March
                        6
                     
            Week of March 5, 2018
Happy Monday!!
Geograpghy
- Adapt – to change in order to fit new environmental conditions.
 - Bodies of water – all the different sizes and shapes of water naturally found on the Earth’s surface. Oceans, seas, bays, lakes, rivers, and ponds are examples of bodies of water.
 - Communication – ways people send and receive messages thereby linking people and places.
 - Environment – the geographic characteristics that surround and affect the way people live.
 - Environment concerns/issues – interests’ people have about the care of the natural environment.
 - Geographic characteristics – traits that distinguish one place from another. These are divided into two groups.
 - Physical characteristics describe the natural environment of the place. They include physical features (natural landforms and bodies of water), weather and climate, soil, vegetation, and animal life.
 - Human characteristics describe the people of the place past or present their human-made features (buildings, etc), languages, religions, economic activities, and political systems.
 - Human-made features – changes people have made to the land. These changes include buildings, bridges, tunnels, railroad tracks, dams, monuments, piers, farm fields.
 - Landforms – the different shapes of Earth’s surface. Mountains, hills, plateaus, plains, valleys, peninsulas, and islands are examples of landforms.
 - Map – a graphic model of the earth or a part of the earth that is drawn on a flat surface.
 - Map elements – the parts of a map that make it usable.
- author – the person or company that made the map.
 - border – the frame around the map.
 - cardinal directions – north, south, east, and west.
 - compass rose – the small drawing that uses one or more arrows to show cardinal and/or intermediate directions on a map or globe.
 - coordinate – the point on a map or globe where a line of latitude and longitude cross.
 - date – the year in which the map was made.
 - grid system – the pattern of lines that help locate places on a map or globe; for example, latitude and longitude.
 - intermediate directions – directions between the cardinal directions: northeast, southeast, southwest, northwest
 - latitude/longitude – imaginary lines on a map or globe that measure distance north and south of the Equator and distance east and west of the prime meridian.
 - legend/key – explains the meaning of the symbols on the map
 - scale – the measurement on a map or globe that shows the distance between places.
 - symbols – the pictures, shapes, or colors on a map that stand for objects, places, or people.
 - title – a heading that identifies the subject of a map.
 
 - Migrate/migration/immigration – to move from one country or region to another with the intent of staying at that place for a long period of time.
 - Modify – to change to meet the wants of people.
 - Natural environment – the physical setting of a place including the land, air, water, plants, and animals.
 - Physical features – landforms and bodies of water formed by nature.
 - Population growth – the increase in the number of people living in a place due to migration, immigration and/or births.
 - Region – an area that has one or more geographic characteristics in common, such as the Middle Colonies or the Piedmont Plateau.
 - Relative distance – the approximate distance of a place in relationship to other places (i.e. near and far)
 - Settlement – the arrangement of places where people live, including rural and urban centers.
 - Technology – skills, methods, tools, machines and other things used to perform activities. Technology changes over time and affects the way we live, work, and play.
 - Transportation – ways goods and people move from place to place thereby linking communities.
 
TEST ON WEDNESDAY!
Important Dates
Late start 3/14/18
EOMP3 3/16/18
No School Spring break 3/30/18-4/8/18
School resumes 4/9/18
Important Reminders
Please send a healthy snack with your child every day we have a late lunch.
If you have any questions or concerns please feel free to contact me at anytime (chamsef@dearbornschools.org).
Thank you,
Fatima Chamseddine
Hi I did not come to school because I had a fever and my stomach started hurting