Social Studies
1. History of the United States and New York
Students will use a variety of intellectual skills
to demonstrate their understanding of major ideas,
eras, themes, developments and turning points in
the history of the United States and New York.
2. World History
Students will use a variety of intellectual skills
to demonstrate their understanding of major ideas,
eras, themes, developments, and turning points in
world history and examine the broad sweep of history
from a variety of perspectives.
3. Geography
Students will use a variety of intellectual skills
to demonstrate their understanding of the geography
of the interdependent world in which we livelocal,
national, and globalincluding the distribution
of people, places, and environments over the Earth's
surface.
4. Economics
Students will use a variety of intellectual skills
to demonstrate their understanding of how the United
States and other societies develop economic systems
and associated institutions to allocate scarce resources,
how major decision-making units function in the
United States and other national economies, and
how an economy solves the scarcity problem through
market and non-market mechanisms.
5. Civics, Citizenship, and Government
Students will use a variety of intellectual skills
to demonstrate their understanding of the necessity
for establishing governments; the governmental system
of the United States and other nations; the United
States Constitution; the basic civic values of American
constitutional democracy; and the roles, rights,
and responsibilities of citizenship, including avenues
of participation.
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