Colorado Academic Standards Online
Use the options below to create customized views of the Colorado Academic Standards. For all standards resources, see the Office of Standards and Instructional Support.
Current selections are shown below (maximum of five)
clear Content Area: Social Studies - 2022 // Grade Level: Kindergarten // Standard Category: 2. Geography
Social Studies - 2022
Kindergarten, Standard 2. Geography
keyboard_arrow_down keyboard_arrow_up
- 3. Apply geographic representations and perspectives to analyze human movement, spatial patterns, systems, and the connections and relationships among them.
1. Recognize that geographic tools represent places and spaces.
Students Can:
- Distinguish between a map and a globe as ways to show places people live.
- Use geographic tools to describe places. For example: Globes, maps, and GPS.
Academic Contexts and Connections:
- Find information using geographic technologies (Critical Thinking and Analysis).
- What information can a map and/or globe give about the places and spaces people live?
Nature and Skills of Geography:
- Geographic thinkers distinguish between a map and globe to show places where people live.
Disciplinary, Information, and Media Literacy:
- Use developmentally appropriate technology resources to present learning.
- Identify vocabulary through illustrations.
- Interpret what is read through illustrations.
- Generate questions and/or answers when presented with geographic tools such as maps, globes, etc.
keyboard_arrow_down keyboard_arrow_up
- 4. Examine the characteristics of places and regions, and the changing nature among geographic and human interactions.
2. Identify how the environment influences the way people live.
Students Can:
- Identify ways students’ lives are similar and different from those in other communities.
- Identify how the environment, geographic features, and climate impact lifestyles. For example: Food, sports, shelter, transportation, school, etc.
Academic Contexts and Connections:
- Compare attitudes and beliefs as an individual to others (Social Awareness).
- Recognize and describe cause-and-effect relationships between people and their surroundings (Social Awareness).
- What would it be like to live in another community, region, city, state, or country?
- What makes a community special to the people who live there, and how is it different from what makes our community special?
- How do the environment, geographic features, and climate impact how people live within a community?
Nature and Skills of Geography:
- Geographic thinkers investigate other cultures and how they have been influenced by the climate, physical geography, and cultures of an area.
- Geographic thinkers understand that people live in different settings and interact with their environment based on location. For example: People living in colder climates wear more clothes, and people in areas where there are floods live on higher ground or in houses on stilts.
Disciplinary, Information, and Media Literacy:
- Use developmentally appropriate technology resources to present learning.
- Identify vocabulary through illustrations.
- Interpret what is read through illustrations.
- Pose and respond to questions and contribute to the discussion about a topic or text in order to advance the dialogue.
Need Help? Submit questions or requests for assistance to bruno_j@cde.state.co.us

