Our City studies careers, the skills people need to work in specific careers, and how businesses contribute to a city. There are five required, volunteer-led activities.
The key learning objectives listed beside each activity state the skills and knowledge students will gain.
|
Activity One: Inside Cities
Students recognize that a city is a place where people live, work, play, and go to school. They become aware of the importance of civic planning to the economic development of a city. |
|
Key Learning Objectives
Students will be able to:
* define a city as a place where people live, work, play, and go to school. |
|
Activity Two: Building a City
Students examine the role of a builder and become aware of how that job is interconnected with the job of the city planner. |
|
Key Learning Objectives
Students will be able to:
* understand the importance of the construction business to a city’s economy. |
|
Activity Three: Dining Out
While students explore the role of restaurant owner, they work in groups to make decisions about operating a restaurant. They define the terms consumer, producer, and entrepreneur. Through discussion, they are able to identify the difference between consumer and producer. |
|
Key Learning Objectives
Students will be able to:
* make group decisions necessary to start a restaurant. |
|
Activity Four: Making Headlines
Students examine the purpose of a newspaper as a communication tool for people in a city, as well as learn about the role of reporter. They generate and organize article outlines for a class newspaper. |
|
Key Learning Objectives
Students will be able to:
* understand the importance of a newspaper as a communication tool. |
|
Activity Five: You Can Bank on It
As they role-play simple financial transactions, students become aware of why banks are important to a city. |
|
Key Learning Objectives
Students will be able to:
* understand that one of a bank’s purposes is to hold money. |
Our City enhances students’ learning of the following concepts and skills:
Concepts: Banking, Business, Careers, City, City planner, Communication, Consumer, Decision, Economic development, Economic institutions, Entrepreneur, Incentives, Income, Interdependence, Jobs, Money, Producer, Quality, Resources, Skills, Specialization, Zones
Skills: Applying information, Applying thinking skills, Compiling data, Conducting research, Constructing data, Creating readable documents, Decision-making, Developing ideas, Drawing, Filling out forms, Following directions, Identifying zones, Interpreting data, Interpreting directions, Listening critically, Mapping information, Map reading, Making observations, Math computations, News writing, Reading data, Responding to written and oral presentations, Role-playing, Teamwork, Using scale
Our City is a series of five activities recommended for students in third grade. The average time for each activity is 45 minutes. Materials are packaged in a self-contained kit that includes detailed activity plans for the volunteer and materials for 30 students.


