6th Grade  Project 6 weeks

Nature’s Voice, People’s Choice

Katie K
Updated
GEO 6–7.1
GEO 6–7.2
GEO 6–7.5
GEO 6–7.9
INQ 6–8.6
+ 12 more
1-pager

Purpose

Students think like geographers as they investigate how land and water decisions affect communities differently when some groups are excluded from decision-making, using maps, satellite images, photographs, and credible sources to build evidence-based explanations. Through a newsroom launch, case study research, weekly circle reflections, and reflection-and-revision blocks, they compare regions, examine stewardship practices, and connect physical and cultural geography to community identity. By working with a tribal nation representative and a local environmental justice partner, students create and present a Maps and Voices Gallery Walk and community forum that communicate who is affected, whose voices are heard, and how their own thinking has changed. During presentations, students use a listening protocol to capture evidence from peers’ maps and explanations, ask informed questions, and show how new ideas from others strengthen their own understanding.

Learning goals

Students will think like geographers as they analyze and create maps, satellite images, photographs, and credible sources to explain how land and water decisions affect communities differently across regions. They will construct and revise evidence-based explanations about who holds decision-making power, who is affected, and how physical and cultural features shape identity, stewardship, and daily life. Students will collaborate with peers and community partners to create clear maps and source-based displays, use a listening protocol during presentations to capture evidence and summarize another group’s ideas accurately, and speak with empathy during the gallery walk and community forum. They will reflect weekly on feedback, revise their maps and explanations, and track how their thinking about the essential question changes.

Standards
  • [Connecticut] GEO 6–7.1 - Construct maps to represent and explain the pattern of cultural and environmental characteristics in our world.
  • [Connecticut] GEO 6–7.2 - Use maps, satellite images, photographs, and other representations to explain relationships between the locations of places and regions, and changes in their environmental characteristics.
  • [Connecticut] GEO 6–7.5 - Explain the connections between the physical and human characteristics of a region and the identity of individuals and cultures living there.
  • [Connecticut] GEO 6–7.9 - Analyze the ways in which cultural and environmental characteristics vary among various regions of the world.
  • [Connecticut] INQ 6–8.6 - Gather relevant information from multiple sources while using the origin, authority, structure, context, and corroborative value of the sources to guide the selection.
  • [Connecticut] INQ 6–8.7 - Evaluate the credibility of a source by determining its relevance and intended use.
  • [Connecticut] INQ 6–8.1 - Explain how a question represents key ideas in the field.
  • [Connecticut] INQ 6–8.4 - Explain how the relationship between supporting questions and compelling questions is mutually reinforcing.
  • [Connecticut] INQ 6–8.5 - Determine the kinds of sources that will be helpful in answering compelling and supporting questions, taking into consideration multiple points of view represented in the sources.
  • [Connecticut] INQ 6–8.11 - Construct explanations using reasoning, correct sequences, examples, and details with relevant information and data, while acknowledging the strengths and weaknesses of the explanations.
  • [Connecticut] INQ 6–8.14 - Critique the structure of explanations.
Competencies
  • Effective Communication - Students practice listening to understand, communicating with empathy, and share their learning through exhibiting, presenting and reflecting on their work.
  • Critical Thinking & Problem Solving - Students consider a variety of innovative approaches to address and understand complex questions that are authentic and important to their communities.
  • Collaboration - Students co-design projects with peers, exercise shared-decision making, strengthen relational agency, resolve conflict, and assume leadership roles.
  • Content Expertise - Students develop key competencies, skills, and dispositions with ample opportunities to apply knowledge and engage in work that matters to them.
  • Self Directed Learning - Students use teacher and peer feedback and self-reflection to monitor and direct their own learning while building self knowledge both in and out of the classroom.
  • Academic Mindset - Students establish a sense of place, identity, and belonging to increase self-efficacy while engaging in critical reflection and action.

Products

Students will create a sequence of geographer-style work samples across the project, including Water and Land Newsroom headlines, annotated source notes, comparison charts, draft regional maps, listening notes from peer presentations, and short evidence-based explanations built from maps, satellite images, photographs, and credible sources. In teams, they will develop a regional case display that includes a student-made map, labeled environmental and cultural features, source snapshots, speaking notes, and a simple listen-and-summarize protocol sheet for visitors and classmates to record key evidence and questions from each presentation. They will revise these products weekly using feedback from peers, the tribal nation representative, the environmental justice partner, and self-reflection circles. The culminating product is a Maps and Voices Gallery Walk station and student-led community forum presentation for classmates, caregivers, and community guests.

Launch

Open with a Water and Land Newsroom where teams examine short, age-appropriate case files from the environmental justice nonprofit, including maps, satellite images, photos, and quotes about a community affected by land or water decisions. Students create a quick headline, identify who is making decisions and who is affected, and place the case on a large class world map to begin noticing cultural and environmental patterns across regions. Then invite the tribal nation cultural or natural resources representative to share how stewardship connects to places of importance and how different communities relate to the same land or water in different ways, and use a listen-summarize-share protocol in which students record one key idea, one piece of evidence, and one question from another group’s or guest speaker’s presentation before paraphrasing it to a partner. Close with a brief circle reflection in which students respond to the essential question and name one map, image, or source detail that changed their thinking.

Exhibition

Host a Maps and Voices Gallery Walk where student teams run stations featuring regional maps, annotated satellite images, place-based photographs, and short source snapshots. Invite classmates, caregivers, the tribal nation representative, and the environmental justice nonprofit partner to circulate, ask questions, and discuss spatial patterns, community perspectives, and who is affected by land and water decisions in each case. Build in a student-led community forum during the event so each group explains its evidence-based claim about stewardship, power, and impact, then use a listening protocol in which visiting students record one claim, two pieces of geographic evidence, and one way the presentation changed or extended their thinking before asking a question. Use simple feedback cards so guests can respond to the clarity of the maps, the strength of the evidence, the geographic reasoning, the empathy shown toward different communities, and how well presenters listened and responded.