Grade 2
Other Arizona History and Social Science sets
Other Arizona History and Social Science sets
Disciplinary Skills and Processes
- SP1
Chronological reasoning requires understanding processes of change and continuity over time, which means assessing similarities and differences between historical periods and between the past and present.2.SP1
- 1
Create a chronological sequence of multiple events.2.SP1.1
- 2
Understand how events of the past affect students’ lives and community.2.SP1.2
- 3
Generate questions about individuals and groups who have shaped a significant historical change.2.SP1.3
- 1
- SP2
Thinking within the discipline involves the ability to identify, compare, and evaluate multiple perspectives about a given event to draw conclusions about that event since there are multiple points of view about events and issues.2.SP2
- 1
Compare diverse cultures from around the world using primary sources such as photographs, artifacts, and music and secondary sources such as fiction and non-fiction.2.SP2.1
- 2
Compare perspectives of people in the past to those today through stories and biographies.2.SP2.2
- 1
- SP3
Historians and Social Scientists gather, interpret, and use evidence to develop claims and answer historical, economic, geographical, and political questions and communicate their conclusions.2.SP3
- 1
Identify facts and concepts associated with compelling and supporting questions.2.SP3.1
- 2
Determine and use various kinds of sources to answer compelling and supporting questions.2.SP3.2
- 3
Generate questions about a source as it relates to an event or development.2.SP3.3
- 4
Gather relevant information from one or two sources.2.SP3.4
- 5
Ask and answer questions about explanations and arguments.2.SP3.5
- 6
Present a summary of an argument or explanation using print, oral, or digital technology.2.SP3.6
- 1
- SP4
Thinking within the discipline involves the ability to analyze relationships among causes and effects and to create and support arguments using relevant evidence.2.SP4
- 1
Generate possible reasons for an event or development. 2.SP4.1
- 2
Select which reasons might be more likely than others to explain an event or development.2.SP4.2
- 1
Civics
- C2
Citizens have individual rights, roles, and responsibilities.2.C2
- 2
Explain how all people, not just official leaders, play important roles in the world.2.C2.2
- 1
Describe roles and responsibilities of people in authority within our country and world.2.C2.1
- 2
- C4
Process, rules, and laws direct how individuals are governed and how society addresses problems. 2.C4
- 1
Explain how people work together to identify and solve problems within our world. 2.C4.1
- 2
Explain how rules function in public settings. 2.C4.2
- 1
Economics
- E1
A financially literate individual understands how to manage income, spending, and investment.2.E1
- 1
Identify different occupations and skills needed in a global economy.2.E1.1
- 2
Describe reasons to save or spend money.2.E1.2
- 1
- E3
Individuals and institutions are interdependent within market systems. 2.E3
- 1
Identify and describe the goods and services that are produced around the world. 2.E3.1
- 2
Explain how people around the world earn income. 2.E3.2
- 3
Explain how people can be producers and consumers in a global economy. 2.E3.3
- 1
- E4
The domestic economy is shaped by interactions between government, institutions, and the private sector. 2.E4
- 1
Describe the public services that governments provide and how they meet the needs of individuals.2.E4.1
- 1
- E5
The interconnected global economy impacts all individuals and groups in significant and varied ways.2.E5
- 1
Illustrate how a country’s resources determine what is produced and traded.2.E5.1
- 1
Geography
- G1
The use of geographic representations and tools help individuals understand their world.2.G1
- 1
Use and construct maps, graphs, and other geographic representations of familiar and unfamiliar places in the world; and locate physical and human features. 2.G1.1
- -
Key physical features include but are not limited to seven continents, oceans, lakes, rivers, mountain ranges, coasts, seas, and deserts
- -
Key human features include but are not limited to equator, hemispheres, North and South Pole, cities, states, countries, regions, and landmarks
- -
- 2
Use maps, globes, and other simple geographic models to identify and explain cultural and environmental characteristics of places in the world based on stories shared.2.G1.2
- 1
- G2
Human-environment interactions are essential aspects of human life in all societies. 2.G2
- 1
Explain how weather, climate, and other environmental characteristics affect people’s lives in a place or region being studied. 2.G2.1
- 2
Describe how human activities affect the communities and the environment of places or regions. 2.G2.2
- 3
Describe the positive and negative effects of using natural resources. 2.G2.3
- 1
- G3
Examining human population and movement helps individuals understand past, present, and future conditions on Earth’s surface.2.G3
- 1
Explain why and how people, goods, and ideas move from place to place.2.G3.1
- -
Key concepts include but are not limited to transportation, trade, immigration, migration, and communication
- -
- 1
- G4
Global interconnections and spatial patterns are a necessary part of geographic reasoning. 2.G4
- 1
Identify different physical and cultural regions in the world. 2.G4.1
- 1
HISTORY
- G1
The development of civilizations, societies, cultures, and innovations have influenced history and continue to impact the modern world.2.H1
- 1
Explain how individuals can make contributions to a civilization and/or culture in place or region studied. 2.H1.1
- 2
Using primary and secondary sources, compare civilizations and/or cultures around the world and how they have changed over time in a place or region studied. 2.H1.2
- 3
Examine developments from the civilization and/or culture in place or region studied. 2.H1.3
- 1
- G3
Economic, political, and religious ideas and institutions have influenced history and continue to shape the modern world.2.H3
- 1
Generate questions about the institutions and belief systems of different societies.2.H3.1
- -
Key concepts include but are not limited to religion, governments, economic systems, and education
- -
- 1
Frequently asked questions
- What grade levels do these standards cover?
- Grade 2
- Where can I read the official document?
- History and Social Science Standards (2019)
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