings Natural substances become resources if and when they become useful to humans. The value of resources has changed over time. Natural, human, and capital resources influence human activity in regions. Economic activity can be classified as primary, secondary, or tertiary. Essential Questions How do human needs and availability of technology affect the value of natural resources? How has the value of resources changed over time? How do natural, human, and capital resources influence patterns of economic activity and land use in regions? Essential Knowledge Essential Skills Use of energy resources and technology (as it has changed over time) Compare maps and globes and make inferences. • • Interpret regional patterns on maps and globes. • • • Wood (deforestation) Coal (pollution, mining problems, competition with oil and gas) Petroleum (transportation, environmental considerations) Nuclear (contamination/waste) Solar, wind (cost, aesthetics) Identify primary ideas expressed in graphic data. Gather, classify, and interpret information. Natural resources • • Renewable—Soil, water, forests Nonrenewable—Fossil fuels (oil, coal, natural gas) and metals (gold, iron, copper, bauxite) Human resources • • • Level of education Skilled and unskilled laborers Entrepreneurial and managerial abilities Capital resources • • • Availability of money for investment Level of infrastructure Availability and use of tools, machines, and technologies 228 Draw conclusions and make generalizations about information. Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.7a (continued) The student will identify natural, human, and capital resources and explain their significance by a) showing patterns of economic activity and land use. Essential Understandings Resources are not distributed equally. The location of resources influences economic activity and patterns of land use. Essential Questions What are some examples of primary, secondary, and tertiary economic activities? Essential Knowledge Levels of economic activity • • • Primary—Dealing directly with resources (fishing, farming, forestry, mining) Secondary—Manufacturing and processing (steel mills, automobile assembly, sawmills) Tertiary—Services (transportation, retail trade, informational technology services) Effects of unequal distribution of resources • • • • • Interdependence of nations/trade in goods, services, and capital resources Uneven economic development Energy producers and consumers Imperialism Conflict over control of resources Patterns of land use • • Economic activities that require extensive areas of land (e.g., agriculture) vs. those that require a limited area (e.g., manufacturing) Land uses that are compatible with each other (open space and residential) vs. land uses that are not compatible (e.g., landfills and residential) 229 Essential Skills Gather, classify and interpret information. Analyze and evaluate information. Explain cause and effect relationships. Sequence information. Draw conclusions and make generalizations from data. Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.7b The student will identify types of natural, human, and capital resources and explain their significance by b) evaluating perspectives and consequences regarding the use of resources. Essential Understandings The use of a resource depends on a nation’s culture, values, access to technology, and governmental priorities as they change over time. Essential Questions How and why do different cultures develop different perspectives on the use of resources? What are some costs and benefits in the use of resources? Essential Knowledge Social and economic priorities that influence a culture’s perspective on resources • • • Economic development priorities Environmental conservation priorities Priorities of indigenous minorities Examples of technologies that have created demand for particular resources • • • Steam engine - and for coal Internal combustion engine (cars and trucks) - and for gasoline (petroleum) Computer chips - and for skilled labor Costs • • • Resource depletion Environmental degradation Health problems Benefits • • • 230 Production of goods and services Employment opportunities Development of technologies Essential Skills Gather, classify, and interpret information. Draw conclusions and make generalizations from data. Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.11a The student will analyze the patterns of urban development by a) applying the concepts of site and situation to major cities in each region. Essential Understandings Essential Questions Essential Knowledge Site and situation are important geographic concepts when studying the growth of cities. What is meant by site? Site is the actual location of a city. What is meant by situation? Examples of site (local characteristics) Patterns of urban development occur according to site and situation. In what ways may site and/or situation affect urban development? • • • • • • • Harbor sites: New York City; Alexandria, Egypt; Istanbul, Turkey Island sites: Paris (originally located on an island in the Seine River), Hong Kong, Singapore Fall line sites: Richmond, Virginia Confluence sites: Khartoum, Sudan; Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Hilltop sites: Rome, Athens, Jerusalem Oasis sites: Damascus, Syria; Siwa, Egypt Sites where rivers narrow: London, Québec City Situation is another name for relative location—the location of a city with respect to other geographic features, regions, resources, and transport routes. 231 Essential Skills Gather, classify, and interpret information. Draw conclusions and make generalizations about information. Explain cause and effect relationships. Identify and interpret regional patterns on maps. Locate area on maps and globes. Sequence events. Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.11a (continued) The student will analyze the patterns of urban development by a) applying the concepts of site and situation to major cities in each region. Essential Understandings Essential Questions Essential Knowledge Examples of situation (regional/ global connections) • • • • • • • 232 Baghdad—Command of land between the Tigris and Euphrates Rivers Istanbul—Command of straits and land bridge to Europe Mecca, Saudi Arabia; Varanasi (Benares), India—Focal point of pilgrimage Samarkand, Uzbekistan; Xi’an, China; Timbuktu, Mali; Singapore—Cities that grew up around trade routes (the Silk Road; Trans-Sahara trade; maritime trade) Cape Town, South Africa—Supply station for ships Omaha, Nebraska; Sacramento, California—Cities that grew up along the U.S. Transcontinental Railroad Novosibirsk, Vladivostok—Cities that grew up along the TransSiberian Railroad Essential Skills Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.11b The student will analyze the patterns of urban development by b) explaining how the functions of towns and cities have changed over time. Essential Understandings The functions of towns and cities change over time. Essential Questions Essential Knowledge What are the functions of towns and cities? How have functions of towns and cities changed over time? Functions of towns and cities • • • • • • Security, defense Religious centers Trade centers (local and long distance) Government administration Manufacturing centers Service centers Examples of changes in cities’ functions over time • • • • 233 Rio de Janeiro—Move of Brazil’s capital city from Rio de Janeiro to Brasilia Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania—Early function connected to defense, then became steel manufacturing center, later shifted to diverse services (financial, light manufacturing) New York City—Changes in trade patterns, coastal and transatlantic trade, trade from Great Lakes via Erie Canal, worldwide trade and finances Mining towns, “ghost” towns— Resource depletion, changes in the environment Essential Skills Gather, classify, and interpret information. Draw conclusions and make generalizations about information. Explain cause and effect relationships. Identify and interpret regional patterns on maps. Locate places on maps and globes. Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.11c The student will analyze the patterns of urban development by c) describing the unique influence of urban areas and some challenges they face. Essential Understandings Urban populations exercise a powerful influence in shaping the world’s cultural, political, and economic ideas and systems. Urban development may lead to problems related to human mobility, social structure, and the environment. Essential Questions Essential Knowledge How do urban areas influence the world’s cultural, political, and economic ideas and systems? What are some urban problems that may occur as a result of development? Influences of urban areas on their regions and countries Gather, classify, and interpret information. • Draw conclusions and make generalizations about data. • • • • • • • Nation-building (monuments, symbols) Transportation/communication hubs Magnets for migration Seed beds of new ideas and technologies Diversity, leading to creativity in the arts Universities, educational opportunities Corporate headquarters/regional offices Media centers (news, entertainment) Problems associated with growth of urban areas • • 234 Essential Skills Transportation problems emerge, especially as automobile travel increases. Rich and poor neighborhoods exist in different areas isolated from one another. Explain cause and effect relationships. Identify and interpret regional patterns on maps. Locate places on maps and globes. Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.11c (continued) The student will analyze the patterns of urban development by c) describing the unique influence of urban areas and some challenges they face. Essential Understandings Essential Questions Essential Knowledge • • • • 235 Providing essential services (fresh water, sewage, disposal, electricity, schools, clinics) becomes a problem with rapid immigration to cities in Latin America, Africa and Asia. Air, water, and noise pollution increase. Sprawl results in conversion of agricultural land to urban uses, especially in North America. In developing countries, major cities are more connected to regions outside the country than to regions within the country. Essential Skills Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.l2a The student will apply geography to interpret the past, understand the present, and plan for the future by a) using geographic knowledge, skills, and perspectives to analyze problems and make decisions. Essential Understandings An understanding of the practical applications of geography enables students to be informed, active citizens in their communities. Essential Questions Essential Knowledge What are some practical applications of geography? Geographic applications at local and regional levels • • • • 236 Air and water quality monitoring and management Recycling programs Land use and transportation planning Selection of locations for residential and commercial development Essential Skills Organize and interpret information. Use maps and other geographic resources to obtain information and draw conclusions. Participate in problem solving and decision making. Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.12b The student will apply geography to interpret the past, understand the present, and plan for the future by b) relating current events to the physical and human characteristics of places and regions. Essential Understandings Current events are shaped by the physical and human characteristics of the places and regions where they occur. Essential Questions Essential Knowledge How are current events connected to the geographical characteristics of places and regions? Geographic relationships Compare maps and make inferences. • Identify and interpret regional patterns on maps. • 237 Essential Skills How physical characteristics influence current events • Natural hazards (e.g, flooding, earthquakes, volcanoes, drought) • Climate change How human characteristics influence current events • Population distribution • Geographic patterns of ethnic diversity • A sense of place (emotional attachment to specific locations) • Geographic patterns of trade and interdependence (e.g., oil) • Geographic patterns of wealth and poverty (developed and developing nations) Identify primary ideas expressed in graphic data. Gather, classify, and interpret information. Draw conclusions and make generalizations about data. Examine cause and effect relationships. Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 SAMPLE LESSON TITLE: Geography of Arlington UNIT XV: Local Geography KEY CONCEPT(s): Geography Skills, Place Geography, Economic Geography, Political Geography, Urban geography ENDURING UNDERSTANDING: Geographic changes occur as a result of how human and natural resources are used. CONCEPTUAL UNIT QUESTION: What does it mean to be a community? SOL OBJECTIVES: WG.6; WG.7a, 7b; WG.11a, 11b, 11c; WG.12a, 12b. LESSON DESCRIPTION: Students will use the most current Arlington County, Virginia PROFILE prepared by the Department of community Planning, Housing and Development to research the Arlington Community. They will work in small groups to create a poster that demonstrates their understanding of the development of the County. Materials/Resources: The most current Arlington County, Virginia PROFILE (Appendices J1-J6), Arlington County Web site: http://www.co.arlington.va.us, PROFILE worksheet (Appendices J7, J8), journals, large paper, markers, rulers, colored pencils Strategies: Research, discussion, visual synthesis Student Action: • review reading strategies. • complete the Arlington PROFILE (Appendices J7, J8) worksheet. • analyze the data and information and write their ideas down in the journals. • work in cooperative groups to discuss and create an advertisement to promote Arlington County to citizens, businesses, tourists and investors. • present advertisements. Teacher Action: • obtain the most current PROFILE (Appendices J1-J6),. • develop an updated worksheet that directs student research. (Appendices J7, J8), • demonstrate the reading strategies that are needed to complete the activity. • provide guidance to students while they are researching. • divide students into cooperative groups 238 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 Assessment: Worksheet, journal, informal observation, formal rubrics need to be developed for group presentations and advertisements, self-assessments may be used to evaluate group activity. Adaptation: Speak with the reading and English teachers, HILTEX specialists and resource specialists to discuss the reading strategies that the students use in the other subject areas. Make overheads of the graphs and charts to use with all students prior to the completion of the research. 239 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 240 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 241 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 242 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 243 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 244 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 245 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 246 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 247 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 UNIT XVI: Geographic Literacy STANDARDS OF LEARNING: This unit will address the following objectives: SOL WG.10 The student will analyze how the forces of conflict and cooperation affect the division and control of the Earth’s surface by a) explaining and analyzing reasons for the creation of different political divisions. SOL WG.11 The student will analyze the patterns of urban development by a) applying the concepts of site and situation to major cities in each region. SOL WG.11 The student will analyze the patterns of urban development by c) describing the unique influence of urban areas and some challenges they face. ENDURING UNDERSTANDING: Divisions are regions of the Earth’s surface over which groups of people establish social, economic, and political control. CONCEPTUAL UNIT QUESTION: How does geography apply to our lives? PREVIEW ACTIVITY: List the features in your ideal city. Why would you include these features? SUMMARY OF KEY TERMS/PEOPLE: The following list reflects some of the important vocabulary terms students should know to successfully understand course content and pass the SOL exams. Many of the vocabulary words for this unit were taught under other units, and can be used for review here. business district civic commercial community concentric design development grid design industrial institutional land use map mixed use public works residential restrictions site situation spoke design zone SOL ESSENTIAL UNDERSTANDINGS, QUESTIONS, CONTENT and SKILLS: The following pages, from the State’s Curriculum Framework, outline the essential understandings, questions, knowledge and skills related to the SOLs. They provide the base from which the content in this unit is studied. 248 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.10a The student will analyze how the forces of conflict and cooperation affect the division & control of the Earth’s surface by a) explaining and analyzing reasons for the creation of different political divisions. Essential Understandings Divisions are regions of the Earth’s surface over which groups of people establish social, economic, and political control. Political divisions may generate conflict. Political divisions may generate cooperation. . Essential Questions Essential Knowledge What are some examples of political divisions at the local and regional levels? What are some reasons for political divisions at the local and regional levels? How do political divisions generate conflict? Why do political divisions cooperate? Examples of political divisions Compare maps and make inferences. • • • • Identify regional patterns. • • • Neighborhoods Election districts School districts Regional districts (e.g., bus lines, waste disposal, conservation districts, planning districts, area code zones) Cities Counties States Reasons for political divisions • • • Desire for government closer to home Need to solve local problems Need to administer resources more efficiently Reasons for conflict • • • • • 249 Essential Skills Boundary disputes Cultural differences Economic differences Competition for scarce resources Political advantages (e.g., gerrymandering) Gather, classify, and interpret information. Explain cause and effect relationships. Participate in problem solving. Draw conclusions and make generalizations about data. Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.11a The student will analyze the patterns of urban development by a) applying the concepts of site and situation to major cities in each region. Essential Understandings Essential Questions Essential Knowledge Site and situation are important geographic concepts when studying the growth of cities. What is meant by site? Site is the actual location of a city. What is meant by situation? Examples of site (local characteristics) Patterns of urban development occur according to site and situation. In what ways may site and/or situation affect urban development? • • • • • • • Harbor sites: New York City; Alexandria, Egypt; Istanbul, Turkey Island sites: Paris (originally located on an island in the Seine River), Hong Kong, Singapore Fall line sites: Richmond, Virginia Confluence sites: Khartoum, Sudan; Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Hilltop sites: Rome, Athens, Jerusalem Oasis sites: Damascus, Syria; Siwa, Egypt Sites where rivers narrow: London, Québec City Situation is another name for relative location—the location of a city with respect to other geographic features, regions, resources, and transport routes. 250 Essential Skills Gather, classify, and interpret information. Draw conclusions and make generalizations about information. Explain cause and effect relationships. Identify and interpret regional patterns on maps. Locate area on maps and globes. Sequence events. Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.11a (continued) The student will analyze the patterns of urban development by a) applying the concepts of site and situation to major cities in each region. Essential Understandings Essential Questions Essential Knowledge Examples of situation (regional/ global connections) • • • • • • • 251 Baghdad – Command of land between the Tifris and Euphrates Rivers Istanbul – Command of straits and land bridge to Europe Mecca, Saudi Arabia; Varanasi (Benares), India – Focal point of pilgrimage Samarkand, Uzbekistan; Xi’an, China; Timbuktu, Mali; Singapore – Cities that grew up around trade routes (the Silk Road; Trans-Sahara trade; maritime trade) Cape Town, South Africa – Supply station for ships Omaha, Nebraska; Sacramento, California – Cities that grew up along the U.S. Transcontinental Railroad Novosibirsk, Vladisvostok – Cities that grew up along the TransSiberian Railroad Essential Skills Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.11c The student will analyze the patterns of urban development by c) describing the unique influence of urban areas and some challenges they face. Essential Understandings Urban populations exercise a powerful influence in shaping the world’s cultural, political, and economic ideas and systems. Urban development may lead to problems related to human mobility, social structure, and the environment. Essential Questions Essential Knowledge How do urban areas influence the world’s cultural, political, and economic ideas and systems? What are some urban problems that may occur as a result of development? Influence of urban areas on their regions and countries Gather, classify, and interpret information. • Draw conclusions and make generalizations about data. • • • • • • • Nation-building (monuments, symbols) Transportation/communication hubs Magnets for migration Seed beds of new ideas and technologies Diversity, leading to creativity in the arts Universities, educational opportunities Corporate headquarters/regional offices Media centers (news, entertainment) Problems associated with growth of urban areas • Transportation problems emerge, especially as automobile travel increases. • Rich and poor neighborhoods exist in different areas isolated from one another. 252 Essential Skills Explain cause and effect relationships. Identify and interpret regional patterns on maps. Locate places on maps and globes. Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 STANDARD WG.11c (continued) The student will analyze the patterns of urban development by c) describing the unique influence of urban areas and some challenges they face. Essential Understandings Essential Questions Essential Knowledge • • • • Providing essential services (fresh water, sewage, disposal, electricity, schools, clinics) becomes a problem with rapid immigration to cities in Latin America, Africa and Asia. Air, water, and noise pollution increase. Sprawl results in conversion of agricultural land to urban uses, especially in North America. In developing countries, major cities are more connected to regions outside the country than to regions within the country. 253 Essential Skills Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 SAMPLE LESSON TITLE: Design your own city UNIT XVI: Geographic Literacy ENDURING UNDERSTANDING(s): Divisions are regions of the Earth’s surface over which groups of people establish social, economic, and political control. CONCEPTUAL UNIT QUESTION: How does geography apply to our lives? KEY CONCEPT(s): Interaction, Physical Geography, Cultural Geography, Urban Geography SOL OBJECTIVES: WG.10a, WG.11a LESSON DESCRIPTION: Students use their knowledge of local, physical and cultural geography to design their own city, using zoning, planning concerns, and vocabulary correctly. This lesson is adapted from the National Building Museum’s City by Design project. This project is also easily adapted to include other disciplines. Materials/Resources: Student packets (Appendices K1-K16), notes on city layouts (concentric, grid, or spoke), walking field trip permission slips (usually obtained at the beginning of the year), graph paper, coloring materials Strategies: small group work for planning tasks; individual work for background; reinforcement of new vocabulary; student-centered application of information Student Action: • read packet information (Appendices K1-K16) • complete work on time and participate in the class discussion and walking field trip • analyze an existing building • share responsibilities of group • compare ideal city to Arlington Teacher Action: • prepare packets (Appendices K1-K16) • lead discussions, answer student questions, and correct misinformation • assist in analysis of building, monitor group activity and assess student progress Assessment: class discussions; paragraphs; city designs Adaptation: HILT: Focus more on vocabulary. Ask students to zone the area, rather than creating buildings. GT: Zones and buildings. Give percentages of each zone and the reason for allotting the land that way. Special Ed: Give more parameters to the class; for example, list buildings to be included with their sizes. 254 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 255 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 256 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 257 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 258 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 259 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 260 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 261 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 262 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 263 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 264 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 265 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 266 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 267 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 268 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 269 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 270 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 271 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 SUGGESTED LITERATURE AND OTHER SOURCES UNITS I-V: There are no literature selections for these introductory units. The remaining units follow a regional approach and have several literature selections. UNIT VI: North America Esperanza Rising by Pam Munoz Ryan. A young girl in the 1930’s flees to depression-era California from her family’s wealthy ranch in Mexico. Whirligig by Paul Fleischman. A young man traverses the United States in a quest for redemption following a terrible accident. Warriors Don’t Cry by Melba Patillo Beals. A young girl’s memoir of the battle to integrate Little Rock’s Central High in the 1950s. As a member of the “Little Rock Nine,” Beals provides a first hand account of the racism and violence that she and her fellow classmates faced. UNIT VII: Central and Latin America Where Angels Glide at Dawn: New Stories from Latin America by J.B. Lippincott, publisher. A collection of short stories by a variety of Latin American authors, including Ariel Dorfman, Julio Cortazar, and Maria Rosa Fort. The Jacob Ladder by Gerald Hausman and Uton Hinds. When his father leaves home, 12-year old Tall T struggles to hold his family together. A Jamaican coming-of-age story, rich in island culture. Red Midnight by Ben Michaelson. When soldiers burn his village and kill his family, Santiago escapes with his little sister to Florida, surviving horrendous odds. UNIT VIII: Asia Homeless Bird by Gloria Whelan. 13-year old Koly journeys from poverty in rural India to an arranged marriage to widowhood and independence in the holy city of Vrindavan. Year of Impossible Goodbyes by Sook Nyul Choi. A North Korean family barely survives the Japanese occupation during WWII, only to find that after the war, they must flee Russian Communists. Rice without Rain by Minfong Ho. After social rebels convince the headman of a small village in northern Thailand to resist the land rent, his 17-yearold daughter Jinda finds herself caught up in the student uprising in Bangkok. Traveling Man: The Journey of Ibn Battuta by James Rumford. Readers join the Marco Polo of the Islamic world on his epic 14th century journey from Morocco to China. Chinese Cinderella by Adeline Yen Mah. The author returns to her roots to paint an authentic portrait of twentieth century China as well as to tell the story of her painful childhood and her courage and triumph over despair. 272 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 Red Scarf Girl by Ji-li Jiang. Memoir from China’s Cultural Revolution through the eyes of the 12-year old author. UNIT IX: Africa Waiting for the Rain by Sheila Gordon. A collection of 10 short stories about South Africa, 5 by black, 5 by white South Africans. The Return by Sonia Levitin. Desta and other members of her Beta Yisorel family (black Jews suffering discrimination in Ethiopia) finally flee the country and reach Israel through Operation Moses. Journey to Jo’burg by Beverley Naidoo. During South Africa’s apartheid era, two youngsters trek to Johannesburg to find their mother and save their little sister. A Long Way Gone by Ishmael Beah. Chilling memoir of a child soldier in Sierra Leone that tells the personal story of Ishmael’s life in the army, his escape, and finally his rehabilitation following years of abuse, murder, and war. A Girl Named Disaster by Nancy Farmer. When 12-year-old Nhamo learns that she must marry a cruel man with 3 wives, she runs away and ends up in the uncharted heart of a great lake. There she battles drowning, starvation, and wild animals. Things Fall Apart by Chinua Achebe. The simple story of a man living in a Nigerian village during European occupation UNIT X: Middle East and Southwest Asia Habibi by Naomi Shihab Nye. 14 -year old Palestinian American Liyana Abboud must learn to fit into a new world and understand the political conflicts when her family moves from St. Louis to Jerusalem. Children of Israel, Children of Palestine: Our Own True Stories by Laurel Holliday. What is it like to grow up in the war zone of the Middle East? That is the subject of this collection, which begins with memories about childhood before the 1948 war and ends with accounts of young Palestinians and Israelis growing up now. Santa Claus in Baghdad by Elsa Marston. Collection of 8 tales based in the Middle East that dispel stereotypes and provide a glimpse of what it’s like to be a young person in the Arab world today. UNIT XI: Polar Regions The Iceberg Hermit by Arthur Roth. Shipwrecked in 1757 on an iceberg in the Arctic Seas with only an orphaned bear cub for companionship, 17 year old Alan begins a seemingly hopeless struggle for survival. Frozen Fire by James A. Houston. Determined to find his father who has been lost in a storm, a young boy and his Eskimo friend brave wind, storms, starvation, wild animals, and wild men during their search in the Canadian Arctic. Antarctica: Escape from Disaster by Peter Lerangis. In the darkest hours of 1910, mutiny, doubt and disaster threatened to destroy Jack Winslow’s secret American expedition to discover the South Pole. 273 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 UNITS XII and XIII: Europe Girl of Kosovo by Alice Mead. Based on a true story, a testimony to the horrors of war, and a powerful account of human resilience and the process of overcoming bitterness. For the Love of Venice by Donna Jo Napoli. Percy is a teenage boy spending the summer in Venice while his father is designing a seawall to help alleviate the city’s flooding problem. Many social and political issues. The Endless Steppe: Growing up in Siberia by Esther Hautzig. Set in WWII, this is a true story of a young Jewish girl and her family, struggling to survive in Siberia after they are removed from their wealthy home in Poland for capitalist crimes. The Other Side of Truth by Beverley Naidoo. After their mother’s murder, Sade and her brother are smuggled to London to live with an uncle. Their plans fall apart, however, and the two are sent to foster homes. Teenage Refugees from Eastern Europe Speak Out by Carl Rollyson. Teenagers from Eastern European countries tell their own stories of life after the fall of communism. UNIT XIV: Australia and Oceania Mutant Message Down Under by Marlo Morgan. A fictional account of an American woman’s spiritual odyssey through the Australian Outback. The woman makes a four month long journey and learns how the Aborigines thrive in natural harmony with plants and animals that exist in the Australia’s rugged lands. Mutiny on the Bounty by Charles Bernard Nordhoff. The famous 1787 mutiny of the crew of the Bounty, a British war vessel, against their infamous captain, William Bligh. Kon Tiki: Across the Pacific by Raft by Thor Heyerdahl. To prove that Polynesia could have been settled by pre-Incas from South America, the author and five men sailed across the Pacific on a replica of an ancient balsa-log raft. 274 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 SUGGESTED PACING The following is a suggested pacing guide. Its use is dependent upon schools’ schedules, teachers’ thematic sequential or issue-based approach to content, students’ leaning needs, and the availability of resources. The high end of each time frame range will total 180 school days. UNIT I. Introduction to Geography TIMEFRAME 4-5 days DATES September II. Geography Skills 10 days September III. Physical Geography 10 days September/October IV. Cultural Geography 10-15 days October V. Economic/Political Geography (end of 1st marking period) 10 days October/November VI. North America 10 days VII. Latin America 15 days VIII. South, Southeast and East Asia 20 days IX. Africa 15 days X. Southwest Asia and North Africa 12 days X. Polar Regions 4 days XII. Europe 12 days XIII. Russia and CentralAsia 10 days XIV. Australia/Oceania XV. Local Geography XVI. Geographic Literacy (can be completed during SOLs) 10 days 5 days 275 At this point the remaining units follow a regional approach. The sequence of regions varies depending on factors such as available resources within your school, current events, and integration with core subjects. All mapping must be finished before SOLs begin. Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 TEXTBOOK ALIGNMENT CHART: EXPLORING OUR WORLD: PEOPLE, PLACES, AND CULTURES TEXBOOK VENDOR: Glencoe/McGraw-Hill UNIT NUMBER & TITLE: SOL OBJECTIVE NUMBER CORRELATION TO STUDENT EDITION I Intro to Geo WG.3a 15, 18, 19, 20, 39, 88 I Intro to Geo WG.12b 123, 164, 169,172, 241, 242-244, 248, 279, 281, 288, 344-346, 355, 416, 445, 489, 499, 500-501, 583, 586, 614, 734-735, 814 II Geography Skills WG.1a 32, 238, 239, 275, 311, 333, 339, 351, 354 II Geography Skills WG.1b 15, 23, 24, 27, 333, 713, 796 II Geography Skills WG.1c 2-3, 104, 106, 107, 125, 160, 178, 180, 181, 199, 258, 260, 261, 284, 302, 351, 362, 379, 428, 430, 431, 514, 515, 517, 531, 554, 598, 600, 601, 674, 676, 677, 764, 766, 767 II Geography Skills WG.1d 28, 29, 31, 180-181, 260-261, 364-365, 379, 430-431, 516-517, 555, 600-601, 618, 676-677, 766-767, III Physical Geography WG.2a 56, 57, 59, 125, 127, 193, 199, 201, 282, 284, 379, 447-449, 539, 540, 617, 619-620, 695, 696-698, 756, 783, 785, 786, 829 III Physical Geography WG.2b 64, 65, 382, 542, 777 276 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 UNIT NUMBER & TITLE: SOL OBJECTIVE NUMBER CORRELATION TO STUDENT EDITION III Physical Geography WG.4 105, 117, 193, 275, 321, 325, 330, 334, 339, 349, 462, 505, 573, 580, 737 IV Cultural Geography WG.1a 32, 238, 239, 275, 311, 333, 339, 351, 354 IV Cultural Geography WG.1b 15, 23, 24, 27, 333, 713, 796 IV Cultural Geography WG.1c 2-3, 104, 106, 107, 125, 160, 178, 180, 181, 199, 258, 260, 261, 284, 302, 351, 362, 379, 428, 430, 431, 514, 515, 517, 531, 554, 598, 600, 601, 674, 676, 677, 764, 766, 767 IV Cultural Geography WG.3a 15, 18, 19, 20, 39, 88 IV Cultural Geography WG.3b 118, 126, 145, 160, 161, 373, 531, 611 IV Cultural Geography WG.3c 83, 84, 85, 140, 149, 155, 220, 223, 229, 305, 310, 317, 321, 405, 459, 471, 561, 636, 641, 653, 801 IV Cultural Geography WG.6 78, 86, 90, 135, 138, 197, 209, 212, 295, 297, 298, 321, 330, 343, 349, 388, 391, 395, 457, 489, 549, 551-555, 627, 630, 653, 705, 709, 716, 793 IV Cultural Geography WG.9a 95, 96, 234, 247, 251, 422, 656, 730, 738, 747, 814 277 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 UNIT NUMBER & TITLE: SOL OBJECTIVE NUMBER CORRELATION TO STUDENT EDITION IV Cultural Geography WG.9b 414, 711, 748 IV Cultural Geography WG.9c 94, 169, 235, 302, 347, 409, 550 IV Cultural Geography WG.10a 137, 140, 463, 464, 491, 493, 496, 589, 661, 828 IV Cultural Geography WG.10b 302, 303, 507, 631 IV Cultural Geography WG.12a 233, 301, 327, 377, 409, 419, 450, 502, 536-537, 559, 584-585, 633, 729, 750, 780-781, 818-819 IV Cultural Geography WG.12b 123, 164, 169,172, 241, 242-244, 248, 279, 281, 288, 344-346, 355, 416, 445, 489, 499, 500-501, 583, 586, 614, 734-735, 814 V Economic/Political WG.5 73, 75, 76, 108, 178, 182, 219, 258, 262, 307, 332, 344-345, 362, 366, 410, 428, 469, 514, 518, 558, 560, 598, 602, 639, 674, 678, 715, 764, 768, 798, 800, 823 V Economic/Political WG.7a 109, 159, 183, 263, 278, 309, 335, 353, 366, 375, 411, 420, 444, 486, 519, 534, 603, 613, 679, 692, 744, 769, 815 V Economic/Political WG.8 94, 169, 213, 409, 411, 474, 485, 559, 573, 634, 711, 737, 814 V Economic/Political WG.9a 95, 96, 234, 247, 251, 422, 656, 730, 738, 747, 814 278 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 UNIT NUMBER & TITLE: SOL OBJECTIVE NUMBER CORRELATION TO STUDENT EDITION V Economic/Political WG.9b 414, 711, 748 V Economic/Political WG.9c 94, 169, 235, 302, 347, 409, 550 V Economic/Political WG.10a 463, 464, 491, 493, 496, 589, 661, 828 V Economic/Political WG.10b 302, 303, 507, 631 VI North America WG.4 105, 117, 193, 275, 321, 325, 330, 334, 339, 349, 462, 505, 573, 580, 737, VI North America WG.9a 95, 96, 234, 247, 251, 422, 656, 730, 738, 747, 814, VI North America WG.9b 414, 711, 748 VI North America WG.10b 302, 303, 507, 631 VII Latin America WG.1c 2-3, 104, 106, 107, 125, 160, 178, 180, 181, 199, 258, 260, 261, 284, 302, 351, 362, 379, 428, 430, 431, 514, 515, 517, 531, 554, 598, 600, 601, 674, 676, 677, 764, 766, 767 VII Latin America WG.3a 15, 18, 19, 20, 39, 88 279 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 UNIT NUMBER & TITLE: SOL OBJECTIVE NUMBER CORRELATION TO STUDENT EDITION VII Latin America WG.3c 83, 84, 85, 140, 149, 155, 220, 223, 229, 305, 310, 317, 321, 405, 459, 471, 561, 636, 641, 653, 801 VII Latin America WG.4 105, 117, 193, 275, 321, 325, 330, 334, 339, 349, 462, 505, 573, 580, 737, VII Latin America WG.6 78, 86, 90, 135, 138, 197, 209, 212, 295, 297, 298, 321, 330, 343, 349, 388, 391, 395, 457, 489, 549, 551-555, 627, 630, 653, 705, 709, 716, 793 VIII Asia WG.1a 32, 238, 239, 275, 311, 333, 339, 351, 354 VIII Asia WG.2a 56, 57, 59, 125, 127, 193, 199, 201, 282, 284, 379, 447-449, 539, 540, 617, 619-620, 695, 696-698, 756, 783, 785, 786, 829 VIII Asia WG.2b 64, 65, 382, 542, 777 VIII Asia WG.2c 65, 66, 93, 277, 281, 395, 400, 691 VIII Asia WG.3a 15, 18, 19, 20, 39, 88 VIII Asia WG.3b 118, 126, 145, 160, 161, 373, 531, 611 VIII Asia WG.3c 83, 84, 85, 140, 149, 155, 220, 223, 229, 305, 310, 317, 321, 405, 459, 471, 561, 636, 641, 653, 801 280 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 UNIT NUMBER & TITLE: SOL OBJECTIVE NUMBER CORRELATION TO STUDENT EDITION VIII Asia WG.4 105, 117, 193, 275, 321, 325, 330, 334, 339, 349, 462, 505, 573, 580, 737 IX Africa WG.1c 2-3, 104, 106, 107, 125, 160, 178, 180, 181, 199, 258, 260, 261, 284, 302, 351, 362, 379, 428, 430, 431, 514, 515, 517, 531, 554, 598, 600, 601, 674, 676, 677, 764, 766, 767 IX Africa WG.1d 28, 29, 31, 180-181, 260-261, 364-365, 379, 430-431, 516-517, 555, 600-601, 618, 676-677, 766-767 IX Africa WG.4 105, 117, 193, 275, 321, 325, 330, 334, 339, 349, 462, 505, 573, 580, 737 IX Africa WG.8 94, 169, 213, 409, 411, 474, 485, 559, 573, 634, 711, 737, 814 IX Africa WG.9a 95, 96, 234, 247, 251, 422, 656, 730, 738, 747, 814 X Middle East WG.4 105, 117, 193, 275, 321, 325, 330, 334, 339, 349, 462, 505, 573, 580, 737 X Middle East WG.9c 94, 169, 235, 302, 347, 409, 550 X Middle East WG.10a 463, 464, 491, 493, 496, 589, 661, 828 X Middle East WG.10b 302, 303, 507, 631 X Middle East WG.12a 233, 301, 327, 377, 409, 419, 450, 502, 536-537, 559, 584-585, 633, 729, 750, 780-781, 818-819 281 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 UNIT NUMBER & TITLE: SOL OBJECTIVE NUMBER CORRELATION TO STUDENT EDITION XI Polar Regions WG.2a 56, 57, 59, 125, 127, 193, 199, 201, 282, 284, 379, 447-449, 539, 540, 617, 619-620, 695, 696-698, 756, 783, 785, 786, 829 XI Polar Regions WG.4 105, 117, 193, 275, 321, 325, 330, 334, 339, 349, 462, 505, 573, 580, 737, XII Europe WG.1a 32, 238, 239, 275, 311, 333, 339, 351, 354 XII Europe WG.1b 15, 23, 24, 27, 333, 713, 796 XII Europe WG.1c 2-3, 104, 106, 107, 125, 160, 178, 180, 181, 199, 258, 260, 261, 284, 302, 351, 362, 379, 428, 430, 431, 514, 515, 517, 531, 554, 598, 600, 601, 674, 676, 677, 764, 766, 767 XII Europe WG.1d 28, 29, 31, 180-181, 260-261, 364-365, 379, 430-431, 516-517, 555, 600-601, 618, 676-677, 766-767 XII Europe WG.3a 15, 18, 19, 20, 39, 88 XII Europe WG.3b 118, 126, 145, 160, 161, 373, 531, 611 XII Europe WG.3c 83, 84, 85, 140, 149, 155, 220, 223, 229, 305, 310, 317, 321, 405, 459, 471, 561, 636, 641, 653, 801 XII Europe WG.4 105, 117, 193, 275, 321, 325, 330, 334, 339, 349, 462, 505, 573, 580, 737 282 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 UNIT NUMBER & TITLE: SOL OBJECTIVE NUMBER CORRELATION TO STUDENT EDITION XII Europe WG.9a 95, 96, 234, 247, 251, 422, 656, 730, 738, 747, 814 XII Europe WG.9b 414, 711, 748 XII Europe WG.9c 94, 169, 235, 302, 347, 409, 550 XII Europe WG.10a 463, 464, 491, 493, 496, 589, 661, 828 XII Europe WG.10b 302, 303, 507, 631 XII Europe WG.12a 233, 301, 327, 377, 409, 419, 450, 502, 536-537, 559, 584-585, 633, 729, 750, 780-781, 818-819 XII Europe WG.12b 123, 164, 169,172, 241, 242-244, 248, 279, 281, 288, 344-346, 355, 416, 445, 489, 499, 500-501, 583, 586, 614, 734-735, 814 XIII Russia/Central Asia WG.4 105, 117, 193, 275, 321, 325, 330, 334, 339, 349, 462, 505, 573, 580, 737 XIII Russia/Central Asia WG.7a 109, 159, 183, 263, 278, 309, 335, 353, 366, 375, 411, 420, 444, 486, 519, 534, 603, 613, 679, 692, 744, 769, 815 XIV Australia & Oceania WG.1a 32, 238, 239, 275, 311, 333, 339, 351, 354 283 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 UNIT NUMBER & TITLE: SOL OBJECTIVE NUMBER CORRELATION TO STUDENT EDITION XIV Australia & Oceania WG.1b 15, 23, 24, 27, 333, 713, 796 XIV Australia & Oceania WG.2a 56, 57, 59, 125, 127, 193, 199, 201, 282, 284, 379, 447-449, 539, 540, 617, 619-620, 695, 696-698, 756, 783, 785, 786, 829 XIV Australia & Oceania WG.4 105, 117, 193, 275, 321, 325, 330, 334, 339, 349, 462, 505, 573, 580, 737 XIV Australia & Oceania WG.6 78, 86, 90, 135, 138, 197, 209, 212, 295, 297, 298, 321, 330, 343, 349, 388, 391, 395, 457, 489, 549, 551-555, 627, 630, 653, 705, 709, 716, 793 XIV Australia & Oceania WG.7a 109, 159, 183, 263, 278, 309, 335, 353, 366, 375, 411, 420, 444, 486, 519, 534, 603, 613, 679, 692, 744, 769, 815 XIV Australia & Oceania WG.7b 195, 341, 350, 485, 494, 576, 658-659, 663, 746, 753, 779 XIV Australia & Oceania WG.12a 233, 301, 327, 377, 409, 419, 450, 502, 536-537, 559, 584-585, 633, 729, 750, 780-781, 818-819 XIV Australia & Oceania WG.12b 123, 164, 169,172, 241, 242-244, 248, 279, 281, 288, 344-346, 355, 416, 445, 489, 499, 500-501, 583, 586, 614, 734-735, 814 XV Local Geography WG.6 78, 86, 90, 135, 138, 197, 209, 212, 295, 297, 298, 321, 330, 343, 349, 388, 391, 395, 457, 489, 549, 551-555, 627, 630, 653, 705, 709, 716, 793 XV Local Geography WG.7a 109, 159, 183, 263, 278, 309, 335, 353, 366, 375, 411, 420, 444, 486, 519, 534, 603, 613, 679, 692, 744, 769, 815 284 Arlington Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum 2009 Curriculum Guide Grade 8 UNIT NUMBER & TITLE: SOL OBJECTIVE NUMBER CORRELATION TO STUDENT EDITION XV Local Geography WG.11a 75, 220, 308, 563, 559 XV Local Geography WG.11b 147, 341, 715 XV Local Geography WG.11c 220, 247, 309, 474, 558, 634, 639, 739, 801 XV Local Geography WG.12a 233, 301, 327, 377, 409, 419, 450, 502, 536-537, 559, 584-585, 633, 729, 750, 780-781, 818-819 XV Local Geography WG.12b 123, 164, 169,172, 241, 242-244, 248, 279, 281, 288, 344-346, 355, 416, 445, 489, 499, 500-501, 583, 586, 614, 734-735, 814 XIV Geographic Literacy WG.10a 463, 464, 491, 493, 496, 589, 661, 828 XIV Geographic Literacy WG.11a 75, 220, 308, 563, 559 XIV Geographic Literacy WG.11c 220, 247, 309, 474, 558, 634, 639, 739, 801 285