Special Collections

District List: NYC Core Curriculum 1st - Social Studies

Description: The New York City Core Curriculum program aims to provide curricula to NYC students through a seamless instructional program across grades and subjects. This list has been curated by NYCDOE for 1st Grade Social Studies materials. #teachers #nyccore


Showing 26 through 50 of 60 results

My Sister

by Mary Auld

In My Sister, young readers learn about the different ways girls become sisters, how sisters care for their siblings, and how siblings play together.

Date Added: 08/21/2018


My Mom

by Mary Auld

Explains, in brief text, the term "Mom" and describes the role of mothers in a family and their relationship with their children.

Date Added: 09/19/2018


My Grandparents

by Mary Auld

Explains, in brief text and illustrations, the meaning of the term "grandparent" and describes the role of grandparents in a family and their relationship with their grandchildren.

Date Added: 08/13/2018


My Dad

by Mary Auld

Explains, in brief text and illustrations, the meaning of the term "Dad" and describes the role of fathers in a family and their relationship with their children.

Date Added: 08/13/2018


My Chinatown

by Kam Mak

Chinatown -- a place of dragons and dreams; fireflies and memories Chinatown -- full of wonder and magic; fireworks on New Year's Day and a delicious smell on every corner Chinatown -- where every day brings something familiar and something wondrously new to a small boy Chinatown -- home? Kam Mak grew up in a place of two cultures, one existing within the other. Using moving poems, he shares a year of growing up in this small city within a city, which is called Chinatown.

Date Added: 07/06/2018


My Brother

by Mary Auld

Explains, in brief text and illustrations, the meaning of the term "brother" and describes their role in a family and their relationship to their siblings.

Date Added: 08/13/2018


My Aunt and Uncle

by Mary Auld

Explains, in brief text and illustrations, the meaning of the terms "aunt" and "uncle" and describes their roles in a family and their relationship with their nieces and nephews.

Date Added: 09/04/2018


Meet the President's Cabinet

by Michael Rajczak

A series that will reveal many surprising facts to middle readers about the United States government and its workings includes fascinating sidebars and age-appropriate informational fact boxes; historical, black and white, and full-color images; glossary; index; and details about the areas of government that make our country run. Simultaneous.

Date Added: 01/23/2019


Making a Law

by Sarah De Capua

Explains what laws are, how local, state, and federal laws are made, and what citizens can do to participate in the lawmaking process.

Date Added: 08/13/2018


The Little Red Lighthouse and the Great Gray Bridge

by Lynd Ward and Hildegarde H. Swift

A little red lighthouse stands on the shores of the Hudson River. When the great bridge is built, the little lighthouse feels very, very small, but he soon comes to understand that he is still needed to guide boats through dark and stormy weather. Picture descriptions added.

Date Added: 07/06/2018


Life on a Wagon Train

by Janey Levy

In 1841, most Americans lived in the eastern part of the country. The wagon trains helped to change that. Towns and farms sprang up all along the Oregon Trail. By 1869, the United States reached from the Atlantic Ocean to the Pacific Ocean.

Date Added: 09/04/2018


The Library

by Jacqueline Laks Gorman

This series is the ticket to places both familiar and exciting to young children. From the library to the zoo, each title explores a different place that kids like to visit and describes what a visitor can see and do there.

Beginning readers will enjoy the lively, full-color photographs, which enhance the simple, easy-to-read text.

Date Added: 07/17/2018


A Journey Along The Erie Canal

by Janey Levy

This fascinating paperback describes the construction and history of the Erie Canal. It uses the information to illustrate elementary division. Includes a scanned photocopy of a weekly toll collection statement from 1860.

Date Added: 08/06/2018


I Live In Brooklyn

by Mari Takabayashi

From days on the stoop, playing hopscotch and watching fireworks from the rooftops, to school field trips into the city, where zoos and museums await, Michelle introduces readers to her favorite places and things to do. Mari Takabayashi’s diminutive scenes, busy with cheerful detail, bring the beauty and bustle of New York City to life for children all around the world.

Date Added: 08/13/2018


I Like to Visit the Museum

by Jacqueline Laks Gorman

Describes some of the things to see and learn about on a visit to a children's museum, including the stars, the human body, wild animals, dinosaurs, and space.

Date Added: 08/13/2018


If You Lived 100 Years Ago

by Anna DiVito and Ann McGovern

NIMAC-sourced textbook

Date Added: 07/06/2018


How Do We Elect Our Leaders?

by William David Thomas

In what ways are the branches of government like a basketball game? How can a school yard game's rules liken themselves to a constitution? Through engaging analogies and introductions, our new government series gets students ready for election 2008. Correlated to the fourth and fifth grade social studies curriculum, My American Government introduces students to how our government works. Students learn about the U.S. Constitution, the branches of government, citizens' basic rights, and how we elect our leaders.

Date Added: 08/13/2018


How Cars Changed The World

by Kurt Hoffman

Bright, full-color and black and white historic photographs compare and contrast the cars, roads, and travel experiences of today with those of days gone by. Strongly correlated to the Common Core Standards for Informational Text, this title is perfect for exploring the relationships between a series of historical events and scientific ideas.

Date Added: 08/06/2018


The History Of New York City

by Katie White

In this book, readers will take a tour of major New York City historical attractions while learning how to use properties of operations for multiplication and division. This volume meets CCSS Math Standard 3.OA.B.5.

Date Added: 08/21/2018


Going to School in American History

by Dana Meachen Rau

This book traces how schools have evolved over time in America.

Date Added: 09/24/2018


The Global Economy

by Hugh Roome and Anne Ross Roome

With travel and communications at an unprecedented level of speed and efficiency, it is almost as easy today to conduct business with colleagues across the world as it is to dial up a friend who lives down the street. As a result, the global economy is more connected than ever. Readers will discover how the many small economies around the world are linked together into a worldwide web of goods, services, and money.

Date Added: 08/06/2018


Following Rules

by Robin Nelson

An introduction to following rules at school, at home, and in the community, with specific examples of how to follow the rules at home and at school.

Date Added: 09/24/2018


Family Pictures / Cuadros de Familia

by Carmen Lomas Garza

Family Pictures is the story of Carmen Lomas Garza's girlhood: celebrating birthdays, making tamales, finding a hammerhead shark on the beach, picking cactus, going to a fair in Mexico, and confiding to her sister her dreams of becoming an artist.

These day-to-day experiences are told through fourteen vignettes of art and a descriptive narrative, each focusing on a different aspect of traditional Mexican American culture. The English-Spanish text and vivid illustrations reflect the author's strong sense of family and community. For Mexican Americans, Carmen Lomas Garza offers a book that reflects their lives and traditions. For others, this work offers insights into a beautifully rich community.

[This text is listed as an example that meets Common Core Standards in English language arts for K-1 at http://www.corestandards.org.]

Date Added: 07/06/2018


Families Around the World

by Margriet Ruurs

A successor to the popular Children Around the World written and illustrated by Donata Montanari, this book allows young readers to visit with fourteen children, each from a different country, to learn about their families. Based on real children, each one's story fills a two-page spread and is told in the first person, beginning with a greeting in the child's native language. From Ryan, who lives on a Texas cattle farm, to Nkoitoi, who tends the family goat in Kenya, to Baatar, who moves regularly with his nomadic family in Mongolia, there is a vast range of homes, locations, customs and activities presented here, all of it enthusiastically illustrated with bright colors and vivid detail by illustrator Jessica Rae Gordon. There is variety in the heads of the families as well: a single parent, multiracial parents and same-sex parents are all represented.

Date Added: 09/28/2018


Do I Need It? Or Do I Want It?

by Jennifer S. Larson

Do you plan how much money you'll use to buy candy? Or how much you'll save for a new video game? Then you're budgeting! A budget is a plan for spending and saving. Budgets help people decide how to use their money wisely. What do you need to buy? What do you want? And how can you make a budget? Read this book to find out.

Date Added: 07/06/2018



Showing 26 through 50 of 60 results