GRADE 7 CITIZENSHIP STUDIES ENGAGED CITIZENS

Part A: Curricular Connections and Background

BROAD AREA OF CITIZENSHIP

Engaged Citizens question, critically examine, advocate, and defend rights and responsibilities of a democracy on a local, national, and global level.  They are beginning to understand the role that history played in the world they experience today. They are making sense of the different types of governance at local and national levels and the areas of responsibility connected to those governing bodies.  Students are continuing to understand issues and actions connected with diversity, rights and responsibilities, levels of governance and think about how rules and social customs can have different impacts on people.

OVERVIEW AND DESIRED RESULTS OF CITIZENSHIP STUDY

Students will:

  • Understand the different types of government locally, nationally and globally.
  • Examine elements of Canadian citizenship including the relationship between rights and responsibilities.
  • Begin to explore forms of governance other than democracies.
  • Consider the impact of historical and current events locally, nationally and globally.

Grade seven students are beginning to investigate and understand the various types of power and governance within their own country at the local, regional, provincial, national and global levels.  As the understanding of the levels of power that govern Canada develop, students compare and contrast those structures and processes with countries operating within Pacific Rim and circumpolar regions that do not operate as democracies.  This area of citizenship focuses on the student using critical thinking skills in order to better understand, the relationship between geography, resources, culture and historical events.

The inquiries offer students opportunities to use various types of maps to situate current issues in Canada and Pacific Rim countries. Knowledge of the geographic features, specific resources, population clusters and economic relationships will help the students to draw their own understandings and perspectives.

ENDURING UNDERSTANDINGS OF CITIZENSHIP STUDY

A deep understanding of democracy is important to become an engaged citizen.

Students will use information to understand:

  • History and current events are understood through diverse historical perspectives.
  • Democracy requires discussion and consideration of alternate points of view in order to find a balance between individual perspectives.
  • Citizens value the needs of the collective common good and consider how their actions impact the collective well-being.
  • Canadian multi-cultural policies challenge citizenship tenets and require consideration of multiple perspectives.
  • Canada’s history includes First Nations, Métis, and Inuit governance and perspectives and each have contributed to Canadian identity.
  • Decision-making is a complex process with far-reaching impacts.
  • Engaged citizens strive to be knowledgeable, uphold their rights, and act on their responsibilities.

Inferences to make;

  • The democratic process involves discussion and consideration of alternate points of view in order to find the best solution for the greatest common good. Consequently, everyone has a right to be heard and understood. (i.e. individual perspectives on various issues)
  • A strong democratic system enhances the significance of all participants and works toward achieving the greatest common good.
  • Enduring understandings are the big ideas that stimulate thinking, guide the inquiry and are linked to outcomes.
  • Essential questions point to the “big ideas’ in the inquiry and should be considered and reconsidered as the inquiry progresses.
  • Answers to these questions form the evidence of learning at the end of study.

KNOWLEDGE AND SKILL DEVELOPMENT

Students will develop the ability to:

  • question,
  • critically examine,
  • consider another perspective,
  • consider the responsibilities that changing situations,
  • evoke/require,
  • advocate, and defend rights and responsibilities of a democracy on a local, national, and global level.

ESSENTIAL QUESTIONS

  • Does democracy work? How could democracy be improved?
  • What is the relationship between rights and responsibilities?
  • How do my actions influence others? / How do the actions of others influence me?
  • What is the impact of affirming multiculturalism in a democracy?
Essential Questions are open-ended questions that are continually revisited, encompass concepts that students will explore throughout the unit of study, form the evidence of understanding and frame the assessment at the end of the study.

CURRICULUM OUTCOMES AND INDICATORS

Student friendly outcomes should be posted throughout the inquiry and continually referenced so the goals of the learning are clearly available to students.

Outcomes:

PA7.1

Compare the sources of power for individuals, nations, and regions in a selection of Pacific Rim and circumpolar countries.

Indicators:

  • Describe the source of power (resources, numbers, organization) and forms of power (force, authority, influence) used by individuals in a position of leadership in the local community or organization.
  • Analyze the sources of power, including organization, resources (technological, human, and military), and numbers, evidenced in the exercise of power by an individual, organization, or nation as described in a current events article.
  • Assess the sources of power held by the First Nations and the Europeans respectively in the negotiations of the treaty which governs the local area.
  • Identify examples of the use of co-operation balance and harmony as sources of power used to effect change in the local, provincial, national, or international community (e.g., service organizations, trade unions, First Nations and Métis organizations, co-operative movements, advocacy groups).
  • Analyze the sources of power of a national leader of a Pacific Rim or circumpolar country.

PA7.2

Investigate the structures and processes of democratic government in Canada.

Indicators:

  • Investigate the federal, provincial or territorial, or local election processes in Canada.
  • Chart the structures of Canadian government at the local, provincial, and national levels.
  • Survey the principles of democracy as defined by family, school, and community members, and synthesize into a definition of democracy.
  • Compare the responsibilities of municipal, provincial or territorial, and federal and First Nations governments in Canada.
  • Describe the roles of the elected representatives in the local (reeve, mayor, councillor), provincial or territorial (member of the legislative assembly), federal (member of parliament), First Nations (councillor, chief) system of government and Métis governance structures.

PA7.3

Compare the strengths and weaknesses of oligarchy, dictatorship and democracy as systems of government. 

Indicators:

  • Examine the systems of government of circumpolar or Pacific Rim countries which are not democracies (e.g., China, North Korea, Vietnam, Fiji).
  • Contrast the systems of government of the non-democracies in circumpolar and Pacific Rim countries with Canada’s system of government.
  • Identify the criteria by which countries are described as dictatorships, oligarchies, or democracies.

DR7.1

Analyze and use various types of maps (that provide differing perspectives and information for differing purposes) in order to situate current issues in Canada, and in a selection of Pacific Rim and northern circumpolar countries.  (Embed this outcome in the various studies that students are doing in the citizenship studies.)

Indicators

In Pacific and northern Canada and a selection of Pacific Rim and circumpolar countries

  • Examine maps of various projections and scales to determine characteristics and application of each kind and propose the advantages, limitations, and potential uses :
    • Mercator
    • Peters
    • circumpolar
    • plate tectonics
  • Describe the nature/kind of the physical, political, and population geography and construct generalizations about the nature of the physical, political, and population geography
  • Locate and identify Treaty territories on a map of Canada.
  • Locate and identify the homeland of the Métis on a map of Canada.*
  • Locate the continents and significant physical features
    • landforms
    • water bodies
    • climatic zones
    • vegetation zones
  • Identify the major population clusters
Teachers are encouraged to use various types of maps for all the inquiries and provide specific instruction regarding the different types of maps as required.  This allows for authentic use of maps.
*The indicators followed by an asterisk highlight Métis perspectives and are additional to Saskatchewan curricula. They assist students in discovering the experiences of Métis people of Canada. 
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Grade 7 Engaged Citizens Part A Curricular Connections and Background