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  • WA.ESES.K.1 - Students develop knowledge of the interconnections and interdependency...
  • WA.ESES.K.1 - Students develop knowledge of the interconnections and interdependency...
Monarch Mystery (Kindergarten)
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CC BY
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Welcome to Monarch Mystery! This curriculum for Kindergarten students is grounded in a local phenomenon about missing Monarch butterflies and is shared through the eyes of a young migrant girl named Violeta, who is currently living in Naches, Washington after moving from Mexico with her family to be farm workers. This unit, while anchored in science, is also grounded in practices of culturally responsive pedagogies that center, acknowledge, and honor the profound knowledge, experiences, historicities, and cultures of migrant and bilingual youth and their families and communities. This also allows the curriculum to be taught in ways that integrate other content areas like English Language Arts and Geography. Ultimately, science is taught within a respective context that promotes students’ sense of belonging and identities. Additionally, this unit, like all units from EarthGen, prepares teachers and students to apply their newfound knowledge toward a culminating student-led action project that supports their community and addresses local environmental challenges of relevance and importance to them.  

Subject:
Cultural Geography
Elementary Education
Environmental Science
Life Science
Material Type:
Activity/Lab
Full Course
Author:
EarthGen Washington
Date Added:
06/27/2024
Since Time Immemorial: Giving Thanks - A Native American Cultural Tradition
Unrestricted Use
CC BY
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Lessons about Thanksgiving in elementary classrooms have historically misrepresented the events and people involved in the “first Thanksgiving.” Teachers are looking for guidance in teaching culturally and historically accurate lessons to young children. Updated research and texts supported by primary documents and tribal oral histories allow us to present more accurate representation of the story behind this tradition. The lessons presented here invite students to share their own fall and harvest traditions, and teach students some of the cultural values and traditions of our country’s indigenous peoples. Lessons are designed to be integrated into existing curriculum on fall/autumn, food, harvest, celebrations, and/or salmon prior to the Thanksgiving holiday, but could be taught independently of other curriculum as well. Lessons 1-4 are written for k-3 and should be adapted for developmental appropriateness.

Subject:
Arts and Humanities
Education
Elementary Education
History
Life Science
U.S. History
World Cultures
Material Type:
Lesson
Lesson Plan
Unit of Study
Author:
Michi Thacker
Washington Office of Superintendent of Public Instruction
Date Added:
11/06/2023