Young people use their voice to speak up for injustice and take action for the common good.
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Young people use their voice to speak up for injustice and take action for the common good.
Youth learn about the work of African American inventors who had a positive influence on society by contributing scientific innovation for the common good.
Participants learn about the scientific contributions of African American inventors and scientists today and in the past.
Young people learn about philanthropy through the book Uncle Willie and the Soup Kitchen and a visit from a nonprofit representative.
Children recognize an act of philanthropy in literature and discuss ways to make the world more beautiful with acts of philanthropy.
The identification of the services provided by for-profit, nonprofit and governmental organizations and the drawing of community map that not only identifies the various services provided by these community organizations but also maps areas of need in the community form the intent of this lesson.
The learners will be introduced to philanthropy and be able to generate examples of various ways the community is impacted, either by individuals, families or community organizations.
In response to reading The Lorax, participants identify what trees give to us and all sectors of society. In response, we identify our personal responsibility for caring for trees.
Clean water is a scarce natural resource because pollution and careless action can make it unusable for consumers. Learners research reliable facts about their local water and propose philanthropic acts to contribute to the common good.
This lesson introduces the characteristics of fairy tales as a genre. The children explore positive and negative character traits and universal themes in the story of Cinderella. The service plan is introduced in this lesson and carried out over the next weeks.