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         Mississippi Geography:     more books (100)
  1. Mississippi "jography": "geography fun!" by Carole Marsh, 1998
  2. Suggestions on teaching geography in the schools of Mississippi (Mississippi Normal College. Bulletin) by Willa Bolton, 1917
  3. Contributions to the physical geography of the United States: Part I. Of the physical geography of the Mississippi valley, with suggestions for the improvement ... (Smithsonian contributions to knowledge) by Charles Ellet, 1850
  4. Economic geography of Mississippi by Ephraim Noble Lowe, 1928
  5. A historical/cultural geography of the socioeconomic development of Mississippi by Jesse O McKee, 1977
  6. A lecture on the peculiarities of the physical geography of the Mississippi River and its delta, by Edward Fontaine, 1874
  7. The physical geography of the Mississippi River: A problem in river hydrography by Jacques W Redway, 1890
  8. Mississippi, its geology, geography, soil and mineral resources, a revision with additions of bulletin no. 12, (Mississippi. State geological survey. Bulletin) by Ephraim Noble Lowe, 1919
  9. The development of trans-Mississippi political geography by Ruth L Higgins, 1923
  10. Mississippi, its geology, geography, soils and mineral resources, (Mississippi. State Geological Survey. Bulletin) by Ephraim Noble Lowe, 1915
  11. Geography of the Mississippi Black Prairie by Merle Wentworth Myers, 1948-01-01
  12. Physical Geography Of The Mississippi Valley (Notable American Authors) by Charles Ellet, 1849-01
  13. Guidebook for geology and geography tour, summer 1939 by Paul Heaney Dunn, 1939
  14. The picturesque West: Our western empire beyond the Mississippi. Containing ... description, from ... authentic sources, of the geography, geology, and ... the Mississippi and the Pacific ocean by Henry Llewellyn Williams, 1891

61. Hotels In Mississippi -- Jackson, Biloxi, Greenville, Hattiesburg, Meridian, Gul
mississippi geography.
http://www.hotels-hoteles.com/hotels-Mississippi.htm
Hotels USA Mississippi Click on a city below to display a list of local hotels. Each hotel has real-time pricing so you can see all available rates and book your reservations online. Batesville Forest Laurel Picayune ... Yazoo City MISSISSIPPI - Geography One of the Deep South states of the United States. It is bordered by Alabama (E), the Gulf of Mexico (S), Arkansas and Louisiana, with most of the border formed by the Mississippi R. (W), and Tennessee (N). Mississippi's generally hilly landscape reaches its highest point (806 ft/246 m) in the northeastern corner of the state along the Tennessee River. The most distinctive region in the state's varied topography is the Mississippi Delta, a flat alluvial plain between the Mississippi and the Yazoo rivers in the western part of the state. A wide belt of longleaf yellow pine (the piney woods) covers most of southern Mississippi to within a few miles of the coastal-plain grasslands. Important there are lumbering and allied industries. Most of the state's rivers belong to either the Mississippi or the Alabama river systems, with the Pontoctoc Ridge the divide. The climate of Mississippi is subtropical in the southern part of the state and temperate in the northern part; the average annual rainfall is more than 50 in. (127 cm). The state, in the path of waterfowl migration routes down the Mississippi valley and home to many species of birds, is noted for its duck and quail hunting. Along the Gulf Coast, a favorite fishing area, are several resort cities and part of Gulf Islands National Seashore. Historical sites in Mississippi include Old Spanish Fort, the oldest house on the Mississippi River, near Pascagoula, as well as Vicksburg National Military Park, Brices Cross Roads National Battlefield Site, and Tupelo National Battlefield Site (see National Parks and Monuments, table). In Natchez and Biloxi are many fine antebellum mansions. Jackson is the capital and largest city. Other important cities are Biloxi, Greenville, Hattiesburg, and Meridian.

62. Mississippi Library Biding Book (Geography & Cultures) From Save2Much.com
From BookRun an Ecofabric Company mississippi Library Biding Book (geography Cultures). Describes the geography, plants and animals
http://www.save2much.com/buy/search/Mississippi_Library_Biding_Book_Geography_Cu
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    Describes the geography, plants and animals, history, economy, language, religions, culture, and people of the state of Mississippi. by: Davis, Charles Publisher: Children's Press Publication Date: March 1999 Number of pages: 144
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  • 63. The US50 - A Guide To The Fifty States
    History geography Outdoors Tourism Events Information State Links
    http://www.theus50.com/mississippi/geography.shtml
    Mississippi State
    Select State Alabama Alaska Arizona Arkansas California Colorado Connecticut Delaware Florida Georgia Hawaii Idaho Illinois Indiana Iowa Kansas Kentucky Louisiana Maine Maryland Massachusetts Michigan Minnesota Mississippi Missouri Montana Nebraska Nevada New Hampshire New Jersey New Mexico New York North Carolina North Dakota Ohio Oklahoma Oregon Pennsylvania Rhode Island South Carolina South Dakota Tennessee Texas Utah Vermont Virginia Washington West Virginia Wisconsin Wyoming
    FAST FACTS
    FREE Wallpaper Guestbook document.write (''); Send a friend this link Website Map
    [The US50 Home]

    State Location
    Highest Elevation: 806 (Woodall Mt)
    Lowest Elevation: Sea Level (Gulf of Mexico)
    [Return to top]

    State Map
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    State Quiz
    Photo Contest History ... Online Policies

    64. Mississippi River Topography, History, Geography, And Uses
    mississippi River topography, history, geography, and uses. FromShawn Horton red.green@sweden.com Category To the Riverlorian
    http://www.inkwells.net/HelpBBS/_helpdisc/00000245.htm
    HelpBBS
    Home Contents Search Post ... Previous Up
    Mississippi River topography, history, geography, and uses
    From: Shawn Horton red.green@sweden.com
    Category: To the Riverlorian
    Date: 22 Feb 2000
    Time:
    Remote Name:
    Comments
    I am an eighth grade student from the Lincoln Middle School in Hibbing, Minnesota. I am doing a research project for English about the Mississippi River, and I can't find the information I need anywhere. I would like to know about the Mississippi River enough to write a three to four pages report. I would be very happy with any help you can give me. Last changed: November 15, 2001

    65. Taking A Look Around Ward-Stewart
    participate in the state geography Bee, often at the State Level. WardStewartis part of the Hands On mississippi geography Alliance.
    http://www.starkville.k12.ms.us/WSES/activity.html
    T a k e A L o o k A r o u n d W a r d S t e w a r t
    Native American Day
    Parents are always welcome at Ward-Stewart School. Here Susan Tomlinson and Counselor Penny Sullivan work on arrangements for dancers from the Choctaw Indian Reservation to be part of Ward-Stewart's Native American Day. "Hands On Mississippi"
    Geography is always an interesting topic at Ward-Stewart; our students participate in the state Geography Bee, often at the State Level. Ward-Stewart is part of the "Hands On Mississippi" Geography Alliance. Strings
    A strings program begins at fourth grade, and this group of promising violinists is anxious to get started! Students perform Christmas and Spring Concerts for the public. Summer Fine Arts Camp
    Mrs. Melby teaches music to fourth and fifth graders - and here she dresses the part! Through a Whole Schools Grant from the Mississippi Arts Commission, students are provided with artistic performances throughout the year and arts is infused in teaching. An eight-week summer fine arts camp keeps students interested year-round. Accelerated Reader Program
    The library always provides lots of choices for readers; the Accelerated Reader program ensures that every student knows his/her way around the library. Computers are available in classrooms and in the library.

    66. Mississippi - Wikipedia
    mississippi's physical geography is characterized by two distinct regionsthe mississippi River Floodplain and the Gulf Coastal Plain.
    http://www.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mississippi
    Main Page Recent changes Edit this page Older versions Special pages Set my user preferences My watchlist Recently updated pages Upload image files Image list Registered users Site statistics Random article Orphaned articles Orphaned images Popular articles Most wanted articles Short articles Long articles Newly created articles Interlanguage links All pages by title Blocked IP addresses Maintenance page External book sources Printable version Talk
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    Mississippi
    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Mississippi In Detail (Full size) State nickname : Magnolia State
    (In Detail)
    Capital Jackson Area
    - Total
    - Land
    - Water
    - % water Ranked 32 nd
    km²

    km²
    ...
    Population

    - Total ( Density Ranked 31 st 21.5/km² Admittance into Union - Order - Date th December 10 Time zone Central: UTC Latitude Longitude Width Length Elevation -Highest -Mean -Lowest 275 km 545 km 246 meters 90 meters meters Mississippi is a southern state of the United States Postal abbreviation: MS. Official (long) name: State of Mississippi. The state takes its name from the Mississippi River , which flows along the western boundary. The name itself probably comes from

    67. L³ - The Lewis And Clark Rediscovery Project
    40 percent of America's commerce already flowed down the mississippi through New ofthe foremost students in the world of American geography, eagerly gathered
    http://www.l3-lewisandclark.com/ShowOneObject.asp?CategoryID=3&SiteID=74

    68. Developing Educational Standards - Mississippi
    of Education The K12 Curriculum Framework portion of the mississippi Departmentof These are the arts, civics, geography, math, reading, science, US history
    http://edstandards.org/StSt/Mississippi.html
    Mississippi Developing Educational Standards is maintained by Charles Hill and the Wappingers Central School District in New York. Your help with updates or corrections is greatly appreciated. [This page was last updated on December 20, 2001] By Governmental Agency By Organization
    • Mississippi Department of Education
      The K12 Curriculum Framework portion of the Mississippi Department of Education 's site contains grade level curriculum frameworks that includes competencies, benchmarks, instructional strategies, and assessment ideas. The science framework was updated in April 2001.
    • National Assessment of Educational Progress
      The National Assessment of Educational Progress, operated by the US Department of Education, bills itself as The Nation's Report Card . While not explicitly tied to particular national or state standards, its reports provide a way of looking at student progress across the country in the eight subject areas the NAEP covers. These are the arts, civics, geography, math, reading, science, US history, and writing. Each subject has its own page that contains findings from related assessments, answers to basic questions about assessment, and standards and frameworks links. The NAEP site contains the following results (and the year last administered): the arts (1997), civics (1998), geography (1994; the 2001 results are being analyzed), math (2000), reading (2000), science (1996;the 2000 results are due in the fall of 2001), US history (1994; the 2001 results are being analyzed), and writing (1998).

    69. Missouri River - Geography
    geography The Missouri River is one of the longest rivers in the United Statessecond only to the mississippi. It's total length is 2,315 miles.
    http://web.bryant.edu/~langlois/ecology/geography.html
    GEOGRAPHY The Missouri River is one of the longest rivers in the United States second only to the Mississippi. It's total length is 2,315 miles. The Missouri travels through seven states as it makes it's way to St. Louis, Mo. where it meets with the Mississippi. The Missouri has the nickname "Big Muddy," because of the large amount of silt that it carries. It also has a large number of tributaries feeding into it along it's path. The total basin that drains into the river covers 530,000 square miles. http://www1.wheelock.edu/watersheds/mississippi/Missouri.html The Missouri River drains one-sixth of the United States flowing from from its headwaters at the confluence of the Gallatin, Madison, and Jefferson Rivers in the Rocky Mountains at Three Forks, Montana, to its confluence with the Mississippi River at St. Louis, Missouri. The basin is home to about 10 million people from 28 Native American tribes, 10 states (Colorado, Iowa, Kansas, Minnesota, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, North Dakota, South Dakota, Wyoming), and a small part of Canada. Precipitation in the basin varies from an annual mean of 40 inches in the interior highlands of the Missouri Ozarks to 10 inches in the dry upland plains of North and South Dakota, Wyoming, and Montana. The basin’s elevation drops from 14,000 foot peaks at its northwestern boundary to about 400 feet where it joins the Mississippi.

    70. UNC-CH Geog: North American Geog Depts-Mississippi (text)
    UNCCH geography. geography Departments in mississippi. Highest geographydegree offered B=Bachelor's M=Master's D=Doctorate Hattiesburg.
    http://www.unc.edu/depts/geog/depts/mississippi-txt.html
    UNC-CH Geography
    Geography Departments in Mississippi
    Highest geography degree offered: B M D =Doctorate
    Hattiesburg
    M University of Southern Mississippi
    Mississippi State
    M Mississippi State University Main map Eastern region map Main list (text) ... Comments Last modified: April 29, 2000

    71. Geography/Cultures - FUN Books
    of North America are covered as well as an introduction to world geography in the theGreat Plains Southwest (Tree in the Trail); and the mississippi River
    http://www.fun-books.com/geography.htm
    For a lifetime of learning fun!
    If you are unable to see the blue navigation buttons below, go to Contents for text links or use our Search function.
    Geography/Cultures Far and Near
    Holling C. Holling Classics
    Minn of the Mississippi Follow the adventures of Minn, a snapping turtle, as she travels hundreds of miles from the source of the Mississippi to the Gulf of Mexico. Learn about bayous, keel boats and more. Paper, 87 pp.
    Paddle-to-the-Sea written and illustrated by Holling Clancy Holling. A Caldecott honor book written in 1941, the story follows the adventures of a small canoe with a tiny figure inside. Carved by an Indian boy in Canada and named Paddle-to-the-Sea, the canoe is released above the Great Lakes, and the reader follows the canoe throughout its travels to a sawmill, through the Great Lakes, over Niagara Falls, down the St. Lawrence River and all the way to the Atlantic Ocean. The writing and artwork is incredibly detailed. It is fun to read and provides an enjoyable way to learn the geographic and historical information of the region. This is one of our family's all-time favorite books. Paper, 62 pages.
    Seabird Learn world geography as you follow the adventures of an ivory gull named Seabird, carved by a cabin boy. A story of sailing, ships and whaling that follows 4 generations of seafarers; it is actually my least favorite Holling book because of the whaling component. It sparked discussion within our family; and we enjoyed other aspects of the book. Paper.

    72. Education World® : Special Theme: A World Of Geography!
    Mighty mississippi In 1986, Congress designated the Upper mississippi River System Helpyour students discover the history, geography, and significance of this
    http://www.education-world.com/a_special/world_geo_2000.shtml

    Special Theme Articles
    Archives: VIEW ALL ARTICLES The Arts ... Social Sciences Special Themes Page S P E C I A L T H E M E P A G E November 20, 2000
    A World of Geography
    Places to go, explore and discover! Take your class on a field trip to The Mighty Mississippi, the Great Wall of China, the Egyptian Pyramids and thousands of other places ... on the Internet! Education World maps the way to great resources for Geography!
    New To Education World !

    73. FSTS Twin Cities Metro Area - Stories - Overview
    geography. Here the mississippi pours over the only waterfall in its entirelength and is joined by the Minnesota River from the west and the St.
    http://www.fromsitetostory.org/tcm/tcmintro.asp
    Twin Cities Metro Area
    Contents
    Stories Sources Search ... Home Overview of Environment and Archaeology
    Geography
    map
    Topography and Environment

    Precontact Archaeology
    ...
    site map
    Geography Rivers are the outstanding geographic features of the five Minnesota counties (Hennepin, Ramsey, Anoka, Dakota and Washington) included in the Twin Cities Metropolitan Area. Here the Mississippi pours over the only waterfall in its entire length and is joined by the Minnesota River from the west and the St. Croix from the northeast. A lock now brings watercraft past the Falls of St. Anthony to the upper harbor, in downtown Minneapolis.
    The Falls of St. Anthony, given its present name by French missionary Louis Hennepin, is shown in this painting by the artist Henry Lewis as it looked in the 1840s.
    Prized by Euro-Americans for its water power, the falls became a saw-milling center and the nucleus of an industrial city in the 1850s. Drawing from Harpers Monthly Vol. XXX No. 1534.
    In the 1870s and 1880s sawmills at the falls gave way to flour mills, and Minneapolis became famous as the world's breadbasket. Drawing from Harpers Monthly Vol. XXX No. 1534.
    Below the falls, the banks of the river rise steeply, forming a narrow gorge, and it is joined by Minnehaha Creek. This stream rises in a cluster of lakes to the west of Minneapolis. As it approaches the Mississippi, it pours over a scenic waterfall.

    74. Monroe County, Mississippi Histories
    Monroe County, mississippi Histories. There Archives. Rowland's History geography of Monroe County at the USGenweb Project Archives.
    http://www.rootsweb.com/~msmonro2/monroehist.html
    Monroe County, Mississippi Histories There are some great histories and geographies of Monroe County and its towns in the Monroe County, MS USGenweb Archives. These are from books that have passed into the public domain. Here are links to these submissions. Goodspeed's History of Monroe County at the USGenweb Project Archives at the USGenweb Project Archives at the USGenweb Project Archives at the USGenweb Project Archives at the USGenweb Project Archives at the USGenweb Project Archives at the USGenweb Project Archives Other items of historical interest found on the Internet are: History of Smithville and Surrounding Territory
    A booklet written by Miss Jessie Pierce in 1958. Bigbee
    An article by Marilyn Tackett Richmond from Monroe County History , vol. 1 (1989):15-17, posted on Genforum.

    75. BiologyBrowser
    For your convenience, we have combined the results from all the sub categoriesResults 1 4 of at least 4 GeographyNorth AmericaUSAMississippi
    http://www.biologybrowser.org/bb/Geography/North_America/USA/Mississippi/index.s
    Home About BIOSIS About BiologyBrowser What's New ... Add URL Enter your email below to receive news and updates to this site.
    Main Category: Geography
    Home Geography North America USA Mississippi
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    Any Term All Terms Entire collection This Category Only Within results
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    Geography:North America:USA:Mississippi

  • Checklist of Mississippi Birds
    Description: BiologyBase
    http://www.interaktv.com/biologybase/statelists/birdsMS.asp
    Checklist of Mississippi Fishes

    Description: BiologyBase - freshwater species http://www.interaktv.com/MS/Fishes.html Checklist of Mississippi Reptiles Description: BiologyBase http://www.interaktv.com/MS/MSReptiles.html Checklist of Mississippi Mammals Description: BiologyBase http://www.interaktv.com/MS/MSMammals.html
  • 76. Geography Of St. Louis
    LOUIS geography. St. is located on 61 square miles just south of the Meeting ofthe Rivers, where the Missouri and Illinois Rivers join the mississippi River
    http://stlouis.missouri.org/citygov/planning/research/data/about/geography.html
    ABOUTST. LOUIS: GEOGRAPHY LOCATION The City of St. Louis is located on 61 square miles just south of the "Meeting of the Rivers," where the Missouri and Illinois Rivers join the Mississippi River. The City is at the center of a 12 county, 7,000 square mile metropolitan area that includes approximately 2.5 million people. The area is a relatively short distance by airplane, automobile or train from such other cities as Kansas City (250 miles), Chicago (300 miles) Indianapolis (250 miles) and Memphis (300 miles). PHYSIOGRAPHY GEOLOGY DEVELOPMENT PATTERNS The City of St. Louis is 100% urbanized. However, as a result of abandonment, dereliction and contamination of properties, there are many opportunities for redevelopment of small sites within the city limits. More challenging is combining small sites some publicly-owned by the city's Land Reutilization Authority (LRA) or other agencies, and some privately owned to create substantially sized sites for new residential and industrial development. Office Space: Retail: Traditionally, downtown St. Louis was the premier retail center of the metropolitan area. Although that role has declined, downtown retains a substantial selection of unique shops, as well as two department stores (Dillard's and Famous-Barr) and two enclosed shopping malls (Union Station and St. Louis Centre). Outside downtown, City retail generally consists of corner stores and strip development along major arteries. Significant retail strips include the Central West End shopping and restaurant district along Euclid Avenue, the Grand South Grand area just south of Tower Grove Park, and Cherokee Street with its Hispanic businesses west of Jefferson Ave. and "Antique Row" east of Jefferson Ave. A few major auto-oriented shopping centers are located in the City. They include the Hampton Village Shopping Center at Hampton and Chippewa, Lindell Marketplace at Lindell and Sarah, and City Plaza at Union and Natural Bridge.

    77. Native American Geography
    Native American geography. above Cape Fear, a large portion of Kentucky and Tennessee,and all north and west of these States eastward of the mississippi River.
    http://www.publicbookshelf.com/public_html/Our_Country_Vol_1/nativeame_e.html
    Native American Geography
    The Natchez, who occupied a territory east of the Mississippi stretching north-eastward from the site of the City of Natchez, along the borders of the Pearl River to the head-waters of the Chickasahaw River, claimed to be an older nation than the Uchees. Like the other Indians of the Gulf region, they were fire and sun worshippers, and made sacrifices to the great luminary. The Mobilians or Floridians occupied a very large territory that bordered on the Gulf of Mexico. It stretched along the Atlantic coast from the mouth of the Cape Fear River to the extremity of the Florida peninsula, and westward to the Mississippi River. They also held jurisdiction up that stream to the mouth of the Ohio River. Their domain included the States of Florida, Alabama and Mississippi, all of Georgia not occupied by the Cherokees and Uchees, and portions of South Carolina, Tennessee and Kentucky. The nation was divided into three confederacies, known respectively as the Creek, Choctaw and Chickasaw.
    Under the general title of Dakotas or Sioux, have been grouped a vast number of tribes west of the Mississippi River and the great lakes, with whom the earlier French explorers came in contact. They spoke, apparently, dialects of the same language, and were regarded as one nation. They inhabited the vast domain stretching northward from the Arkansas River to the western tributaries of Lake Winnepeg, and westward along that line to the eastern slopes of the Rocky Mountains. These have been arranged in four classes, namely, the Winnebagoes, the Assinniboins or Sioux proper, the Minetarees and the Southern Sioux.

    78. Geography And Environmental Conditions: Earliest Americans Theme Study.
    of Columbia, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maryland, mississippi, NorthCarolina to fundamental characteristics of environment and geography, and to a
    http://www.cr.nps.gov/seac/outline/02-paleoindian/se_paleo/02-geo.htm
    Geography and Environmental Conditions
    Contents Introduction Geography and Environmental Conditions Chronological Considerations Initial Human Occupation Widespread Settlement Terminal Paleoindian Occupations ... References Cited The southeastern United States as defined in this study encompasses the modern political units of Alabama, Arkansas, the District of Columbia, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maryland, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee, and Virginia. This region, while demarcated by modern political and resource management considerations, closely corresponds to various definitions of a southeastern Native American culture area advanced by anthropologists over the past century. That is, the area contains a number of related societies whose cultural similarities are believed due, in part, to fundamental characteristics of environment and geography, and to a shared history. The Southeast retains such an identity to this day, although precise definitions of what constitutes its boundaries vary somewhat from person to person (see Smith 1986 for a map showing various scholarly definitions of the Native American southeastern cultural area, none of which, however, vary appreciably from one another).

    79. Research Wizard - Listings For Mississippi | Research | University Library
    information on mississippi. jmm geography mississippi Climate Summaryhttp//lwf.ncdc.noaa.gov/oa/climate/research/ From the
    http://library.unomaha.edu/research/wizard/wizard.php3?knum=1709

    80. MISSISSIPPI STUDIES
    Teacher observation; Rubric. 1, a, Plan a field trip to different regionsof mississippi and keep a journal of geography of the regions. Rubric.
    http://www.mde.k12.ms.us/acad/id/curriculum/ss/ssms.htm
    MISSISSIPPI STUDIES
    -one semester- Mississippi Studies is a one semester course designed to foster appreciation for the state and its culture. The content will include the geographic, historic, economic, political, and social events that have contributed to the state’s development. The course will trace Mississippi’s transition from agriculture to industry and its effort to expand participation in the political process. The course will include the study of the diverse contributions of the citizens of the state. Additionally, civic concepts will be developed in order to encourage active participation in the political process of the state and nation. Skill development will include, but is not limited to, the interpretation and application of maps, graphs, charts, political cartoons, primary documents, and other social studies tools. The avenues for these concepts are developed through the social studies strands. The social studies curriculum is designed to be taught in a developmental sequence. This means the instruction proceeds from the simple to the complex, beginning with the child’s immediate geographic world and expanding to the world, using history, civics, and economics to develop the child’s knowledge and perspectives. The expanding theme that is incorporated in this framework refers to a curriculum progression in the study of people from self, families, communities, cities, regions, United States to the world.

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