United States History I:
Beginnings to 1877
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6th grade Social Studies will be exploring the rich history of the United States from its beginnings to 1877. Geographic, economic, and civic concepts will be presented within this historic context. Students will use geographic tools to analyze the influence of physical and cultural geography on United States history and will also focus on concepts of economic interdependence and the historic ideas that form the foundation of political institutions in the United States.
History and Social Science units of study:
| 1. Geography | 4. Colonial America | 7. Westward Expansion |
| 2. Native Americans | 5. The American Revolution | 8. The Civil War |
| 3 European Exploration | 6. The New Republic | 9. Reconstruction |
Specific Standards of Learning Objectives:
Skills
USI.1 The student will develop skills for historical
and geographical analysis, including the ability to
a) identify and interpret primary and secondary source
documents to increase understanding of events and life in United States
history to 1877;
b) make connections between the past and the present;
c) sequence events in United States history from pre-Columbian
times to 1877;
d) interpret ideas and events from different historical
perspectives;
e) evaluate and discuss issues orally and in writing;
f) analyze and interpret maps to explain relationships
among landforms, water features, climatic characteristics, and historical
events;
g) distinguish between parallels of latitude and meridians
of longitude;
h) interpret patriotic slogans and excerpts from notable
speeches and documents.
Geography
USI.2 The student will use maps, globes, photographs,
pictures, and tables to
a) locate the seven continents;
b) locate and describe the location of the geographic
regions of North America: Coastal Plain, Appalachian Mountains, Canadian
Shield, Interior Lowlands, Great Plains, Rocky Mountains, Basin and Range,
and Coastal Range;
c) locate and identify the water features important to
the early history of the United States: Great Lakes, Mississippi River,
Missouri River, Ohio River, Columbia River, Colorado River, Rio Grande,
Atlantic Ocean, Pacific Ocean, and Gulf of Mexico.
Exploration to Revolution: Pre-Columbian Times to the
1770s
USI.3 The student will demonstrate knowledge of how
early cultures developed in North America by
a) locating where the American Indians (First Americans)
settled, with emphasis on Arctic (Inuit), Northwest (Kwakiutl), Plains
(Sioux), Southwest (Pueblo), and Eastern Woodland (Iroquois);
b) describing how the American Indians (First Americans)
used their environment to obtain food, clothing, and shelter.
USI.4 The student will demonstrate knowledge
of European exploration in North America and West Africa by
a) describing the motivations, obstacles, and accomplishments
of the Spanish, French, Portuguese, and English explorations;
b) describing cultural interactions between Europeans
and American Indians (First Americans) that led to cooperation and conflict;
c) identifying the location and describing the characteristics
of West African societies (Ghana, Mali, and Songhai) and their interactions
with traders.
USI.5 The student will demonstrate knowledge of the
factors that shaped colonial America by
a) describing the religious and economic events and conditions
that led to the colonization of America;
b) comparing and contrasting life in the New England,
Mid-Atlantic, and Southern colonies, with emphasis on how people interacted
with their environment;
c) describing colonial life in America from the perspectives
of large landowners, farmers, artisans, women, indentured servants, and
slaves;
d) identifying the political and economic relationships
between the colonies and England.
Revolution and the New Nation: 1770s to the Early 1800s
USI.6 The student will demonstrate knowledge of the
causes and results of the American Revolution by
a) identifying the issues of dissatisfaction that led
to the American Revolution;
b) identifying how political ideas shaped the revolutionary
movement in America and led to the Declaration of Independence, with emphasis
on the ideas of John Locke;
c) describing key events and the roles of key individuals
in the American Revolution, with emphasis on George Washington, Benjamin
Franklin, Thomas Jefferson, Patrick Henry, and Thomas Paine;
d) explaining reasons why the colonies were able to defeat
Britain.
USI.7 The student will demonstrate knowledge of the
challenges faced by the new nation by
a) identifying the weaknesses of the government established
by the Articles of Confederation;
b) identifying the basic principles of the new government
established by the Constitution of the United States and the Bill of Rights;
c) identifying the conflicts that resulted in the emergence
of two political parties;
d) describing the major accomplishments of the first
five presidents of the United States.
Expansion and Reform: 1801 to 1861
USI.8 The student will demonstrate knowledge of westward
expansion and reform in America from 1801 to 1861 by
a) describing territorial expansion and how it affected
the political map of the United States, with emphasis on the Louisiana
Purchase, the Lewis and Clark expedition, and the acquisitions of Florida,
Texas, Oregon, and California;
b) identifying the geographic and economic factors that
influenced the westward movement of settlers;
c) describing the impact of inventions, including the
cotton gin, the reaper, the steamboat, and the steam locomotive, on life
in America;
d) identifying the main ideas of the abolitionist and
suffrage movements.
Civil War and Reconstruction: 1860s to 1877
USI.9 The student will demonstrate knowledge of the
causes, major events, and effects of the Civil War by
a) describing the cultural, economic, and constitutional
issues that divided the nation;
b) explaining how the issues of states’ rights and slavery
increased sectional tensions;
c) identifying on a map the states that seceded from
the Union and those that remained in the Union;
d) describing the roles of Abraham Lincoln, Jefferson
Davis, Ulysses S. Grant, Robert E. Lee, Thomas "Stonewall" Jackson, and
Frederick Douglass in events leading to and during the war;
e) using maps to explain critical developments in the
war, including major battles;
f) describing the effects of war from the perspectives
of Union and Confederate soldiers (including black soldiers), women, and
slaves.
USI.10 The student will demonstrate knowledge of the
effects of Reconstruction on American life by
a) identifying the provisions of the 13th, 14th, and
15th Amendments to the Constitution of the United States and their impact
on the expansion of freedom in America;
b) describing the impact of Reconstruction policies on
the South.
Links for Social Studies:
National
Geographic
Social
Studies School Service Links
United States History
The United
States History Index
From Revolution
to Reconstruction
The Library of Congress
US National Archivers
and Records Administration
Questions about Social Studies at Walker?