Standard set
Grade 5
Standards
Showing 75 of 75 standards.
Strand
Strand
History
Strand
Strand
Geography
Strand
Strand
Civics and Government
Strand
Strand
Economics
5-8.I
Content Standard
Students are able to identify important people and events in order to analyze significant patterns, relationships, themes, ideas, beliefs, and turning points in New Mexico, United States, and world history in order to understand the complexity of the human experience. Students will:
5-8.II
Content Standard
Students understand how physical, natural, and cultural processes influence where people live, the ways in which people live, and how societies interact with one another and their environments. Students will
5-8.III
Content Standard
Students understand the ideals, rights, and responsibilities of citizenship and understand the content and history of the founding documents of the United States with particular emphasis on the United States and New Mexico constitutions and how governments function at local, state, tribal, and national levels. Students will:
5-8.IV
Content Standard
Students understand basic economic principles and use economic reasoning skills to analyze the impact of economic systems (including the market economy) on individuals, families, businesses, communities, and governments. Students will:
I.A
Benchmark
New Mexico: explore and explain how people and events have influenced the development of New Mexico up to the present day:
I.B
Benchmark
United States: analyze and interpret major eras, events and individuals from the periods of exploration and colonization through the civil war and reconstruction in United States history:
I.C
Benchmark
World: compare and contrast major historical eras, events and figures from ancient civilizations to the age of exploration:
I.D
Benchmark
Skills: research historical events and people from a variety of perspectives:
II.A
Benchmark
analyze and evaluate the characteristics and purposes of geographic tools, knowledge, skills and perspectives and apply them to explain the past, present and future in terms of patterns, events and issues:
II.B
Benchmark
explain the physical and human characteristics of places and use this knowledge to define regions, their relationships with other regions, and their patterns of change:
II.C
Benchmark
understand how human behavior impacts man-made and natural environments, recognize past and present results and predict potential changes:
II.D
Benchmark
explain how physical processes shape the earth's surface patterns and biosystems:
II.E
Benchmark
explain how economic, political, cultural and social processes interact to shape patterns of human populations and their interdependence, cooperation and conflict:
II.F
Benchmark
understand the effects of interactions between human and natural systems in terms of changes in meaning, use, distribution and relative importance of resources
III.A
Benchmark
demonstrate understanding of the structure, functions and powers of government (local, state, tribal and national):
III.B
Benchmark
explain the significance of symbols, icons, songs, traditions and leaders of New Mexico and the United States that exemplify ideals and provide continuity and a sense of unity:
III.C
Benchmark
compare political philosophies and concepts of government that became the foundation for the American revolution and the United States government:
III.D
Benchmark
explain how individuals have rights and responsibilities as members of social groups, families, schools, communities, states, tribes and countries:
IV.A
Benchmark
explain and describe how individuals, households, businesses, governments and societies make decisions, are influenced by incentives (economic as well as intrinsic) and the availability and use of scarce resources, and that their choices involve costs and varying ways of allocating:
IV.B
Benchmark
explain how economic systems impact the way individuals, households, businesses, governments and societies make decisions about resources and the production and distribution of goods and services:
IV.C
Benchmark
describe the patterns of trade and exchange in early societies and civilizations and explore the extent of their continuation in today's world:
I.A.5.1
Performance Standard
Describe changes of governance of New Mexico (e.g., indigenous, Spanish, Mexican, French, Texan, confederate, United States);
I.A.5.2
Performance Standard
Explain the reasons for European exploration of the Americas.
I.B.5.1
Performance Standard
Explain the motivations for the European exploration of the Americas (e.g., Leif Ericson, Christopher Columbus, John Cabot, Hernán Cortez, Jacques Cartier, Henry Hudson);
I.B.5.2
Performance Standard
Describe and explain the reasons for colonization, to include: religious freedom, desire for land, economic opportunity, a new way of life, including the roles and views of key individuals who founded colonies (e.g., John Smith, William Penn, Lord Baltimore);
I.B.5.3
Performance Standard
Explain the significance of major historical documents (e.g., the Mayflower compact, the declaration of independence, the federalist papers, United States constitution, bill of rights, the Gettysburg address);
I.B.5.4
Performance Standard
Identify the interactions between American Indians and European settlers, including agriculture, cultural exchanges, alliances and conflicts (e.g., the first Thanksgiving, the pueblo revolt, French and Indian war);
I.B.5.5
Performance Standard
Describe how the introduction of slavery into the Americas, and especially the United States, laid a foundation for conflict;
I.B.5.6
Performance Standard
Explain early representative government and identify democratic practices that emerged (e.g., Iroquois nation model, town meetings, assemblies).
I.C.5.1
Performance Standard
Describe the characteristics of early societies, including the development of tools and adaptation to environments;
I.C.5.2
Performance Standard
Identify, describe and explain the political, religious, economic and social conditions in Europe that led to the era of colonization;
I.C.5.3
Performance Standard
Identify the European countries that colonized the North American continent and their areas of settlement;
I.C.5.4
Performance Standard
Describe the development of slavery as a widespread practice that limits human freedoms and potentials.
I.D.5.1
Performance Standard
Differentiate between, locate and use primary and secondary sources (e.g., computer software, interviews, biographies, oral histories, print, visual material, artifacts) to acquire information;
I.D.5.2
Performance Standard
Use resources for historical information (e.g., libraries, museums, historical societies, courthouse, worldwide web, family records, elders);
I.D.5.3
Performance Standard
Gather, organize and interpret information using a variety of media and technology;
I.D.5.4
Performance Standard
Show the relationship between social contexts and events
I.D.5.5
Performance Standard
Use effective communication skills and strategies to share research findings.
II.A.5.1
Performance Standard
Make and use different kinds of maps, globes, charts and databases;
II.A.5.2
Performance Standard
Demonstrate how different areas of the United States are organized and interconnected;
II.A.5.3
Performance Standard
Identify and locate each of the fifty states and capitols of the United States;
II.A.5.4
Performance Standard
Identify tribal territories within states;
II.A.5.5
Performance Standard
Employ fundamental geographic vocabulary (e.g., latitude, longitude, interdependence, accessibility, connections);
II.A.5.6
Performance Standard
Demonstrate a relational understanding of time zones;
II.A.5.7
Performance Standard
Use spatial organization to communicate information;
II.A.5.8
Performance Standard
Identify and locate natural and man-made features of local, regional, state, national and international locales.
II.B.5.1
Performance Standard
Describe human and natural characteristics of places;
II.B.5.2
Performance Standard
Describe similarities and differences among regions of the globe, and their patterns of change.
II.C.5.1
Performance Standard
Describe how man-made and natural environments have influenced conditions in the past;
II.C.5.2
Performance Standard
Identify and define geographic issues and problems from accounts of current events.
II.D.5.1
Performance Standard
Explain how the four provinces of New Mexico's land surface (plains, mountains, plateau, basin and range) support life.
II.E.5.1
Performance Standard
Explain how physical features influenced the expansion of the United States.
II.F.5.1
Performance Standard
Understand how resources impact daily life.
III.A.5.1
Performance Standard
Explain how the three branches of national government function and explain how they are defined in the United States constitution;
III.A.5.2
Performance Standard
Identify the fundamental ideals and principles of our republican form of government (e.g., inalienable rights such as "life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness," the rule of law, justice, equality under the law);
III.A.5.3
Performance Standard
Identify and describe the significance of American symbols, landmarks and essential documents (e.g., declaration of independence; United States constitution; bill of rights; the federalist papers; Washington, D.C.; liberty bell; Gettysburg address; statue of liberty; government to government accords; treaty of Guadalupe Hildago; Gadsden purchase);
III.A.5.4
Performance Standard
Compare and contrast the basic government sovereignty of local, state, tribal and national governments.
III.B.5.1
Performance Standard
Explain the significance and importance of American customs, symbols, landmarks and celebrations;
III.B.5.2
Performance Standard
Identify and summarize contributions of various racial, ethnic and religious groups to national identity;
III.B.5.3
Performance Standard
Describe selected ethnic and religious customs and celebrations that enhance local, state, tribal and national identities.
III.C.5.1
Performance Standard
Describe the narrative of the people and events associated with the development of the United States constitution, and describe its significance to the foundation of the American republic, to include:<ol type="a"><li>colonists' and Native Americans' shared sense of individualism, independence and religious freedom that developed before the revolution</li><li>articles of confederation</li><li>purpose of the constitutional convention</li><li>natural rights expressed in the declaration of independence</li></ol>
III.C.5.2
Performance Standard
Describe the contributions and roles of major individuals, including George Washington, James Madison and Benjamin Franklin.
III.D.5.1
Performance Standard
Explain the meaning of the American creed that calls on citizens to safeguard the liberty of individual Americans within a unified nation, to respect the rule of law and to preserve the constitutions of local, state, tribal and federal governments.
IV.A.5.1
Performance Standard
Understand the impact of supply and demand on consumers and producers in a free-enterprise system
IV.A.5.2
Performance Standard
Understand the patterns of work and economic activities in New Mexico and the United States (e.g., farming, ranching, oil and gas production, high tech, manufacturing, medicine);
IV.A.5.3
Performance Standard
Describe the aspects of trade;
IV.A.5.4
Performance Standard
Explain how voluntary trade is not coercive.
IV.B.5.1
Performance Standard
Explain how all economic systems must consider the following: What will be produced? How will it be produced? For whom will it be produced;
IV.B.5.2
Performance Standard
Identify the influence of bordering countries (Canada and Mexico) on United States commerce.
IV.C.5.1
Performance Standard
Explain basic economic patterns of early societies (e.g., hunter-gathers, early farming, trade);
IV.C.5.2
Performance Standard
Explain the economic motivation of exploration and colonization by colonial powers.
Framework metadata
- Source document
- Social Studies 5-8 Content Standards with Benchmarks and Performance Standards (2009)
- License
- CC BY 3.0 US
- Normalized subject
- Social Studies