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Content Area: Social Studies
Index: 6.6E Grade 2 CPI 1
Standard: 6.6 - Geography
Strand: E - Environment and Society
Cumulative Progress Indicator: 1 - The student will describe the role of resources such as air, land, water, and plants in everyday life.
Grade: 2
Sample Activities:
· Resource Identification. Students begin by studying resources in general. They learn that the utility of specific resources is related to the surrounding context. The diamond mines in South Africa have not in general benefited most of that country’s people. Other kinds of resources are the source of values-laden arguments. For example, is a rain forest a resource? What is the value of certain wet-lands? After developing a list of resources and where they are found, students compare the availability of the resources to the economy of the country or region to define that relationship.
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A Resource ’s Impact on the Economy. When identifying renewable and nonrenewable
resources, students think about resources that can be used and that will still
be available (like the wheat fields of Kansas) and those that can be used but
will eventually be used up (like the diamond mines of South Africa). They then
choose a resource and explain whether it is renewable or nonrenewable and why.
Students begin to make lists of both types of resources, adding the location for
each. Next, each student chooses a state or country and begins to research the
impact of the chosen resource on the place selected—for example, the impact of
tomatoes on the New Jersey economy, oil on Saudi Arabia’s economy, coffee on
Brazil’s economy, sugar on Cuba’s economy, and so forth. Do students know that
South Africa has the largest deposits of uranium in the world? What effect does
this have
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