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Social Studies Standards Mail:Postal Workers, Letters and Envelopes Jennifer Norris Erica Tyler

Social Studies Standards Mail:Postal Workers, Letters and Envelopes Jennifer Norris Erica Tyler

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Social Studies Standards

Mail:Postal Workers, Letters and Envelopes

Jennifer Norris

Erica Tyler

Contents• Objectives• Standards• History*• People in Societies*• Geography*• Economies *• Government*

• Citizen Rights and Responsibilities*

• Social studies Skills and methods*

*Slide of Corresponding

websites to follow

ObjectivesStudents will:

• Identify postal service worker as a community helper job

• Students will identify the different jobs of a postal worker

• Understand the parts of a letter and how to address a letter so a postal worker can deliver it.

Academic Content Standards

All Activities and Standards are for Social Studies First Grade

• Identify and correctly use terms related to location, direction, and distance including– Left/right– Near/far

• Identify and use symbols to locate places of significance on maps or globes.

• Locate the Local community, state and United States on maps or globes.

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Standards Continued• Raise questions about how families lived in the past and use

photographs, letters,artifacts and books to clairify what is know and what is unknown

• Describe Life in other countries whith emphasis on daily life including the roles of men, women, and children

• Describe the way people produce consume and exchange goods and services in their community

• Recognize symbols of the United States that represent it’s democracy and values including:

• The bald Eagle• The White House• The Statue of Liberty• The national anthem

Standards Continued• Obtain Information about a topic using a

variety of oral and visual sources

History Activities:• Compare and contrast the present day postal system

with the 1960’s postal system.

• Have a postal worker come in and talk to the class about their job in the postal system.

• Research the increases in the price of the stamp. Why did these price increases take place?

• Research the mail history from the pony express to present day with a focus on changes in technology including computerized mail sorters, vehicles, etc.

• Make a Venn Diagram comparing E-mail to standard post of how the two are used and discuss changes

People in Societies Activities

• Students will “interview” their grandparents to see how many days it took to send mail and the price of a stamp from when they were young.

• Have students make a timeline showing all the important historical events that affected the United States Postal Service.

• Have students learn the name of their postal carrier and research the names of former postal carriers that served their local community.

• Have students make a list of the variety of items that we send through the postal service.

• Students will do research to determine what the penalty is for tampering with someone else’s mail.

Geography Activities• Students will learn and be assessed on new

vocabulary words related to location, direction, and distance.

• Students will be able to identify their local community, state, and the United States on a map or globe.

• Students will construct a chart showing the role that the post office plays in helping consumers exchange goods and services in their community.

• Students will look at letters that are addressed with one part missing and try to determine if they can still mail it or if they need more information

Geography Activities Continued

Where does a letter go?• Students will discuss the sorting process that

goes on within the post office. • Game: Where does this letter go?

Teacher will have a different collection of maps ones that represent the community state and the United states as well as a few easily

identifiable foreign countries. Letters will be addressed to each of these places and students will be expected to find the address on the map and match the two together.

Geography Websites• Zip code Lookup

• Decode the Barcode Game

• Rail, Sail or Overland Mail Game

• Up Down Around Game

• Directions in the Rain Forest

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Economies Activities• Students will hold a debate discussing whether the hobby of

stamp collecting will increase or decrease in the future.

• Students will hold a discussion about how the postal system is being pushed aside and ignored due to email.

• Have students research and make a list of items that the postal service considers “hazardous”. Explain that consumers are not permitted to send or receive these hazardous materials.

• Students will do research to determine what the penalty is for tampering with someone else’s mail.

• Students will look up and discuss the laws that pertain to mailboxes,trucks etc. being federal property

Government Activities• Students will make lists of holidays and special

occasions that people often use the postal service to send cards or packages for.

• Students will play Memory with laminated pictures of American Symbols

• Using interactive writing have students describe a postal worker, as far as uniform, job, transportation.

• Discuss Purposes of Mail to send cards, pay bills, solicit business etc.

• Write a Letter to a White House Pet

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Government Websites• White House Pets

• Flat Stanley

• Famous Americans Stamp Game

• Symbols of our Government game

• US Symbols Matching Game

Citizen Rights and Responsibilities Activities

• Discuss the importance of a postal service worker.

• Read The Jolly Postman by Janet and Allan Ahlberg

• Using interactive writing have students describe a postal worker, as far as uniform, job, transportation.

Citizen Rights and Responsibilities Websites

• Character Education and Rights Stories

• Respect for others

• Write to Buddy

• Values

• Conflict Resolution

Social Studies Skills and Methods Activities

• Write a letter with a heading, date, greeting, body, and closing.

• Address and stamp envelope• Drop of letter at Post Office• Reply to a pen pal• Apply knowledge of postal work to

daily life

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Social Studies Skills and Methods Websites

• Billy Bear will send you mail

• Make your own fold and mail stationery

• Arthur interviews a postal worker

• Find a Pen Pal

• Flat Stanley