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South Korea Lesson Plans
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Students investigate North and South Korea. In this research lesson, students gather facts about North and South Korea. In groups students research using encyclopedias, the internet and other sources. Students compare and contrast the two countries.
Ninth graders brainstorm "what they know about North Korea and South Korea." They determine the approximate distance from the United States to North and South Korea and create a graph comparing the birth rates, death rates, infant mortality rates, literacy rates, and GDP of North Korea, South Korea, and the United States.
Students compare weather in two opposite cities. In this weather analysis lesson, students create line graphs for the weather patterns of South Korea and their hometown. Students write up comparisons between the different cities.
Students compare war monuments of North and South Korea. In this Korean history instructional activity, students compare and contrast images of the war monuments in both countries. Students analyze the message behind the monuments as they complete a worksheet activity.
Third graders discuss information about Seoul, South Korea. In this cultural appreciation lesson plan, 3rd graders read about the history and present happenings of Seoul, South Korea. They compare Seoul to their hometown.
Students investigate how command and market economies function in North and South Korea. In this economics lesson, students experience a simulation of market and command economies under authoritarian dictatorships.
Students use primary and secondary resources in order to investigate the culture of South Korea. They use guiding questions that progressively lead them to higher order thinking to make connections from the information to how people live.
Students examine the division of North and South Korea. They identify the ideological differences and the tensions between the two countries. They discuss the threat of nuclear weapons as well.
Students explore their impressions of several countries and the sources of information that informed those impressions. They examine the changing attitudes of South Koreans toward North Korean by reading and discussing "New Craze in South Korea: The N
Students study about the creation of a German village in South Korea for returning emigrants. They examine other cases of migration and relocation from modern world history.
