California Department of Education A logo depicting elements of public education. A globe, a student at school, a computer lab, and a  school bus
Children with César at La Paz
Photo Copyright © Manuel Echavarria
César Chávez Day
K-3 Model Curriculum and Resources

César Chávez Day > Intro > Model Curriculum > K — 3 Curriculum
César Chávez Day

Kindergarten: Learning and Working Now and Long Ago
Kindergarten students studying the life, work, and philosophy of César E. Chávez will learn that being a good citizen involves acting in certain ways, and that the personal qualities that Chávez possessed reflect good civic behavior. They will also have the opportunity to learn about the work that people must do to grow food, to harvest the crops, and to transport the food to locations for people to buy. Kindergarten students will learn about César E. Chávez, the man for which California named a holiday.

Kindergarten: History-Social Science Framework
Students in kindergarten begin their formal education by learning to understand the character traits that are necessary for good civic behavior. They will listen to stories of times past and about men and women who have made a difference. They will learn how it might have been to live in other times and places and how their lives would have been different. They will observe different ways people lived in earlier days; for example, getting water from a well or growing their food. (Pp. 27-29)

Kindergarten: History-Social Science Standards
Standard K.1 Students understand that being a good citizen involves acting in certain ways.
K.1.2 Learn examples of honesty, courage, determination, individual responsibility, and patriotism in American and world history from stories and folklore.

Standard K.3 Students match simple descriptions of work that people do and the names of related jobs at school, in the community, and from historical accounts.

Standard K.6 Students understand that history relates to events, people, and places of other times.
K.6.1 Identify the purpose of, and the people and events honored in, commemorative holidays, including the human struggles that were the basis for the events (e.g., Thanksgiving, Independence Day, Washington’s and Lincoln’s Birthdays, Martin Luther King Jr. Day, Labor Day, Columbus Day, Veterans Day).
K.6.3 Understand how people lived in earlier times and how their lives would be different today (e.g., water from a well, growing food, making clothing, having fun, forming organizations, living by rules and laws).

Lesson 1 César E. Chávez: An American Hero
Students will be able to identify a photograph or portrait of César E. Chávez and orally state one reason why he is an American hero.
Lesson 2 César E. Chávez and His Family
Students will be able to state what César E. Chávez learned from his mother, father and grandmother.
Lesson 3 César E. Chávez and the Community
Students will be able to describe and model good citizenship. Students will be able to state why César E. Chávez was a good citizen.
Lesson 4 César E. Chávez Making Change
Students will be able to explain how César E. Chávez helped farm workers. Students will be able to explain how the life of a farm worker changed because of Chávez’s work. Students will be able to show how nonviolent action can lead to a peaceful resolution.
Lesson 5 The Memory of César E. Chávez
Students will plan and complete a service learning project.

Grade One: A Child’s Place in Time and Space
Students studying the life, work, and philosophy of César E. Chávez in grade one will learn how he worked to resolve problems peaceably. By examining the life of Chávez, they will understand how his cultural experiences influenced his politics, family life, education, philosophy, recreational activities, and his world vision.

Grade One: History-Social Science Framework (Revised 2000)
Students in grade one will learn more about the world they live in and their responsibility to other people. They will be ready to develop a deeper understanding of cultural diversity and to appreciate the many people from various backgrounds. They will gain a beginning understanding of economics and how goods and services are exchanged for money. They will be ready to examine their neighborhood's many geographic and economic connections to the larger world. Students will hear stories to discover the many ways in which people, families, and cultural groups are alike as well as those ways in which they differ. (Pp. 32-34)

Grade One: History-Social Science Standards
Standard 1.2 Students compare and contrast the absolute and relative locations of places and people, and describe the physical and/or human characteristics of places.
1.2.4 Describe how location, weather, and physical environment affect the way people live, including the effects on their food, clothing, shelter, transportation, and recreation.

Standard 1.4 Students compare and contrast everyday life in different times and places around the world and recognize that some aspects of people, places, and things change over time while others stay the same.
1.4.3 Recognize similarities and differences of earlier generations in such areas as work (inside and outside the home), dress, manners, stories, games, festivals, drawing from biographies, oral histories, and folklore.

Standard 1.5 Students describe the human characteristics of familiar places and the varied backgrounds of American citizens and residents in those places.
1.5.2 Understand the ways in which Native Americans and immigrants have helped define Californian and American culture.

Standard 1.6 Students understand basic economic concepts and the role of individual choice in a free-market economy.
1.6.2 Identify the specialized work that people do to manufacture, transport, and market goods and services, and the contributions of those who work in the home.

Lesson 1 Boycott Posters
Students will be able to explain how a nonviolent action can cause change in the cycle of a free-market economy. Students will be able to create imagery that conveys a nonviolent message of change.
Lesson 2 Chávez Time Line
Students will be able to put a time line in order. They will identify factors of change and similarities and differences between the life of Chávez. Students will be able to understand how Chávez changed the world he lived in.
Lesson 3 De Colores
Students will be able to see how a cultural song can invoke visions and emotions. Students will be able to identify reasons that Chávez would play this song at meetings.
Lesson 4 Farm Worker Inspired Poetry
Students will be able to recognize the role farm workers play in the marketing of goods. Students will be able to use words to invoke the feelings of this individual group of people.
Lesson 5 Similarities and Differences
Students will be able to identify the similarities and differences in the life of Chávez. Students and teacher pick out similarities and differences to create a list.
Lesson 6 Violence Versus Nonviolence
Students will see how violence does not reach a given goal and how nonviolence and unity does. Students are able to explain why to choose nonviolence over violence.

Grade Two: People Who Make a Difference
Students studying César E. Chávez will learn about his role in improving the lives of farm workers. They will learn about Chávez as a family man, as a husband, as a father and grandfather. They will learn about the role that religion played in Chávez’s life. They will learn about his role as an organizer, a labor leader, and as an environmentalist. Most importantly, they will learn about him as a civil rights leader and as an advocate for social justice and nonviolence.

Grade Two: History-Social Science Framework
Students in grade two will learn about people who made a difference in the past. They will learn about those who supply the goods and services that are necessary for daily life. Their studies will emphasize those who supply food: people who grow and harvest food, vegetable farms, fruit orchards, and the processors and distributors who move food from farm to market. Students will also learn to use maps that extend to regions beyond their neighborhood to the farmlands and to the places where people work to produce their food. They will also learn to explore geographic questions such as: How does climate affect the crops that a farmer can grow? Why are some areas more fertile than others are? Why is water such an important resource for farmers?

They will also understand and appreciate the many ways that parents, grandparents, and ancestors have made a difference. This will help them develop a beginning sense of history. Teachers will ask students: Where did the family come from? What was it like to live there? Who was in the family then? Do photos or letters from that time still exist? Reading literature helps children acquire deeper insights into the cultures from which families came; the stories, games, and festivals parents or grandparents might have enjoyed as children; the work that children as well as their families were expected to perform; their religious practices; and the dress, manners, and morals expected of family members at that time. Comparisons will be drawn with children’s lives today to discover how many of these family traditions, practices, and values have carried forward to the present and what kinds of changes have occurred.

They will also learn about those extraordinary men and women who have made a difference in our national life and in the larger world community. Children will meet those men and women whose contributions can be appreciated by seven-year-olds and whose achievements have directly or indirectly touched their lives or the lives of others. They will learn about leaders from all walks of life who have helped to solve community problems, worked for better schools, or improved living conditions and the lifelong opportunities for workers, families, women, and children. They will learn about those who have been honored locally for the special courage, responsibility, and concern they have displayed in contributing to the safety, welfare, and happiness of others. (Pp. 38-41)

Grade Two History-Social Science Standards
Standard 2.2 Students demonstrate map skills by describing the absolute and relative locations of people, places, and environments.
2.2.4 Compare and contrast basic land use in urban, suburban, and rural environments in California.

Standard 2.4 Students understand basic economic concepts and their individual roles in the economy and demonstrate basic economic reasoning skills.
2.4.1 Describe food production and consumption long ago and today, including the roles of farmers, processors, distributors, weather, and land and water resources.
2.4.3 Understand how limits on resources affect production and consumption (what to produce and what to consume).

Standard 2.5 Students understand the importance of individual action and character and explain how heroes from long ago and the recent past have made a difference in others' lives (e.g., from biographies of Abraham Lincoln, Louis Pasteur, Sitting Bull, George Washington Carver, Marie Curie, Albert Einstein, Golda Meir, Jackie Robinson, Sally Ride).

Lesson 1 The Food We Eat
Students will be able to name the major crops grown in California’s central valley. Students will list where the products of the central valley are exported. Students will trace one of California’s major crops from the farm to consumption.
Lesson 2 Farm Labor
Students will be able to state why farm workers are an important part of the farm economy. Students will be able to explain the crop cycle in California and why farm workers are migrant workers. Students will state that César E. Chávez was an important migrant farm worker.
Lesson 3 Pesticides
Students will explain the reasons that farmers need to use pesticides. Students will list the dangers of using pesticides. Students will understand that limits on resources affect production and consumption. Students will understand that the general public does not want to eat products that are harmful.
Lesson 4 The Importance of Farm Owners and Farm Workers
Students will be able to state why farm owners are an important part of the farm economy. Students will be able to state why farm workers are an important part of the farm economy. Students will state why César E. Chávez became interested in improving the lives of farm workers.

Grade Three: Continuity and Change
Students in grade three studying César E. Chávez will learn about his relationship with immigrants. Students will learn about Chávez’s work with Fred Ross, as well as his work in his own local community. They will learn about Chávez’s work as a civil rights leader and the connection between his ideas and his actions and behavior. Students will learn how César E. Chávez was taught to organize people to solve their problems and to fight for justice.

Grade Three: History-Social Science Framework
Students in grade three will continue their study of community by examining continuity and change. They will differentiate between major landforms and landscapes. They will consider the impact of new groups of people on those that came before. They will use historical photographs to observe the changes in the ways families lived and worked. They will have opportunities to role-play being an immigrant today and long ago; discover how newcomers, including children have earned their living, now and long ago; and analyze why such occupations have changed over time. They will compare the past to changes underway today. (How do people today earn a living? How are people working to protect their region’s natural resources? How do people in this community work to influence public policy and participate in resolving local issues that are important to children and their families?) Children will listen to biographies of the nation’s heroes and of those who took the risk of new and controversial ideas and opened new opportunities for many. These stories will help children to understand today’s great movement of immigrants into California as part of the continuing history of their nation. (Pp. 44-47)

Grade Three: History-Social Science Standards
Standard 3.1 Students describe the physical and human geography and use maps, tables, graphs, photographs, and charts to organize information about people, places, and environments in a spatial context.
3.1.1 Identify geographical features in their local region (e.g., deserts, mountains, valleys, hills, coastal areas, oceans, lakes).
3.1.2 Trace the ways in which people have used the resources of the local region and modified the physical environment (e.g., a dam constructed upstream changed a river or coastline).

Standard 3.4 Students understand the role of rules and laws in our daily lives and the basic structure of the U.S. Government.
3.4.2 Discuss the importance of public virtue and the role of citizens, including how to participate in a classroom, in the community, and in civic life.
3.4.6 Describe the lives of American heroes who took risks to secure our freedoms (e.g., Anne Hutchinson, Benjamin Franklin, Thomas Jefferson, Abraham Lincoln, Frederick Douglas, Harriet Tubman, Martin Luther King, Jr.).

Standard 3.5 Students demonstrate basic economic reasoning skills and an understanding of the economy of the local region.
3.5.1 Describe the ways in which local procedures have used and are using natural resources, human resources, and capital resources to produce goods and services in the past and the present.

Lesson 1 We Depend on the Land: Agriculture in California
Students will be able to color and label a map of California by geographic region. Students will be able to identify the agricultural regions of California and describe why they are conducive to farming. Students will be able to graph data of California’s major crops and write/say fact statements about the state's agriculture. Students will write/say sentences comparing and contrasting agriculture now and in California’s past.
Lesson 2 César E. Chávez: An American Hero
Students will be able to create and interpret a time line of César’s life. Students will be able to state and analyze several causes and effects of César’s actions to help migrant farm workers. Students will be able to compare and contrast conditions of migrant workers now and in the past.
Lesson 3 Understanding a Democratic Society
Students will be able to state examples of local laws and explain why they exist. Students will be able to describe who makes the laws in a democratic society. Students will be able to distinguish between the roles of local, state and federal government.
Lesson 4 César E. Chávez: An Instrument of Change in a Democracy
Students will be able to describe a day in the life of a migrant farm worker in the 1960s. Students will be able to summarize why Chávez was an important person in American history. Students will be able to state the nonviolent methods used by Chávez and explain their effects. Students will be able to develop an action plan to solve a community problem.
Lesson 5 Agriculture and the Economy
The students will be able to demonstrate an understanding of the impact that farm workers have on the economy of the state and the country.


California Department of Education
1430 N Street
Sacramento, CA 95814
_