CECsst.194 TITLE: STATES AND CAPITALS OF THE UNITED STATES AUTHOR: John Moreland,Idaho State Youth Services Center, St. Anthony, Idaho OBJECTIVE(s): 1. Students will learn all of the states of the United States. 2. Students will learn the capitals of each state. 3. Students will learn the location of each state on a blank map. 4. Students will learn general information about each state which will include size, population, and when it became a state. RESOURCES: Students to make bingo cards with states and bingo cards with capitals. Blank maps of each state. Blank maps of continental United States with Hawaii and Alaska. Encyclopedias, atlas, and large wall maps of the United States. ACTIVITIES AND PROCEDURES: 1. Each student will do research and report to classmates on two or three states. This will depend on the amount of students in your class. Research will include general information, drawing an outline of the state with name and location of the capital. 2. Upon completion of number one, students will learn all the names of the states and capitals. This will be done by playing a form of bingo. Students will make bingo cards listing twenty-four states and a free space and twenty four capitals with free space. Ten cards with states and ten cards of capitals will be made by each student. ONLY one card will be used during each game. Instructor will call out states or capitals and the first with five in a row has bingo. Instructor calls opposite of cards students are using for game. Example: If students have cards with states, instructor will call out capitals. Students will place marker over proper state. When a student calls out"Bingo", he must call back capitals and say the name of the state the capital is in. 3. Students will fill in state and capitals on blank maps. They will use maps of states that reports on #1 were given. Students will fill in states of the seven different regions of the United States. These regions include New England States, Middle Atlantic States, Southern States, Midwestern States, Rocky Mountain States, Southwestern States, and the Pacific Coast States. Upon completion of these activities students will fill in the states and capitals on a blank map of the United States.