LindaMandy Climate Unit PDF
LindaMandy Climate Unit PDF
LindaMandy Climate Unit PDF
Unit Overview
The purpose of this unit is to help students develop conceptual understanding of Earth’s climate
and the factors that influence it. The unit engages students in a variety of activities designed to
specifically allow them to explore and construct their understanding of the effects of latitude,
elevation, and local geography on climate. Students also discover how climate affects humans’
lifestyles, especially those of Montana’s tribal people.
Skill Objectives
1. Students will develop hypotheses about how factors influence climate and will test their
hypotheses through experimentation. (MT State Standard 1, Benchmark 1, end of grade 8)
2. Students will gather data and construct a climograph (MT State Standard 1, Benchmark 3,
end of grade 4).
3. Students will use the Internet to gather information about climatic effects on the lifestyles
and cultures of Montana’s tribal peoples and will create posters displaying their findings.
(MT State Standard 5, Benchmark 5, end of grade 4 and 8)
4. Students will compare climatic variations caused by differences in elevation, latitude, and
local geography. (MT State Standard 4, Benchmark 5, end of grade 8)
5. Students will develop a teaching poster and teach their peers about how climate affects
people’s lifestyles. (MT State Standard 5, Benchmark 5, end of grade 4)
Essential Understandings
1. There is great diversity among the 12 tribal Nations of Montana in their languages, cultures,
histories and governments. Each Nation has a distinct and unique cultural heritage that
contributes to modern Montana.
3. The ideologies of Native traditional beliefs and spirituality persist into modern day life as
tribal cultures, traditions, and languages are still practiced by many American Indian people
and are incorporated into how tribes govern and manage their affairs. Additionally, each tribe
has its own oral histories, which are as valid as written histories. These histories pre-date the
“discovery” of North America.
Time/Scheduling
Fifteen class periods of forty-five to sixty minutes each.
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Lesson #1 - Is Climate the Same Across Earth?
Summary of the Lesson
This introductory lesson accesses students’ prior knowledge about climate and weather. Students
construct their knowledge through participation in pair/share, whole class discussion, the
completion of a T chart and journaling in response to questions about climate and weather.
Grade Level
4th and 5th Grades
Resources/Materials Needed
Science journals
T-chart worksheets
Assessment probes
Teacher Preparation
Make a copy of the T-chart worksheet and the assessment probe for each student.
Background Information
Weather is the set of all the phenomena (e.g., temperature, humidity, cloud cover, precipitation,
wind) occurring in a given part of the atmosphere at a given time. Climate is temperature,
humidity, precipitation, air pressure, wind, and clouds over a period of at least several decades at
a given location. Climate varies across Earth’s surface due to factors including the angle of
sunlight (which relates to latitude of a location), elevation, and local geographic features like
proximity to water.
Procedure
1. Activate students’ prior knowledge by asking them to write in their journals in response to
the question: “Is climate the same everywhere on Earth?”
2. Ask students to pair/share their ideas.
3. Facilitate a class discussion, encouraging students to share their ideas about climate
differences across Earth. Guide and expand the discussion so that students discuss weather
and climate, what each is, and how they compare.
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4. Ask students to complete a T-chart listing the characteristics of weather and climate.
5. The assessment probe attached to this lesson may also be used to check students’
understanding of weather and climate.
Formative Assessment
1. Teacher Observations - Teacher observations of the whole class discussion and pairs’
discussion, and individual journal entries and T-charts will provide a means to assess
students’ initial understandings and naïve ideas about weather and climate concepts. The core
concepts that teachers should be assessing understanding of are:
Weather occurs over a short period of time in a given location and includes phenomena
such as temperature, air pressure, precipitation, clouds, wind and humidity.
Climate is temperature, humidity, precipitation, air pressure, wind, and clouds over a
period of at least several decades at a given location. Climate varies across Earth’s
surface due to factors including the angle of sunlight (which relates to latitude of a
location), elevation, and proximity of water.
2. Assessment probe - The teacher may also use the formative assessment probe included with
the unit materials to check students’ understanding of the difference between weather and
climate.
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Name: __________________________________ Date ______________________
WEATHER
CLIMATE
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Name: _____________________________________ Date: __________________
For each statement below, write “W” if you think the statement relates to Weather or “C” if you
think the statement relates to Climate.
_____ 3. Did you hear about the hurricane in Florida last week?
_____ 5. I’m moving to Las Vegas, Nevada for the winter months. How will I know what to
take for clothing?
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Lesson #2 – Latitude’s Effects on Climate
Summary of the Lesson
In this lesson, students engage in a differential heating activity to observe the influence of
latitude on temperature. Using a globe, a directional lamp, and three thermometers, students will
construct a model to test their predictions and hypotheses about where it is hottest and coldest on
Earth’s surface and why.
Grade Level
4th and 5th Grades
Resources/Materials Needed
For each small group of students:
Globe
Three strip thermometers used for reptile terrariums with temperature range sensitivity to
above 100° F
Directional Lamps (lamps should have a hot bulb and should be able to be pointed toward the
globes)
Ruler
For each student:
Directional heating activity lab sheet
Science journals
For the class:
World map
Index cards or sticky notes
White board or chart paper and markers
Internet access for student research
Atlases for student research
Teacher Preparation
Before the lesson, gather the materials for the activity and make a copy of the lab sheet for each
student. The thermometers can be purchased at a local pet store.
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Test the experimental set up before using the lesson with students. Depending on the materials
you have, the set up will vary. To create a lamp and globe set up, first attach three strip
thermometers flat to the globe, placing one strip at the equator and one each at the 45th parallels
north and south. Position the lamp height so that the light points directly toward the globe.
Pointing the lamp directly at the equator simulates an equinox and is generally a good condition
to use, although changing the angle of the light rays is one way to expand the inquiry and
challenge students to think about seasonal variations in temperature. Experiment with the lamp’s
distance from the globe to determine the optimal distance for obtaining significantly different
results for thermometers at the three latitudes - if the lamp is too close or too far, thermometer
readings may not vary.
Background Information
Due to the position of the Sun relative to Earth, the equator receives more direct and thus more
concentrated sunlight year round, resulting in more constant (and higher) temperatures than other
latitudes. In contrast, Earth’s tilt results in substantial seasonal variations in the angle of the
Sun’s rays at the 45th parallels north or south, leading to noticeable seasonal changes in
temperature and weather. Thus latitude is a major factor influencing climate and weather on
Earth.
Procedure
Engage
1. Activate students’ prior knowledge by facilitating a discussion about the differences in
weather in Montana’s seasons. Ask students why they think these seasonal variations occur.
Record students’ ideas on the board or chart paper.
Explore
2. Divide students into groups of three to five. Ask students to work with their group to make
predictions and hypotheses about items #1 and #2 on the lab sheet, the hottest and coldest
places on Earth.
3. Next, demonstrate for students how to set up their models for the experiment. Assist groups
in optimizing their set ups as necessary, particularly in positioning the lamp to obtain
significant temperature variation across latitudes.
4. Students should work as a group to complete the investigation and fill in the lab sheet.
Circulate to observe, assess, and assist students in constructing their understanding of the
core concepts, asking probing questions and listening to students’ conversations.
Explain
5. Bring the class together for a whole group discussion about their results and conclusions.
Solicit their ideas and expand on them to fully address the core concepts. Use key vocabulary
in fleshing out students’ explanations – latitude, equator, angle and concentration of the
Sun’s rays, temperature, weather and climate.
Elaborate
6. In a hat, place slips of paper with latitudes and longitudes of specific locations on Earth with
differing climates. Ask students to randomly draw a slip of paper from the hat.
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7. Instruct students to use an atlas or the Internet to research the location they chose, and to note
in particular the seasonal climate of the area. The next day they should bring two items of
clothing to class that they would wear if they lived at that location on this day of the year.
8. Students will present to their classmates the location they chose, pointing it out on a map and
explaining their reasoning for the two pieces of clothing they brought in. Chart the global
climate on a large map of the world by placing a sticky note on each location that labels the
climate that the students described for that location.
9. Discuss the resulting global climate data that the class compiled on the world map. Guide the
discussion to help students discern and explain the patterns in climate that they observe
across the world.
10. As a final assessment of their understanding of the influence of latitude on climate, ask
students to journal in response to the following question: “How does latitude affect Earth’s
climate?”
Formative Assessment
1. Observations - Teacher observations of students working on the activity in their groups will
provide an informal means of assessing students’ understandings and naïve ideas about
differential heating of the globe. The core concepts that the teacher should be assessing
understanding of are:
The Earth’s tilt results in sunlight striking Earth at different angles over different latitudes
on any given day of the year. The concentration of the Sun’s rays varies with the angle at
which they strike Earth.
Temperature variations across Earth’s surface are influenced by differences in the
concentration of sunlight at each latitude.
2. Student lab sheets – Students’ answers on the lab sheet can be used as an assessment of their
understanding at this point in the lesson.
For the questions “Which thermometer’s temperature increased the most? Why?”,
students should indicate that the thermometer placed at the latitude receiving the most
direct light from the lamp was hottest.
For the questions “Why do you think that thermometer got hotter than the other
thermometers? Why?”, students should explain that the areas with more direct light
receive a higher concentration of energy from the sun in a given area, and therefore,
reach a higher temperature.
Summative Assessment
1. Clothing presentation - Assess students’ work in preparing the presentation and their ability
to explain why people wear a particular article of clothing for their specific location on
Earth’s surface, its sunlight concentration, and its resulting climate.
2. Student journals – Students’ journal explanations of how latitude affects Earth’s climate is a
good summative assessment. The depth of the explanation expected may vary depending on
the student’s grade level, etc.
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Name: __________________________________ Date: ______________________
1. Predict where you think it will be hottest on Earth’s surface and explain why you chose that
location.
_____________________________________________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________________________________________
2. Predict where you think it will be coldest on Earth’s surface and explain why you chose that
location.
_____________________________________________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________________________________
Data Table
Latitude ________
Thermometer #2
Latitude ________
Thermometer #3
Latitude ________
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Conclusions
1. Which thermometer’s temperature increased the most? Write your hypothesis (explanation)
for why you think this latitude had the highest temperature.
___________________________________________________________________________
___________________________________________________________________________
___________________________________________________________________________
___________________________________________________________________________
2. Which thermometer’s temperature increased the least? Write your hypothesis for why you
think this latitude had the lowest temperature.
___________________________________________________________________________
___________________________________________________________________________
___________________________________________________________________________
___________________________________________________________________________
___________________________________________________________________________
___________________________________________________________________________
___________________________________________________________________________
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Lesson #3 - Elevation’s Effects on Climate and Weather
Summary of the Lesson
In this lesson students use their observations of differing weather effects at different elevations in
their local area to discover and describe the effects of elevation on climate and weather.
Grade Level
4th and 5th Grades
Resources/Materials Needed
Science journals
Venn diagram worksheets
Blank sheet of paper for each student
Access to school yard from which areas of different elevation can be viewed
Teacher Preparation
Make a copy of the Venn diagram worksheet for each student.
This lesson will work best when there are discernible differences visible between the valley and
the mountains, i.e., when there is snow visible in the mountains. If you cannot take students to a
site where they can observe the differences in person, you can use photos showing snow covered
mountain peaks and clear valleys, or just ask students to draw on their experiences with weather
at higher elevations, for example when they have gone camping, hunting or hiking.
Background Information
One reason temperatures are lower at higher elevations involves differences in air pressure. If
you think about a giant column of air extending into the upper atmosphere, the air pressure in the
column is higher near the ground because all of the air in the column above it is pressing down
on the air near the ground. Air pressure is lower at higher elevations, where there is less air
above it pressing down on it.
Air is made up of moving molecules of gases. Temperature is a measure of the average kinetic
energy of molecules. Where there is less pressure, the molecules are spread more widely and
therefore collide less frequently with each other, thus reducing their kinetic energy and so their
temperature. This is one reason that air in the upper atmosphere, where there are fewer gas
molecules per unit volume, is cooler compared with air near the ground.
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Procedure
1. Take students outside to the playground with their journals. Instruct them to make written
observations and drawings of both the valley floor and the mountaintops. Ask students,
“What do you notice that is different when you compare the mountains and the valley?”.
Students should notice that there is more snow at higher elevations. Ask them to predict what
the weather is like at each location and to hypothesize why this difference exists.
2. Back in the classroom, facilitate a discussion, soliciting students’ observations and
hypotheses about why they observed differences between the valley and the mountains.
3. Instruct students to complete a Venn diagram, comparing and contrasting the valley and the
mountain tops.
4. Ask students to share their Venn diagrams. Ask them what they think caused the differences
they observed between the valleys and the mountains. The students will likely infer that it is
colder at higher elevations compared with lower elevations.
5. Lead a discussion to help students understand why there is an inverse relationship between
temperature and elevation. Using a Smart board or whiteboard, draw a diagram of a column
of air and explain that near the ground the gas molecules are closer together, under more
pressure, and colliding more frequently, resulting in greater kinetic energy and higher
temperatures. There are good online diagrams and simulations of this effect that could also
be shared with students to help illustrate the concept.
6. After the discussion, ask students to revise their Venn diagrams using the new information
they have talked about as a class. Ask students to share with the class how their Venn
diagrams changed.
Formative Assessment
Teacher Observations - Teacher observations of students while they are outside, while they are
completing their Venn diagrams and pictures, and during the ensuing discussions will provide a
means to assess students’ understandings and naïve ideas about how elevation affects climate.
The core concept that the teacher should be assessing understanding of is that it is relatively
colder at higher elevations and warmer at lower elevations. At this grade level, students may not
come to this lesson with a scientific understanding of the relationship between air pressure and
temperature of gases.
The teacher may also opt to use a checklist to monitor individual students’ participation.
Summative Assessment
Students’ Final Venn Diagrams – Assess student learning by looking for some of the following
types of differences/similarities on students’ revised Venn diagrams:
Differences:
Precipitation in the mountains is more likely to be frozen precipitation compared with valley.
Air pressure is lower in the mountains compared with the valley.
Temperatures will be lower in the mountains compared with the valley.
The molecules of gas are closer together near the ground (in the valley) compared with on the
mountains.
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Similarities:
Both the valley and the mountains are in the troposphere.
There are grasses and trees in both the valley and on the mountains (though they may be
different types).
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Name: ______________________________
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Lesson #4 – Graphing Climate on Climographs
Grade Level
4th and 5th Grades
Resources/Materials Needed
U.S. map
Sticky notes
Climograph data sheets
Blank climographs
“Questions about Climographs” worksheets
Computer lab
Teacher Preparation
Copy the materials for the activity. Each student will need a climograph data sheet, a question
worksheet, and a blank climograph. Schedule computer lab time for the class, if needed. Create
the groups that students will work in for the activity.
Background Information
A climograph depicts the annual cycle of temperature and rainfall for a geographical location.
On the graph, one vertical axis shows temperature and a second vertical axis shows rainfall. The
horizontal axis shows time, usually in months.
The following website provides an example climograph and several helpful climate links:
www.uwsp.edu/geo/faculty/ritter/glossary/a_d/climograph.html
Procedure
Day One: Engage
1) Hold a class discussion about climographs, explaining that they are one method that scientists
use to represent climates in specific locations. Show some example climographs for various
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cities and climates.
2) Ask students to describe the climate, in terms of precipitation and temperature, for their own
city. Demonstrate and assist students in creating a climograph for their city. The necessary
monthly precipitation and temperature data can be provided or students may find it
themselves on the Internet.
Day 5: Elaborate
1. Discuss other world cities, looking at their location on a globe or map. Students should
consider the factors that they have learned that affect climate; assist them as needed. Have
students work in pairs to write a prediction for the climate of each city and to provide an
explanation for their prediction. Assign pairs to look up the climate for one of the cities.
2. As a class, encourage students’ to discuss their predictions and compare them to the actual
climate of each site. Were their predictions accurate? Why or why not?
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Formative Assessment
Teacher observations - Teacher observations of students as they learn about climographs and
work in their groups will provide a means to assess students’ understanding of climographs and
climate differences across a line of latitude. The core concepts that the teacher should be
assessing understanding of are:
Multiple factors can impact the climate of an area including elevation, proximity to
bodies of water, proximity to mountains, and latitude.
The climate of an area can be represented as a climograph showing average monthly
precipitation and temperature over a year. Inferences about what the climate of a place is
like can be made using a climograph.
Summative Assessment
1. Climograph presentations - Use the attached rubric to assess the groups’ climograph
presentations.
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Name: _______________________________ Date: ____________________
February
March
April
May
June
July
August
September
October
November
December
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Name: ___________________________________ Date: ____________________
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Name: ______________________________ Date: _______________________
1. Which city has the highest average precipitation? Lowest average precipitation?
____________________________ __________________________
2. Which city has the highest average temperature? Lowest average temperature?
_____________________________ _________________________
3. Which two cities are most alike in temperature and precipitation? What factors do you think
influence their climates to make them similar?
___________________________________________________________________________
___________________________________________________________________________
___________________________________________________________________________
___________________________________________________________________________
4. These cities are all located along the 45 degree north latitude line, but their climates are not
all similar. Look more closely at the cities on the U. S. map. What might be some specific
things about these cities that are making their climates differ?
___________________________________________________________________________
___________________________________________________________________________
___________________________________________________________________________
___________________________________________________________________________
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Lesson #5 – Climate’s Influence on Tribal Lifestyles
Summary of the Lesson
In this activity, students research Montana’s tribal peoples and how their lifestyles are influenced
by the climates in which they live. Students research specific information about a Montana tribe,
design a poster using the information they find, and present it to their classmates. As a
culminating activity for this lesson, a member of a Montana tribal community is invited to visit
the class to discuss seasons and climate and how they relate to the tribe’s lifestyles.
Grade Level
4th and 5th Grades
Resources/Materials Needed
Data sheet for gathering information about a Montana tribe (one per student)
Poster board (one for each group)
Books and other reference materials about specific tribes
Tribal guest speaker to talk about tribal lifestyles (past and present ) and climate
Trunk on Montana’s First People, available at http://montanahistoricalsociety.org
Teacher Preparation
1. Copy the materials for the activity and schedule computer lab time for the class, if needed.
2. Designate the groups for the activity.
3. Gather reference materials for students to use in researching Montana’s tribal peoples. Most
tribes have an official website. Also, Montana’s Office of Public Instruction has good
resources for learning about Montana’s Native peoples (http://opi.mt.gov). Click the Indian
Ed tab on the home page to find valuable links.
4. Invite a tribal guest speaker to visit the class. Make sure the class understands and follows
respectful protocols for having a tribal visitor. For example, the visitor should be met at the
door of the school, provided with a comfortable seat and something to drink. After the visit,
it is appropriate for students to write thank you notes to the visitor. The visitor should be
compensated appropriately.
5. Order the Montana’s First People trunk from the Montana Historical Society. This needs to
be completed at least a month before this lesson.
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Background Information
Montana has seven American Indian reservations and twelve tribes with diverse cultures and
histories. Students should have knowledge of the reservations and tribes in Montana, including
the history of each tribe. Use the Montana Historic Society trunk and the Montana Office of
Public Instruction website to find lessons or reference materials to help students learn about
Montana tribes.
Procedure
Days One and Two: Engage and Explore
1. Ask students about their own lifestyles – How does the climate in which they live affect their
culture and lifestyles? Facilitate a discussion about climate and lifestyle, using examples
from around the world. Share photos of diverse groups of people that show their climates and
lifestyles.
2. Ask students if they can name the American Indian tribes and reservations in Montana. Point
them out on a map. Ask what else they might know about Montana’s tribal people and about
the climates on the various reservations.
3. Explain to students that they will be creating a teaching poster about a specific Montana tribe
detailing their lifestyles, traditions, current issues, and so forth, especially as they relate to the
climate in which they live. Emphasize that every member of the group should have a specific
topic to research and contribute to the poster. Share with students the rubric with the criteria
for their posters and presentations.
4. Divide the students into groups and assign each group a Montana tribe to study.
5. Provide the groups with time to research their assigned tribe.
6. Provide the groups with time to put their information together and design their posters.
Formative Assessment
Teacher observations - Teacher observations of students as they work in their groups to research
a tribe are one means of assessing students’ developing understandings about the connection
between climate, lifestyles, and cultural traditions of Montana tribes.
The teacher may also want to evaluate whether the students were effective in their group work,
and making equal contributions to the research and presentations.
Summative Assessment
Research and presentation on Montana tribes - The teacher will evaluate students’ research by
examining
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1. The data sheets for research on tribes - Did students find accurate information that
relates the tribe’s lifestyle and traditions to the climate in which they live? Was their
work thorough and their notes clear?
2. The posters and their presentations - Use the attached rubric to assess the groups’ posters
and presentations. Is their poster accurate, relevant, and aesthetically pleasing? Was the
presentation informative and thorough? Did they include all of the requested elements?
Did all members of the group make significant contributions?
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Names: ______________________________________ Date: ___________________
_________________________________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________________________________
8. Describe past and present tribal traditions related to climate factors: __________________________
_________________________________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________________________________
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Lesson #6 – Seasons of the Montana Salish
Summary of the Lesson
In this lesson, students explore how the lifestyles of the Salish people of Montana (both past and
present) relate to the climate of northwest Montana. Students examine the Salish calendar
months and the seasonal events that go with them.
Grade Level
4th and 5th Grades
Resources/Materials Needed
Salish and Pend d Oreille calendar months descriptions (attached)
Photos showing seasonal activities of the Salish people (some are attached with the lesson)
3 x 5 notecards – one per student
Salish and Pend d Oreille monthly activities cards
Teacher Preparation
1. Gather photos of Salish people engaged in seasonal activities. Some are included with this
lesson. Many others are available on the Internet. One source is the Salish Kootenai College
library collection (www.skclibrary/skc.edu). Copy two of each photo you intend to use.
2. Copy and cut apart the Salish and Pend d Oreille monthly activities descriptions and mount
them on construction paper.
Background Information
Students should have knowledge of the tribes living on the Flathead Reservation, the
contemporary home of the Montana Salish, Pend d Oreille and Kootenai people. There are
numerous sources of accurate information about the tribes and the Flathead reservation available.
Two recommended web sites are the Salish Kootenai College web site (www.skc.edu) and the
web site of the Confederated Salish and Kootenai Tribes (http://cskt.org). Curriculum resources
for K-12 that support learning about the tribes of Montana can be found on the web site for the
Montana Office of Public Instruction under the Indian Ed tab (http://opi.mt.gov).
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Procedure
Day One:
1. Ask students what conventions we commonly use to divide up our calendar year. Write the
calendar months of the Gregorian calendar (the calendar commonly used in the United States
and many other countries today) across the board, leaving space between each month.
Discuss with students that calendars can vary, and that different groups of people define their
calendars differently. Ask for students to contribute their ideas on this.
2. Show students the monthly activity cards for the Salish and Pend d Oreille calendar, in
random order. Ask them what they notice about the names of the months on the Salish
calendar. Guide the discussion as necessary so that students realize that the months are
named after seasonal events – e.g., the Month of Bitterroot, when bitterroot is harvested.
3. Pair students up and give them a Salish and Pend d Oreille monthly activity card. Ask them
to discuss with their partner what month they think the activity on the card occurs in each
year and then place this card under the appropriate month written on the whiteboard. Give
students about10 minutes to do this.
4. Facilitate a class discussion, asking students to explain why they thought their card belonged
in the month they chose. Give students an opportunity to change the placement of their
monthly activity card as they hear other groups explain their thinking.
5. Once all of the partners are satisfied with their decisions, place the activities cards under the
appropriate months and let students see if they were correct. Lead a final discussion about the
monthly activities and guide students toward connecting the activities to climate and weather.
Day Two:
1. Place five to ten photo copies on different desks in the room. Tear the copy of each photo
into two or three pieces, depending on how many students you have in class.
2. Hand a piece of the torn photo to each student and have them find the photo on one of the
desks that matches their photo piece. Students with pieces of the same photo will form a
collaborative group.
3. Have each group discuss among themselves their observations about the photo. What time of
year is it? What are the people wearing? What are they doing?
4. Write the seasons spring, summer, autumn and winter at the four cardinal points in a large
circle on the board. Ask students to place their photo in the season in which they think it
belongs. Hold a class discussion in which student groups discuss why they think their photo
depicts a particular season’s activities. Guide students to make connections between the
seasonal activities and the weather and climate of northwestern Montana.
5. Wrap up the lesson with an assessment. Have each student write one to two sentences on a
note card that summarizes how climate and season affect the traditions and lifestyle of the
Salish people. How does it affect the way Salish People live today? Do they have new ways
to follow an old tradition? Do the students’ families have traditions they follow throughout
the year (e.g., berry picking in August)?
Formative Assessment
Teacher Observation/ Student note cards - Teacher observations of students as they work in their
groups, as well as examination of students’ comments on their note cards, will provide a check of
students’ developing understandings about the connection between climate and cultural traditions
of Montana tribes.
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Salish and Pend d Oreille Calendar Months
COLDEST MONTH
This is the month that our people regarded as the coldest month of the year. Their name for it
meant it was very, very cold. The weather was often below zero during this month and the snow
deep. This month was a long hard time for the Indian people.
MONTH of BITTERROOT
About this time each year the Salish & Pend d’Oreille started digging the bitterroot. When it was
time to dig, the Chief would select a group of women to go ahead and check the roots to see if it
was ready. If it peeled easily, then it was ready. Following a feast, everyone was then free to dig
all that they need. A long time ago the people, they’d all get together when it was time to dig
bitterroot or camas and go together and camp for days where the bitterroot was plentiful. They
were making and storing food for the winter. Now days most of us are rich in food. We don’t
have such a hard time during the winter for our food anymore. But a long time ago the Indians
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had to make and store food all summer for the winter months as we had no money to be buying
food each day or week like now.
MONTH of CAMAS
This is usually the month when the Camas is ready to dig. The Camas is baked in the ground for
three days with black tree moss. During this month the Salish People make bark baskets for berry
picking. Tipi poles are cut during this month as well, they peel easier. When the wild rose
blossoms our people know that the buffalo are nice and fat. When the strawberries were ripe, the
baby elk and deer were born.
CELEBRATION MONTH
This is the middle of the summer months when all the people get together to celebrate and give
thanks that they survived the wars and the long hard winter. The people donate in many ways to
celebrate at this time of year. Each day several Indian leaders would gather at the Chief’s tipi to
discuss the activities for that day. After they had it all planned, the camp crier would ride among
the encampment to announce each activity. The annual Arlee Celebration is usually the first
weekend of this month.
HUNTING MONTH
A hunting party of young men would go up into hunting grounds. The leader would give the
directions and calls to let the others know when to be ready and when to make moves. The
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animals were chased into a corral and only what was needed was taken. After the men killed
enough meat for the camp they would then take all the meat back to the women who would then
slice and dry the meat, then divided it equally among all the camps. They would pack their meat
in their hunting packs and start for home. This is the month for getting the meat needed to last
through the long winter months, usually the large game animals.
STORY TELLING
Story telling begins after the first snowfall. This is a time of year when the Salish people relax
from the summer and early fall harvesting seasons. Stories are told by parents and grandparents
to the younger generations. The children are encouraged to sit quietly and listen with thoughts of
their own about being part of the stories. The stories teach and tell of values and morals. From
these stories we can still today see landmarks that tell us of the creation of mankind. From these
stories, we learn how mankind came to be. In early spring the stories are put away and are not to
be told until snowfall again in the winter season.
TRAPPING MONTH
This is the time of year when Salish and Pend d’Oreille did the trapping. Some time ago, we
trapped martin, weasel, mink, otter, beaver and muskrat. We use the skins of these animals in
different ways – braid wraps, trimming for outfits among other uses. Today, these animals aren’t
in as much as abundance as they once were long ago and are trapped and used carefully.
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