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Transportation Seven Strands Kindergarten

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Seven Strands. Kindergarten. Ashley Christian. Jennifer Schaeffer. Table ... 3 big pieces of paper, green for land, blue for the water and white for the sky ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Transportation Seven Strands Kindergarten


1
TransportationSeven StrandsKindergarten
  • Ashley Christian
  • Jennifer Schaeffer

2
Table of Contents
  • History
  • People in Societies
  • Geography
  • Economics
  • Government
  • Citizenship Rights and Responsibilities
  • Social Studies Skills and Methods

3
History
  • Students use materials drawn from the diversity
    of human experience to analyze and interpret
    significant events, patterns, and themes in
    history of Ohio, the United States, and the
    world. -ODE

4
Activities
  • Students will learn about the Wright brothers by
    watching The Wright Brothers at Kittyhawk A
    Charlie Brown Video
  • Create a timeline for transportation.
  • Allow the students to play Oregon Trail and
    discover the modes of transportation used.

5
Activities
  • Ask the students how long they think that people
    have been flying airplanes and allow them to
    share their ideas. Then, ask the students how
    they think airplanes fly and again let them offer
    their theories. With the students' attention
    still focused on the television monitor, display
    the Web sites listed below and read the text to
    the students as they view the images.
  • To understand what life was like as a pioneer,
    ask the students to imagine that they were going
    on a four month trip in your family van. You will
    be traveling through remote wilderness with no
    place to stop for food or supplies. What would
    you take along. Make a list. How is your list
    similar to or different from the pioneers.

6
Websites
  • http//www.nasm.si.edu/
  • Information about the Wright Brothers and
    different types of planes
  • http//www.saskschools.ca/gregory/transport.html
  • Pictures of early mode of transportation
  • http//www.transitpeople.org/lesson/trancovr.shtml
  • Online lesson about early transportation

7
Websites
  • http//travel.howstuffworks.com/airplane.htm
  • http//www.glc.k12.ga.us/BuilderV03/LPTools/LPShar
    ed/lpdisplay.asp?Session_StampLPID53346

8
People in Societies
  • Students use knowledge of perspectives,
    practices, and products of cultural, ethnic, and
    social groups to analyze the impact of their
    commonality and diversity within local, national,
    regional, and global settings. -ODE

9
Activities
  • The teacher will begin a class discussion
    explaining the various positions of the workers
    on a canal boat. Each boat had a captain. There
    was a steersman, a mule boy and a cook. Each had
    an important job to do, in order to keep the
    canal boat moving. Ask the students to define
    each persons role on the boat.

10
Activities
  • There are many people who work in the community.
    Let's name some of those people. (Write the
    responses on the chalkboard.) Typical answers may
    include police officer, firefighters, garbage
    collectors, mail carrier, and bus driver. After
    children have compiled a list, go back to each
    person listed and discuss what modes of
    transportation they use to travel to do their
    community jobs.

11
Activities
  • Introduce the book Tap-Tap. Ask the students to
    identify the vehicle on the cover of the book.
    Read the book. Then explain to the students that
    in Haiti people use various methods of
    transportation including tap-taps. Tell the
    students that a tap-tap is a form of a bus that
    is colorfully painted and used to transfer
    people, luggage and animals. This vehicle is
    called a tap-tap because when you want to leave
    the vehicle, you tap the outside and the driver
    stops.

12
Activities
  • Begin the lesson about life of the pioneers who
    traveled west by reviewing the westward movement
    of the pioneers during the time of Johnny
    Appleseed. Use pictures from books and a large,
    simple physical map of the United States (ideally
    a primary physical map with only the state
    boundaries) to review how the early pioneers
    traveled, where they traveled and why. Review the
    concept that a pioneer is someone who leads the
    way into a land not known to them.

13
Activities
  • Locate on a map possibilities of where the
    students ancestors live(d). Describe how these
    people made their trip to America.

14
Websites
  • www.lessonplanspage.com/SSK1.htm
  • http//www.reacheverychild.com/feature/transportat
    ion.html
  • http//www.cstone.net/bcp/K/KDGeo.htm
  • http//www.eduref.org/Virtual/Lessons/crossroads/s
    ec3/k2/unit7/u7kinl1.htm

15
Geography
  • Students use knowledge of geographic locations,
    patterns, and processes to show the
    interrelationship between the physical
    environment and human activity, and to explain
    the interactions that occur in an increasingly
    interdependent world. -ODE

16
Activities
  • Read the book Dumbo on Land on Sea in the Air to
    the class. Have the students place objects onto a
    felt board according to their category land,
    air, sea- as indicated.
  • Have 3 big pieces of paper, green for land, blue
    for the water and white for the sky and place
    them on floor around the room. Using the same
    principle as above have students place pictures
    on the appropriate paper. This activity is larger
    and more hands on if you have the space and time.

17
Activities
  • Explain that in today's lesson, they are going to
    learn how various forms of transportation are
    used to move people from one place to another.
    Draw a word web on the board. Discuss the three
    types of transportation (i.e. public, emergency
    and basic). Explain that public transportation is
    used when many people ride on vehicles together
    in order to arrive at a specific destination.
    Then state that emergency transportation is used
    when people need help and basic transportation is
    used by everyone in order to complete daily tasks
    such as going to school, work, etc. Ask the
    students to identify specific vehicles for each
    category.

18
Activities
  • Challenge the students to brainstorm some
    different forms of air travel and record their
    suggestions as well as an illustration of the
    mode on a sheet of chart paper. As the students
    are offering possible means of air travel,
    challenge them to be creative but realistic in
    their replies. Remind the students that not all
    types of transport are motorized and offer
    suggestions such as hot air balloons, hang
    gliders, and parachutes if necessary.

19
Activities
  • Show students maps of the major transportation
    networks in the United States. Locate major
    interstates on a road atlas, major plane routes
    in an airline timetable, and railroad routes.
    Have them explain how specific products might get
    from place to place. Ask students to discuss
    and/or list what they think would be the best and
    worst things about each method of transportation.
    For example, an airplane is fast but can't carry
    as much weight as a train.

20
Websites
  • www.glc.k12.ga.us/seqlps/sudspres.asp?SUID284SSU
    ID269SSTitleKindergartenSocialStudies
  • http//www.nationalgeographic.com/xpeditions/lesso
    ns/11/gk2/belongings.html

21
Economics
  • Students use economic reasoning skills and
    knowledge of major economic concepts, issues, and
    systems in order to make informed choices as
    producers, consumers, savers, investors, workers,
    and citizens in an interdependent world. -ODE

22
Activities
  • Read a book about assembly line and how vehicles
    were made originally. Have student make a mock
    assembly line using candy and food.
  • It is important to know that these methods of
    transportation are produced in a factory.
    Students will learn that the various
    transportation methods each use a different
    number of wheels. Next, ask the students to sort
    pictures of transportation by how many wheels
    they have.

23
Activities
  • Introduce the lesson by asking the students to
    think about why people need transportation and
    allow them to respond. After students share their
    ideas, explain that there are two primary reasons
    why transportation is necessary to move people
    from one place to another and to deliver goods
    (or things that people use) to where they need to
    go. Tell the students that today they will learn
    some different ways that goods are transported.

24
Activities
  • Each child will be given a picture of a canal
    boat and a paper with different things the canal
    carried. They will cut and paste five things they
    want the canal boat to carry for them.
  • Begin by having students reach into the feeling
    box (a cardboard box with a hole cut in it and a
    piece of material acting as a curtain) one at a
    time. The box contains a toy car, a toy plane,
    and a toy boat. As the students reach into the
    box, the teacher states that the box contains
    three items and asks the students to think about
    what these three things have in common. Write and
    draw a picture to create a list of the students'
    ideas on chart paper.

25
Websites
  • www.pbs.org/harriman/education/lessonplans/transpo
    rtation.html
  • http//www.lessonplanspage.com/SSMDOTransportation
    UnitK.htm
  • http//www.glc.k12.ga.us/BuilderV03/LPTools/LPShar
    ed/displayunit.asp?UnitID1372

26
Government
  • Students use knowledge of the purposes,
    structures and processes of political systems at
    the local, state, national and international
    levels to understand that people create systems
    of government as structures of power and
    authority to provide order, maintain stability
    and promote the general welfare. - ODE

27
Activities
  • Students will work in small groups. The teacher
    will give each group a list of rules that have
    been broken while riding on a school bus. The
    group will collaborate and decide what
    consequences should be given and why
  • The students will work in small groups. Each
    group will choose a state. The students in each
    group have to decide what the speed limit is for
    the state, what forms of transportation
    (including airplanes) can be used throughout the
    state and why. The group can choose how they
    would like to present it to the class.

28
Activities
  • Have the students explain and demonstrate the
    purpose of rules for the airport.
  • Provide a list of signs and rules that you must
    use while traveling. Have students look for and
    report back about what signs they saw while out
    of school.

29
Websites
  • http//www.bts.gov/
  • http//www.iron.k12.ut.us/schools/BUS/rules.htm
  • http//www.dot.state.mn.us/speed/speedbrochure.htm
    l
  • http//www.bmv.ohio.gov/TraffRul.html

30
Citizenship Rights and Responsibilities
  • Students use knowledge of the rights and
    responsibilities of citizenship in order to
    examine and evaluate civic ideals and to
    participate in community life and the American
    democratic system. -ODE

31
Activities
  • If it is nice outside, set up a roadway with road
    signs outside. Have students learn what the
    different signs mean and role play using the
    bikes and tricycles.
  • Compare the rights that a driver has verses a
    pedestrian sharing the same roadway.

32
Activities
  • There is a traffic jam in the community, the
    students will decide how to solve the problem
    while maintaining order and explain why.
  • The students will demonstrate how a citizen can
    show their patriotism when using different modes
    of transportation or when traveling abroad.

33
Activities
  • The students will compare the rights they have in
    America verses their rights and responsibilities
    when traveling to another country.

34
Websites
  • http//travel.state.gov/
  • http//www.robsherman.com/information/liberalnews/
    2002/godbus/home.htm
  • http//www.csaa.com/global/articledetail/0,1398,10
    04040000257C225,00.html
  • http//kidshealth.org/kid/watch/out/bike_safety.ht
    ml

35
Social Studies Skills and Methods
  • Students collects, organize, evaluate and
    synthesize information from multiple sources to
    draw logical conclusions. Students communicate
    this information using appropriate social studies
    terminology in oral, written or multimedia form
    and apply what they have learned to societal
    issues simulated or real-world setting. -ODE

36
Activities
  • Divide the children into 4 groups. Give each
    group a type of transportation. (bus, boat,
    plane, train) Have each group decide what they
    would need for their type of transportation and
    have them role play a trip to wherever they want
    based on their type of transportation.

37
Activities
  • Poll the students about how they get to school in
    the morning, and how they leave in the afternoon.
    Make a bar graph for morning and afternoon.
    Compare each graph with itself and the other
    graph.
  • Using a map of Ohio, find Dayton, Columbus, and
    Cincinnati. Report your findings to the class.

38
Activities
  • The students will sort fact and fiction cards
    about travel and transportation.
  • The students will predict what they think the
    next type of transportation will be.

39
Websites
  • http//ww2.aaa.com/scripts/WebObjects.dll/AAAOnlin
    e?associationaaaclub133
  • http//science.nasa.gov/
  • http//inventors.about.com/library/inventors/blrai
    lroad.htm
  • http//www.enchantedlearning.com/inventors/transpo
    rtation.shtml
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