DAILY GEOGRAPHY PRACTICE GRADE-6 BY EVAN MOOC FREE DOWNLOAD PRINTABLE PDF FILE
The Daily The geography series has books for grades 1 through 6. Each course is a fairly thorough, year-long course that is closely aligned with the National Geography Standards. The standards include learning geography by studying the relationships between people, places, and environments; learning to read maps of all kinds; learning the characteristics of regions; studying physical processes that shape the earth’s surface and influence ecosystems; understanding how human activity fits in with geography; learning about the effect of human activity on the environment and the environment upon people and human systems; and learning how geography helps us interpret the past and present as well as make plans for the future.
The primary component
of each course is the reproducible teacher’s edition. While separate student
workbooks are available, lesson presentation is done from the teacher’s
edition, and that information is not in the student workbooks. Reproducible or
printable student pages are in the teacher’s edition, so you really don’t need
the student workbooks.
These courses were
designed for classroom use. The printed teacher's editions are softbound books
that include weekly lesson plans, full-page maps or graphics that are used for
presenting each lesson, a reproducible glossary, and two reproducible pages per week with daily assignments and a “challenge” question.
Each day’s assignment
has two questions that students will answer based upon the lesson presented at
the beginning of the week, the student's own study of the week’s map or
graphic, and, occasionally, outside research. Students will need to maintain
their question pages in a notebook since they will work two or three days to
complete each page.
Vocabulary words and
their definitions are introduced at the beginning of each lesson. While the
words are also included in the glossary of each book, the definitions in both
places are not identical. You might want to have students write out words and
definitions each week. Other than the time this might require, lesson
presentation at the beginning of each week should take only about ten minutes.
Daily questions should only take a few minutes each, but the challenge question
might require research, coloring, drawing, writing, or other activity that will
likely take much more time. An answer key is included on the teaching page for
each lesson. There are no tests.
The first-grade book
begins with globes, directions, map keys, physical maps, street maps, city maps
(and other types of “local” maps), park or zoo maps, product maps, tourist and
weather maps, and political maps. By sixth grade, students are learning about
map grids and coordinates, map scales, projections, road maps, historical and
cultural landmarks, population maps, time zones, climate zones, land use, and
other topics. Many topics are repeated at different grade levels but at
increasing levels of difficulty.
While lessons do not
require a lot of time, some of them are interesting, sometimes even intriguing--the
challenge questions more so than the daily questions. Students should acquire
both broad and specific geographic knowledge through these courses, but the
specific knowledge will be selective given the time and space limitations.
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