History & Social Studies

Lumen Academy will use Inquiry Journeys as the basis of its social studies curriculum in kindergarten through third grade and will use the History Quest series of textbooks and activity guides as the basis of its history curriculum beginning in fourth grade. The social studies curriculum in kindergarten through third grade will be supplemented with short units on Ancient Egypt, Ancient Greece, and the Roman Empire using other material.

Kindergarten

Navigating School

  • School norms, behaviors, interactions
  • Creating maps of the school and classroom
  • Student roles and responsibilities
  • Interviewing staff members about roles and duties
  • Leaders, helpers, and friends
  • Encountering problems
  • Tactics to help resolve conflicts

My Team and Self

  • Self-portraits: historical and student-generated
  • Family, culture, identity
  • Case Study: Apollo 11 & the power of different skills
  • Classmate interviews, celebrating unique strengths
  • Brainpower and brain growth
  • Strengths, challenges, growth mindset
  • Cooperation and teamwork & Setting shared goals

Past, Present, & Future

  • Past, present, future
  • Learning from stories
  • Increments and measures (months, weeks, days)
  • Natural cycles and patterns (night & day, seasons)
  • Chronological order & Timelines
  • Learning from experience
  • Relationship between actions and outcomes

Grade 1

Families Near and Far

  • Exploration of different family structures
  • Families around the world
  • Responsibilities, needs, and wants of a family
  • Compare and contrast different family roles
  • Customs and traditions
  • Exploring holidays and food traditions
  • Diverse family types & How families help each other

Our Special Location

  • Maps and globes: symbols, directions, location
  • Mapping important community locations
  • Community goods and services
  • Characteristics of rural, urban, and suburban communities
  • Landforms, bodies of water, local and regional climates
  • Effects of climate and landscape on way of life
  • Community workers and helpers & Symbols

Civic Engagement

  • Responsibilities as community citizens
  • Purpose and function of rules and laws
  • Historical changes in rules and laws
  • Case Study: Women and girls in sports
  • Difference between fact and opinion
  • Making informed choices
  • Working together to overcome challenges (Case Study: ADA)

Grade 2

Meeting Needs & Wants

  • Understanding needs and wants
  • Money Wise: price, saving, spending, and giving
  • Planned vs. unexpected expenses
  • Financial literacy and evaluating decision-making
  • Producers and consumers
  • Market Economy: supply and demand
  • Community needs and generating ideas

Our Changing Landscape

  • Identify geographic features
  • Natural resources of community and state
  • Types of modifications to the environment
  • Population growth and landscape changes
  • Basic human needs
  • Freshwater, issues of scarcity & environmental problems
  • Innovation in fresh food production

Innovation

  • Sparks and impacts of innovation
  • Using evidence to evaluate impact of innovation
  • Impact of Industrial Revolution’s innovations
  • Transcontinental Railroad
  • Spotlight on George Washington Carver
  • Characteristics of effective innovators
  • Modern innovations & Improving communities

Grade 3

Global Connections

  • Relative location and geographic features
  • Latitude, longitude, and grid systems
  • Domestic and global trade
  • Using natural resources and raw materials
  • Physical and human geographic characteristics
  • Geography’s effect on culture, good, and services
  • Cultural Diffusion, Globalization and interdependence

Migration and Movement

  • Identify push and pull factors
  • The impact of conflict on movement
  • Cultural identity and immigration
  • Evolving identities
  • Waves of immigration to the US
  • Identifying themes of immigration experiences
  • Diverse communities & Community connections

20th Century Civil Rights

  • Rights and responsibilities
  • Segregation
  • The March on Washington
  • Civil Rights Act of 1964
  • Civil rights movement
  • Changemakers in the civil rights movement
  • Learning from examples & Positive footsteps for change

Grade 4 – 5

Grades 4 and 5 will focus on the years between the Paleolithic period through the 8th century CE and cover the following topics:

Early Civilizations

  • Paleolithic and Neolithic Times
  • Earliest Civilizations
  • Ancient Egypt
  • The Andes Mountain Civilizations
  • Mesoamerica
  • Babylon, Assyria, and Persia

Global Antiquity

  • The Hebrews and Phoenicians
  • Ancient Greece
  • India
  • The Roman Empire
  • Ancient China
  • Arabia and the Rise of the Islamic Empire

Grade 6 – 7

Grades 6 and 7 will focus on the years the Fall of the Roman Empire through Elizabethan Times and cover the following topics:

Medieval Empires & Asia

  • Islamic innovation
  • Khmer, Mali, Aztec, Inca, Indian, Mughal, Mongolian, and Ottoman Empires
  • Medieval dynasties of China
  • Norse and Viking history
  • The British Isles
  • Medieval Japan

Europe & The New World

  • The Crusades
  • The Magna Carta
  • The Plague
  • The Hundred Years War
  • Exploration and the New World
  • The Renaissance and Reformation

Grade 8

Grade 8 will cover the history and civics of the United States from the 1500s to the early 21st century:

Foundations to Expansion

  • The Haudenosaunee Confederacy
  • European Colonization
  • The American Revolution
  • Civics: U.S. Government, the Constitution, and Elections
  • Slavery and the Civil War
  • Western Expansion

Modern Era

  • Industry, Invention, and Scientific Achievements
  • The Roaring Twenties & The Great Depression
  • World War II
  • The Cold War
  • The Civil Rights Movement
  • September 11, 2001