A&L_NL_L2_M2_Learn_PS_PP_112908

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The American West

LEARN  Module 2

The American West

How has life in the American West changed over time?

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Lesson 24

Relationship Cards | The Buffalo Are Back

Module Task 3

Lesson 27

Notice and Wonder Chart | Powwow Day

Fluency Practice | “Celebrating Powwows”

Informative Writing Planner | Module Task 4

Lesson 28

Read Aloud | “Celebrating Powwows”

Story Map | Powwow Day

Lesson 29

Drum’s Heartbeat Chart | Powwow Day

Module Task 4

Lesson 35

Informative Writing Planner | End-of-Module Task

End-of-Module Task

Credits

Works Cited

L2 | Notice and Wonder Chart

Buffalo Bird Girl | Write one thing you notice and one thing you wonder.

A one-column chart with heading labeled Notice.

Notice

L2 | Fluency Practice

Buffalo Bird Girl

A two-column chart with headings labeled Initials and Comments.

1. Ask a friend or adult to listen to you read.

2. Read aloud the fluency passage three to five times.

3. Focus on the day’s fluency element as you read.

4. Ask the listener to initial and comment below.

Initials Comments

Day 1

Accuracy

Day 2

Phrasing

Day 3

Expression

Day 4

Rate

Fluency Elements

Accuracy: Correctly decode the words.

Phrasing: Group words into phrases, and pause for punctuation.

Expression: Use voice to show feeling.

Rate: Read at an appropriate speed.

Retelling

Buffalo Bird Girl

Work began early every day. I remember awaking to the comforting sound of a crackling morning fire. My grandmother and aunts would already be awake, preparing breakfast. I learned by watching and then by doing. A favorite breakfast for us children was hot corn porridge. To make it, Grandmother would pound hard kernels of corn into a fine meal in a wooden mortar. She boiled dried squash and beans in a clay pot filled with river water. Then she added the cornmeal mixed with roasted buffalo fat to the pot of vegetables. It tasted delicious!

L3 | Seasons Organizer

Buffalo Bird Girl | Draw and write what the Hidatsa did in each season.

A chart with four boxes labeled Summer, Fall, Winter, and Spring.

Summer Fall Winter Spring

“Native

American Tribes”

L6 | Venn Diagram

Buffalo Bull, Grazing on the Prairie and Buffalo Hunter | Complete the Venn diagram.

A Venn diagram with two overlapping circles labeled Buffalo Bull Grazing on the Prairie and Buffalo Hunter. The area of overlap is labeled Both.

Buffalo Bull, Grazing on the Prairie

Both

Buffalo Hunter

L8 | Notice and Wonder Chart

Where the Buffalo Roam | Write two things you notice and two things you wonder.

A one-column chart with heading labeled Notice.

Notice

L8 | Fluency Practice

Where the Buffalo Roam

A two-column chart with headings labeled Initials and Comments.

1. Ask a friend or adult to listen to you read.

2. Read aloud the fluency passage three to five times.

3. Focus on the day’s fluency element as you read.

4. Ask the listener to initial and comment below.

Initials

Day 1

Accuracy

Day 2

Phrasing

Day 3

Expression

Day 4

Rate

Comments

Fluency Elements

Accuracy: Correctly decode the words.

Phrasing: Group words into phrases, and pause for punctuation.

Expression: Use voice to show feeling.

Rate: Read at an appropriate speed.

Retelling

Where the Buffalo Roam

A bison has a hump on the back of its neck. Inside is solid muscle and bone.

The hump helps the bison lift its huge head to sniff for danger.

In winter, a bison uses its head as a snowplow to uncover food.

Bison use their short tails as flyswatters when flies and ticks bite.

Bison also signal for the herd with their tails.

L10 | Vocabulary Chart

Where the Buffalo Roam | Write the meaning of unknown words from the text.

A three-column table with headings labeled Word, What I Think the Word Means, and Glossary Definition.

Word

What I Think the Word Means

Glossary Definition

L10 | Writing Model

Module 2 | Label the sentences of the paragraph.

In the past, Native American tribes in the Great Plains had many uses for buffalo. Buffalo were very important to the Hidatsa. They used buffalo bones to make tools. They used fat from the buffalo to cook. The buffalo were important to the Hidatsa in many ways.

Informative Writing Planner

Module Task 1 | Write evidence notes to tell where bison live.

A chart with four boxes labeled Introduction, Focus, Evidence, and Conclusion.

Introduction

Focus Evidence

Conclusion

Introduction

Bison live in North America.

Focus

Bison are land animals.

Evidence

Conclusion

Bison have lived on the land of North America for thousands of years.

Prompt: Complete the paragraph about bison. Write two evidence sentences about where bison live.

Bison live in North America. Bison are land animals.

Bison have lived on the land of North America for thousands of years.

In the spring of 1879, Jerry Shores, a former enslaved person, moved his family westward. They joined one of the first emigrant wagon trains to Nebraska. The Shores family traveled in three wagons. Shores drove one wagon. His son drove another one. And his 16-year-old daughter drove the third wagon.

The Shoreses settled on a homestead claim in Nebraska. Since Nebraska was mostly treeless prairie land, it was impossible to build any kind of wooden structure. But good,

The Shores family near Westerville, Nebraska.

cheap material was available. In fact, it was all around them. It was sod, the earth and grass beneath their feet. Some settlers referred to it as “prairie marble.” They used it to build a sod house, or soddy. For most families on the prairie, building a soddy was the first thing they did to keep the family safe and protected from the weather.

The first step was to find a flat section of land. A one-room sod house was usually 16 feet by 20 feet. Space was cleared of grass, smoothed out with a spade, and packed down to make a hard earth floor.

Sod is a section of grass-covered soil held together by matted roots.

It was important to use the right kind of grass for a sod house. Grass with dense roots held the soil together. Buffalo grass, wheat grass, and Indian grass were varieties that worked well. Builders cut the sod into strips 18 inches wide by 24 inches long and 4 to 6 inches deep. Each brick weighed about 50 pounds. The average sod house required about 3,000 bricks and weighed almost 90 tons.

Once the site was prepped and ready, the Shoreses established the perimeter of the house. They lay two side-by-side rows of bricks grassside down. Exposing the roots to the top allowed them to grow into the layers of brick placed on top. After a few layers, the builders turned the next layers to lie horizontally instead of vertically in order to make the walls stronger. They used loose dirt and mud to fill in cracks between the bricks.

As the walls grew higher, the builders positioned wooden frames where the windows and door would go. They laid sod all around the frame, leaving a gap at the top (filled with rags or grass) to allow room for the sod to settle without crushing the glass in the window. Wooden pegs held the frames in place in the sod walls.

Once the walls were the correct height, usually about 8 feet, the builders placed a wooden ridgepole across the length of the house, from one end of the sod house to the other, to support a roof. A sod house roof was sometimes made out of lumber covered with shingles or tarpaper, but more often it simply was covered with thinner sod bricks.

close-up of a sod house reveals the brickwork.

Sod houses lasted only about six or seven years and required frequent maintenance. means built a floor of split logs or acquired wide wood planks from a sawmill.

Some women complained that nothing was ever clean in a sod house. Fleas, rats, mice, and snakes were a constant problem. Those creatures liked to live in the cracks between the bricks. Women learned to cook with lids on their pots to keep mud—or worse— from falling into the food. Beds had to go in the center of the room beneath the ridgepole, where they were most likely to stay dry. After a long, soaking rain, almost everything in a sod house had to be moved outside to dry in the sunshine.

For all its hardships, life in a soddy on the prairie became a symbol, too. It represented an opportunity for people to own their own home and their own land as they built new lives in the West.

L15 | Notice and Wonder Chart

“Life in a Soddy” | Write two things you notice and two things you wonder.

A one-column chart with heading labeled Notice.

Notice

L15 | Fluency Practice

“Life in a Soddy”

A two-column chart with headings labeled Initials and Comments.

1. Ask a friend or adult to listen to you read.

2. Read aloud the fluency passage three to five times.

3. Focus on the day’s fluency element as you read.

4. Ask the listener to initial and comment below.

Initials

Day 1

Accuracy

Day 2

Phrasing

Day 3

Expression Day 4

Rate

Comments

Fluency Elements

Accuracy: Correctly decode the words.

Phrasing: Group words into phrases, and pause for punctuation.

Expression: Use voice to show feeling.

Rate: Read at an appropriate speed.

Retelling

“Life

in a Soddy”

Sod houses were sturdy and fireproof. They were warm in the winter and cool in the summer. Above all, they were cheap to construct. But what was it like to live in one? The roof often leaked. Nebraska sod contained sand, which made it easier for water to filter through. Sod roofs also held on to water, so even after a rainstorm was over, the soggy material would drip for days.

L16 | Question Word Cards

“Life in a Soddy” | Cut out the cards.

Who?

When?

What?

Where?

L16 | Noun Cards

Singular and Irregular Plural Nouns | Cut out the cards. bison

A two-column chart with headings labeled Singular and Irregular Plural.

Singular Irregular Plural

child

children

life lives

Singular

L16 | Language Practice

Irregular Plural Nouns | Complete each sentence with the correct irregular plural noun.

Many (person) chose to move west to make a new life.

Settlers built sod houses to live in. They built houses 16 (foot) by 20 (foot)

. Even the (child) helped build sod houses. Sometimes, rats, (mouse) , and snakes would live in the cracks of the walls. The (woman) had to clean the sod houses often. Everyone in the family helped with the house.

L16 | Gallery

“Homesteaders”

L17 | Flowchart

“Life in a Soddy” | Draw and describe the last three steps in building a sod house.

A flowchart showing how one step leads to another. Arrows point from one box to another in the direction of the flow. In order, the headings are Step 1, Step 2, Step 3, Step 4, and Step 5.

Step 1

Step 2

Find a flat piece of land.

Find grass with strong roots.

Cut sod into strips.

5

Informative Writing Planner

Module Task 2 | Fill in the planner with details for your paragraph.

A chart with four boxes labeled Introduction, Focus, Evidence, and Conclusion.

Introduction

Focus

Evidence

Conclusion

Introduction

Some settlers in the West lived in sod houses.

Focus

Evidence

needed the right grass

heavy sod bricks

fire protection

leaky roofs

snow in cracks

animals and insects in between bricks

Conclusion

L18 | Author’s Purpose Organizer

“Life in a Soddy” | Write notes about the author’s purpose in each section of text.

A chart with four boxes labeled Paragraph 1, Paragraph 2, Paragraphs 3-7, and Paragraphs 8-11.

Paragraph 1

to describe how the Shoreses traveled west to Nebraska

Paragraph 2

Paragraphs 3–7

Paragraphs 8–11

Little Dugout on the Prairie from “A

Home in the Ground”

Trees were scarce on the prairie, so settlers had to make do using sod and dirt as building materials. Many homes, churches, schools, post offices, stores, and spaces for protecting livestock began as dugouts. The dugouts were replaced with aboveground wooden structures as soon as lumber could be obtained.

Dugouts often began as caves dug into the slope of a creek or riverbank. Water was nearby, and the thick layer of dirt overhead made a good roof, providing insulation and

protection, while concealing the home from view. But floods from the rising river often destroyed both the insides and the outsides of the dugouts. Collapsing roofs plagued the dwellers when animals fell through from overhead. Snow blocked the doorway. A riverbank dugout was cooler in the summer and warmer in the winter, but overall, not safe.

Module Task 2

Prompt: Complete the paragraph about life in a sod house.

Some settlers in the West

lived in sod houses.

excerpt from What About the Native Americans?

The Homestead Act of 1862 offered a wide range of people the opportunity to own land. But the land that settlers hoped to claim was not uninhabited. Native Americans had lived throughout North America for centuries.

First, early European settlers along the East Coast displaced them. Then, as the colonists increased in number and the individual colonies formed a nation, the US government grew more aggressive in its ways to make room for European settlers. The government used removal, treaties, and armed conflicts to push Native Americans off the land and restrict their movements.

L20 | Topic and Details Map

Excerpt from “What About the Native Americans?” | Write the key details and main topic of the text.

A box for the Main Topic. Boxes for the Key Details are underneath.

Main Topic

Key Detail

Key Detail

Key Detail

L22 | Notice and Wonder Chart

The Buffalo Are Back | Write two things you notice and two things you wonder.

A one-column chart with heading labeled Notice.

Notice

L22 | Fluency Practice

The Buffalo Are Back

A two-column chart with headings labeled Initials and Comments.

1. Ask a friend or adult to listen to you read.

2. Read aloud the fluency passage three to five times.

3. Focus on the day’s fluency element as you read.

4. Ask the listener to initial and comment below.

Initials Comments

Day 1

Accuracy

Day 2

Phrasing

Day 3

Expression

Day 4

Rate

Fluency Elements

Accuracy: Correctly decode the words.

Phrasing: Group words into phrases, and pause for punctuation.

Expression: Use voice to show feeling.

Rate: Read at an appropriate speed.

Retelling

The Buffalo Are Back

One day a young girl walked into her house in Kansas waving a six-foot blade of grass. “Where did you find that?” her father asked. “That’s buffalo grass. It’s been extinct for years—or so we thought.”

“In my schoolyard,” she said. “That is land that was never plowed,” her father told her. Like many other people living on the prairie, he longed to see the beautiful grasses again. “Let’s try to find more of these native grasses,” he said. Perhaps the tall grass could come back to the plains.

L22 | Verb Cards

Present and Past Tense Verbs | Cut out the cards.

A two-column table with headings labeled Present Tense and Past Tense.

Present Tense Past Tense

begin take

began took

Present Tense Past Tense

Present Tense Past Tense

Present Tense Past Tense

L22 | Language Practice

Irregular Past Tense Verbs | Complete each sentence with the correct irregular past tense verb. Then, in step 6, write one sentence with any irregular past tense verb.

1. Many settlers (make) their homes from sod.

3. Settlers (begin) their trip in the spring.

2. The bison (eat) grass.
4. The Hidatsa (grow) corn.
5. Women and girls (dig) in the ground to plant corn.
6. .

L23 | Story Map

The Buffalo Are Back | Write what happens in the middle and at the end of the story.

Four boxes with headings labeled Characters, Setting, Problem, and Solution.

Beginning Middle

The Native Americans and buffalo live together on the prairie. They take care of the grass and each other.

The government had soldiers and settlers kill buffalo. Native Americans could not survive on the plains without the buffalo.

Middle End

| Informative Writing Planner

Module Task 3 | Fill in the planner with details for your paragraph.

A chart with four boxes labeled Introduction, Focus, Evidence, and Conclusion.

Introduction

Focus Evidence

Conclusion

Introduction

Focus

Evidence

L24 | Relationship Cards

The Buffalo Are Back | Cut out the cards.

buffalo
Native Americans
prairie

Module Task 3

Prompt: Write a paragraph to tell how people helped save the buffalo in the West.

LeTTers

L27 | Notice and Wonder Chart

Powwow Day | Write two things you notice and two things you wonder. Notice

A one-column chart with heading labeled Notice.

L27 | Fluency Practice

“Celebrating Powwows”

A two-column chart with headings labeled Initials and Comments.

1. Ask a friend or adult to listen to you read.

2. Read aloud the fluency passage three to five times.

3. Focus on the day’s fluency element as you read.

4. Ask the listener to initial and comment below.

Initials

Day 1

Accuracy

Day 2

Phrasing

Day 3

Expression

Day 4

Rate

Comments

Fluency Elements

Accuracy: Correctly decode the words.

Phrasing: Group words into phrases, and pause for punctuation.

Expression: Use voice to show feeling.

Rate: Read at an appropriate speed.

Retelling

“Celebrating

Powwows”

Dancers swirl. Moccasins move up and down. Beads glitter. Feathers soar with the dancers. This is a special time. My family has traveled many miles to be together. We are at a powwow.

Going to a powwow is fun. Dancing in a powwow is even more fun. Many American Indian families dance. It brings parents and children together. Parents help make their children’s dance outfits. Each feather and design is important. They have special meanings.

Informative Writing Planner

Module Task 4 | Fill in the planner with details for your paragraph.

A chart with four boxes labeled Introduction, Focus, Evidence, and Conclusion.

Introduction

Focus Evidence

Conclusion

Introduction Focus

Evidence

C elebrating P owwows

Dancers swirl. Moccasins move up and down. Beads glitter. Feathers soar with the dancers. This is a special time. My family has traveled many miles to be together. We are at a powwow.

Going to a powwow is fun. Dancing in a powwow is even more fun. Many American Indian families dance. It brings parents and children together. Parents help make their children’s dance outfits. Each feather and design is important. They have special meanings.

Most powwows are in the summer. It is good to be outdoors. Families camp out. Tents, campers, and tipis are everywhere. A small village comes alive.

“Dancers, line up! Grand Entry in five minutes!” A voice booms over the loudspeakers.

No one wants to miss the Grand Entry. The crowd hurries to find a seat. Dancers form a line at the dance circle entrance. It is a thrilling sight. Tradition is everywhere.

The powwow begins. The drums echo in the air. An honor guard carries flags into the circle. One is the United States flag. The other is Canada’s. Leading them is the Indian flag, the staff, a curved stick covered in fur and eagle feathers. One by one, the dancers enter.

Their outfits make a rainbow of color. The rainbow becomes a circle. After everyone enters the dance arena, the dancing stops. An elder blesses the gathering. The drum plays a veteran’s honor song. Veterans are people who served in the armed services. They are like warriors of the past. Then it is time to dance. The emcee calls for an Intertribal.

This is a social dance. Everyone—adults and children—dance together. Another social dance is the Round Dance. Everyone is invited to join. You do not have to be a Native American. All dancers join hands.

This is a friendship dance.

Some powwows are traditional. They are social gatherings. Other powwows have dance contests where cash prizes are

given out. The dance contest is divided into four main areas: Traditional, Fancy, Grass, and Jingle. Dancers are judged. Their steps are watched. Every movement counts. Are their outfits proper? There are many good dancers.The best will win prize money.

Cone-shaped tin jingles cover the dress of a woman Jingle Dress Dancer. These jingles create a soft melody of tinkling sounds. This is a musical dance. Every movement is heard. This is an Ojibwe dance of dignity.

All too soon the weekend comes to an end. Tents and tipis come down. Outfits are packed away. Families return home. They remember the songs, the gifts, new friends, and the dances. They have new memories— powwow memories!

L28 | Story Map

Powwow Day | Complete the story map.

Four boxes with headings labeled Characters, Setting, Problem, and Solution.

Characters Setting

Beginning (pages 3–7)

Middle (pages 8–21)

End (pages 22–29)

L29 | Drum’s Heartbeat Chart

Powwow Day | Complete the chart. page 12 page 21 page 27

What River Says About the Drum

How River Feels

Module Task 4

Prompt: Write a paragraph to tell why powwows are important to some Native nations in the United States and Canada.

ArTs & LeTTers
Great Minds

L35 | Informative Writing Planner

End-of-Module Task | Fill in the planner with details for your paragraph.

A chart with four boxes labeled Introduction, Focus, Evidence, and Conclusion. Introduction

Introduction Focus

Evidence

End-of-Module Task

Prompt: Write a paragraph to tell why the buffalo were important to the Lakota.

Credits

Great Minds® has made every effort to obtain permission for the reprinting of all copyrighted material. If any owner of copyrighted material is not acknowledged herein, please contact Great Minds for proper acknowledgment in all future editions and reprints of this module.

Cover: Among the Sierra Nevada, California, 1868, Albert Bierstadt (1830–1902), Oil on canvas, 183 × 305 cm, Bequest of Helen Huntington Hull, 1873 Courtesy of the Smithsonian American Art Museum; pages 2, 5 and 7–9, Courtesy of the Minnesota Historical Society; page 8, Everett Collection/Shutterstock.com, RichVintage/Getty Images, Abbie Warnock-Matthews/Shutterstock.com, Wikimedia Commons, Jim Parkin/Shutterstock.com; pages pages 10, 13 and 15, The Charles and Valerie Diker Collection of Native American Art, Gift of Valerie-Charles Diker Fund, 2017; page 22, Nebraska State Historical Society (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/); page 23, ER_09/Shutterstock. com, Library of Congress, Prints & Photographs Division; page 24, Lee Rentz/Alamy Stock Photo; page 25, Library of Congress, Prints & Photographs Division; page 32, Nebraska State Historical Society (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/); pages 22–26, Life in a Soddy, by Marcia Amidon Lusted, from Cobblestone Magazine, vol. 40, no. 8, 2019. Copyright © by Carus Publishing Company. Adapted and reproduced with permission. All Cricket Media material is copyrighted by Carus Publishing Company, d/b/a Cricket Media, and/or various authors and illustrators. Any commercial use or distribution of material without permission is strictly prohibited; pages 28, 31, 33, 35, 39, 41, 42, 46 and 57, Courtesy of the Minnesota Historical Society; page 41, Everett Collection/Shutterstock.com, Foxys Graphic/Shutterstock.com, Nebraska State Historical Society (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/); pages 48–49, A Home in the Ground, by Ann Parr, art by Lori McElrath-Eslick, from Cricket Magazine, vol. 44, no. 6, 2016. Copyright © by Carus Publishing Company. Adapted and reproduced with permission. All Cricket Media material is copyrighted by Carus Publishing Company, d/b/a Cricket Media, and/or various authors and illustrators. Any commercial use or distribution of material without permission is strictly prohibited; pages 54–55, What About the Native Americans?, by Mikal Eckstrom, from Cobblestone Magazine, vol. 40, no. 8, 2019. Copyright © by Carus Publishing Company. Adapted and reproduced with permission. All Cricket Media material is copyrighted by Carus Publishing Company, d/b/a Cricket Media, and/or various authors and illustrators. Any commercial use or distribution of material without permission is strictly prohibited; pages 58, 61, 63, 72 and 77, © Dirk Bakker / Bridgeman Images; pages 84, 87, 96 and 99, George Ostertag /Alamy Stock Photo; pages 92–95, Celebrating Powwows, by Shawn Termin, from AppleSeeds Magazine, vol. 1, no. 2, 1998. Copyright © by Carus Publishing Company. Adapted and reproduced with permission. All Cricket Media material is copyrighted by Carus Publishing Company, d/b/a Cricket Media, and/or various authors and illustrators. Any commercial use or distribution of material without permission is strictly prohibited; page 92, Petr Podrouzek/Shutterstock. com; page 93, Stéphane Groleau /Alamy Stock Photo; page 94, Jim Parkin/Shutterstock.com; page 95, George Ostertag /Alamy Stock Photo.

All other images are the property of Great Minds.

Works Cited

Craighead George, Jean. The Buffalo Are Back. Illustrated by Wendell Minor, Dutton Children’s Books, 2010.

“Demystified: How Are Buffalo and Bison Different?” Encyclopaedia Britannica, 4 May 2020, https://app.boclips.com/ videos/61c1df584a0cb63c9f1e5d20.

Eckstrom, Mikal. “What About the Native Americans?” Cobblestone, vol. 40, no. 8, Oct. 2019, pp. 12–15, https://cricketmedia. widencollective.com/dam/assetdetails/asset:7bfa7517-4e89-48b9-b54c-25ec4ed2cd15/false?inav=false

Lusted, Marcia Amidon. “Life in a Soddy.” Cobblestone, vol. 40, no. 8, 2019, pp. 18–20, https://cricketmedia.widencollective.com/dam/ assetdetails/asset:25b581e1-a4ab-414c-8b6b-1d2f2561bcbe/false?inav=false.

Myers, Marya. The Lakota and the Buffalo. Illustrated by Madelyn Goodnight. Geodes, level 2, module 2, set 1, Great Minds PBC, 2018.

Nelson, S. D. Buffalo Bird Girl: A Hidatsa Story. Abrams Books for Young Readers, 2012.

Parr, Ann. “Little Dugout on the Prairie.” Information box. “A Home in the Ground.” Illustrated by Lori McElrath-Eslick. Cricket, vol. 44, no. 6, July 2016, pp. 34–35, https://cricketmedia.widencollective.com/dam/assetdetails/asset:daf1c9a0-0def-42a8-8302-290eb83bc54c/ false?inav=false.

Sorell, Traci. Powwow Day. Illustrated by Madelyn Goodnight, Charlesbridge, 2022.

Termin, Shawn. “Celebrating Powwows.” AppleSeeds, vol. 1, no. 2, Oct. 1998, pp. 4–9, https://cricketmedia.widencollective.com/dam/ assetdetails/asset:c7a6391d-3602-472f-8751-dfca80e8aa9e/false?inav=false

Waters, Kate. Where the Buffalo Roam: Bison in America. Penguin Young Readers, 2017.

WIDA. WIDA English Language Development Standards Framework 2020 Edition: Kindergarten–Grade 12. Board of Regents of the University of Wisconsin System, https://wida.wisc.edu/sites/default/files/resource/WIDA-ELD-Standards-Framework-2020.pdf.

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GRADE 2 MODULES

Module 1 | A Season of Change

Module 2 | The American West

Module 3 | Civil Rights Advocates

Module 4 | Good Eating

ON THE COVER

Among the Sierra Nevada, California, 1868

Albert Bierstadt (1830–1902)

Oil on canvas, 183 × 305 cm

Bequest of Helen Huntington Hull, 1873
Courtesy of the Smithsonian American Art Museum
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