2nd Grade History
2.1 Students differentiate between things that happened long ago and
things that happened yesterday.
Trace the history of a family through the use of
primary and secondary sources, including artifacts, photographs, interviews,
and documents.
Compare and contrast their daily lives with those of
their parents, grandparents, and/ or guardians.
Place important events in their lives in the order in
which they occurred (e.g., on a time line or storyboard).
2.2 Students demonstrate map skills by describing the absolute and
relative locations of people, places, and environments.
Locate on a simple letter-number grid system the
specific locations and geographic features in their neighborhood or community
(e.g., map of the classroom, the school).
Label from memory a simple map of the North American
continent, including the countries, oceans, Great Lakes, major rivers, and
mountain ranges. Identify the essential map elements: title, legend,
directional indicator, scale, and date.
Locate on a map where their ancestors live(d), telling
when the family moved to the local community and how and why they made the
trip.
Compare and contrast basic land use in urban,
suburban, and rural environments in California.
2.3 Students explain governmental institutions and practices in the
United States and other countries.
Explain how the United States and other countries make
laws, carry out laws, determine whether laws have been violated, and punish
wrongdoers.
Describe the ways in which groups and nations interact
with one another to try to resolve problems in such areas as trade, cultural
contacts, treaties, diplomacy, and military force.
2.4 Students understand basic economic concepts and their individual
roles in the economy and demonstrate basic economic reasoning skills.
Describe food production and consumption long ago and
today, including the roles of farmers, processors, distributors, weather, and
land and water resources.
Understand the role and interdependence of buyers
(consumers) and sellers (producers) of goods and services.
Understand how limits on resources affect production
and consumption (what to produce and what to consume).
2.5 Students understand the importance of individual action and
character and explain how heroes from long ago and the recent past have made a
difference in others' lives (e.g., from biographies of Abraham Lincoln, Louis
Pasteur, Sitting Bull, George Washington Carver, Marie Curie, Albert Einstein,
Golda Meir, Jackie Robinson, Sally Ride).