Paid-members only Grade 4 Social Studies Units Unit Plan 16 (Grade 4 Social Studies): Sources Tell Our State’s Story Students investigate a guiding historical question using primary and secondary sources, analyzing relevance, credibility, and perspective to separate fact from opinion and write a clear, evidence-based explanation of who/what/where/when/why.
Paid-members only Grade 4 Social Studies Units Unit Plan 15 (Grade 4 Social Studies): Timelines of Change Students build and interpret a state history timeline—from longstanding Indigenous presence to statehood—using chronological vocabulary, intervals, and multiple sources to understand how communities and governments changed over time.
Paid-members only Grade 4 Social Studies Units Unit Plan 14 (Grade 4 Social Studies): Building Communities Students analyze how natural features like rivers and landforms influenced early settlements and how human-made features—roads, bridges, canals, and dams—transformed land use, trade, and community growth across the region.
Paid-members only Grade 4 Social Studies Units Unit Plan 13 (Grade 4 Social Studies): Trade and Exchange in the Early State Students explore early trade between Indigenous nations and newcomers, mapping trading locations, identifying exchanged goods, and using simple supply-and-demand ideas to explain interdependence, cooperation, and conflict in the region’s early history.
Paid-members only Grade 4 Social Studies Units Unit Plan 12 (Grade 4 Social Studies): Explorers and Early Contacts Students trace explorers’ routes, motives, and early encounters with Indigenous peoples using maps and multiple sources, identifying clear cause-and-effect patterns that shaped early exploration and settlement in the region.
Paid-members only Grade 4 Social Studies Units Unit Plan 11 (Grade 4 Social Studies): Cultural Regions and Adaptations Students explore how Indigenous nations adapted tools, clothing, and seasonal movement to their environments across cultural regions, highlighting stewardship practices and showing how these traditions continue and change today.
Paid-members only Grade 4 Social Studies Units Unit Plan 10 (Grade 4 Social Studies): Life Before Settlement Students explore Indigenous nations of their region—mapping homelands, connecting environment to food and housing, and recognizing living cultures that show both continuity and change.
Paid-members only Grade 4 Social Studies Units Unit Plan 9 (Grade 4 Social Studies): State Geography Project Students create a State Geography Map Book using multiple sources, clear maps, and evidence-based explanations to show regions, features, resources, and stewardship ideas.
Paid-members only Grade 4 Social Studies Units Unit Plan 8 (Grade 4 Social Studies): Caring for Our Environment Students investigate real examples of conservation, protection, and restoration in our state and create their own evidence-based stewardship proposal, learning how to analyze human–environment interaction and communicate informed actions clearly.
Paid-members only Grade 4 Social Studies Units Unit Plan 7 (Grade 4 Social Studies): Resources and Regions Students explore how landforms and climate shape natural resources and regional industries, identifying natural, human, and capital resources while weighing benefits, costs, and environmental trade-offs.
Paid-members only Grade 4 Social Studies Units Unit Plan 6 (Grade 4 Social Studies): Map Skills and Direction Students apply cardinal/intermediate directions and use map scales to estimate distance and plan simple routes, integrating titles, legends, compass roses, grids, and multiple sources to answer geographic questions with accuracy and clarity.
Paid-members only Grade 4 Social Studies Units Unit Plan 5 (Grade 4 Social Studies): Natural and Human-Made Features Students compare natural and human-made features—like mountains, rivers, dams, bridges, and highways—and explain their purposes, impacts, and stewardship needs through hands-on mapping and human–environment interaction activities.
Paid-members only Grade 4 Social Studies Units Unit Plan 4 (Grade 4 Social Studies): Weather and Climate Across Regions Students investigate how weather and climate differ across regions and how people adapt, modify, and conserve resources in response to temperature, precipitation, and seasonal patterns.
Paid-members only Grade 4 Social Studies Units Unit Plan 3 (Grade 4 Social Studies): Landforms and Waterways Students explore major landforms and waterways in their state and region, examining how these features shape settlement, jobs, and travel while learning how people adapt to, modify, and care for their environment through hands-on mapping and stewardship activities.
Paid-members only Grade 4 Social Studies Units Unit Plan 2 (Grade 4 Social Studies): Mapping Our State Students learn to read and create detailed state maps using titles, legends, scales, grid coordinates, and directions, gathering information from multiple sources to locate cities, rivers, and borders accurately.
Grade 4 Social Studies Units Unit Plan 1 (Grade 4 Social Studies): Our State and Its Regions Students explore their state’s physical and cultural regions and compare urban, suburban, and rural communities using maps, questions, and local examples to understand how geography shapes ways of life.
Paid-members only Grade 5 Social Studies Units Unit Plan 36 (Grade 5 Social Studies): Cumulative Synthesis & Exhibition Culminating 5th grade History Fair where students synthesize timelines, maps, documents, and civic/economic ideas into an interactive exhibit showing U.S. development and citizenship.
Paid-members only Grade 5 Social Studies Units Unit Plan 35 (Grade 5 Social Studies): The United States in the World Students map how the U.S. connects to other nations through trade, movement, and ideas, explain global interdependence, model how taxes or boycotts affect demand, and identify which levels of government support these worldwide connections.
Paid-members only Grade 5 Social Studies Units Unit Plan 34 (Grade 5 Social Studies): Civic Action and Service Students design a local civic action or service project that reflects democratic ideals, citizen responsibilities, and rights with limits, using civil discourse to choose an issue and create clear products that communicate their plan to an authentic audience.
Paid-members only Grade 5 Social Studies Units Unit Plan 33 (Grade 5 Social Studies): Human-Environment Interaction in the New Nation Students explore how canals, railroads, and land use reshaped the environment and economy of the new nation, analyzing resource use and weighing the benefits and costs of human-environment interaction.
Paid-members only Grade 5 Social Studies Units Unit Plan 32 (Grade 5 Social Studies): Expanding America’s Borders Students trace U.S. exploration, migration, and westward expansion using maps and primary/secondary sources, examining how geography shaped routes and how expansion brought opportunity for some and loss and harm—especially for Indigenous peoples.
Paid-members only Grade 5 Social Studies Units Unit Plan 31 (Grade 5 Social Studies): Civic Debate—Rights Then and Now Students explore liberty, equality, and rights through founding documents, analyze past and present debates, and practice civil discourse in a structured class debate using evidence from the Declaration, Constitution, and Bill of Rights.
Paid-members only Grade 5 Social Studies Units Unit Plan 30 (Grade 5 Social Studies): Work, Money, and Markets Students investigate how early Americans earned, saved, spent, and invested by analyzing budgets, ledgers, maps, and artifacts—connecting household money choices to markets, mercantilism, and the wider economic systems that shaped everyday life.
Paid-members only Grade 5 Social Studies Units Unit Plan 29 (Grade 5 Social Studies): Trade and Interdependence Students map Atlantic and domestic trade routes, explore interdependence among regions, and analyze how resources, taxes, and boycotts shaped early American trade—showing how goods, people, and ideas moved across the Atlantic world and the growing United States.
Paid-members only Grade 5 Social Studies Units Unit Plan 28 (Grade 5 Social Studies): Scarcity and Choice in a Growing Nation Students investigate how scarcity, landforms, waterways, and climate shaped early American settlement and expansion—analyzing choices like docks vs. roads or coast vs. frontier and explaining each decision’s opportunity cost using maps, scenarios, and case studies.