Standards Detail
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Family and Consumer Sciences
- Standard Area - 11.1: Financial and Resource Management
- Grade Level - 11.1.3: GRADE 3
Identify money denominations, services and material resources available as trade-offs within the home,school and community.
Define the components of a spending plan (e.g., income, expenses, savings).
Explain the need for shelter for the purpose of safety, warmth and comfort.
Explain consumer rights and responsibilities.
- To be safe
- To be informed
- To be heard
- To choose
- To redres
Describe criteria needed to identify quality in consumer goods and services (e.g., food, clothing,furniture, hometechnology, health care, transportation, services).
Identify the services that communities provide for individuals and families.
- Standard Area - 11.1: Financial and Resource Management
- Grade Level - 11.1.6: GRADE 6
Justify the decision to use or not use resources based on scarcity.
Know the relationship of the components of a simple spending plan and how that relationship allows for managing income, expenses and savings.
Describe the adaptability to meet basic human needs of the different types of housing available (e.g., single home, apartment, mobile home, shelter, recreational vehicle, public housing).
Analyze information in care instructions, safety precautions and the use of consumable goods as a demonstration of understanding of consumer rights and responsibilities.
Explain the principles of child labor laws and the opportunity cost of working by evaluating the advantages and disadvantages of holding a job while a teenager.
Explain practices to maintain and/or repair consumer goods and services.
Identify the public and nonpublic services that are available to serve families within the community.
- Standard Area - 11.1: Financial and Resource Management
- Grade Level - 11.1.9: GRADE 9
Analyze current conservation practices and their effect on future renewable and non-renewable resources.
- Refuse
- Reduce
- Reuse
- Recycle
Explain the responsibilities associated with managing personal finances (e.g., savings, checking, credit, non- cash systems, investments, insurance).
Delineate and assess the factors affecting the availability of housing (e.g., supply and demand, market factors, geographical location, community regulations).
Explain how consumer rights and responsibilities are protected (e.g., government agencies, consumer protection agencies, consumer action groups).
Compare the influences of income and fringe benefits to make decisions about work.
Evaluate different strategies to obtain consumer goods and services.
Analyze how public, nonpublic and for-profit service providers serve the family.
- Standard Area - 11.1: Financial and Resource Management
- Grade Level - 11.1.12: GRADE 12
Evaluate the impact of family resource management on the global community.
Analyze the management of financial resources across the lifespan.
Analyze the relationship among factors affecting consumer housing decisions (e.g., human needs, financial resources, location, legal agreements, maintenance responsibilities).
Evaluate the role of consumer rights and responsibilities in the resolution of a consumer problem through the practical reasoning process.
Compare and contrast factors affecting annual gross and taxable income and reporting requirements (e.g., W-2 form, Income tax form).
Compare and contrast the selection of goods and services by applying effective consumer strategies.
Compare the availability, costs and benefits of accessing public, nonpublic and for-profit services to assist the family.
- Standard Area - 11.2: Balancing Family, Work, and Community Responsibility
- Grade Level - 11.2.3: GRADE 3
Examine consequences of family, work or career decisions.
Identify the importance of routines and schedules while differentiating between short and long term goals.
Indicate the benefits and costs of working as an individual or as a team member and of being a leader or follower.
Explain the importance of organizing space for efficiency and a sense of comfort (e.g., desk space, classroom space).
Analyze the effectiveness of technology used for school and home in accomplishing the work of the family (e.g., security, entertainment, communication, education).
Explain daily activities that fulfill family functions in meeting responsibilities (e.g., economic, emotional support, childcare and guidance, housekeeping, maintaining kinship, providing recreation).
Identify the life stages by identifying their developmental task (e.g., infant, pre-schooler, school age, teen-age, adult, senior citizen).
Identify how to resolve conflict using interpersonal communications skills.
- Speaking and listening
- I messages
- Active listening
- Checking for understanding
- Following directions
- Empathy
- Feedback
- Standard Area - 11.2: Balancing Family, Work, and Community Responsibility
- Grade Level - 11.2.6: Grade 6
Contrast the solutions reached through the use of a simple decision making process that includes analyzing consequences of alternative solutions against snap decision making methods.
Deduce the importance of time management skills (e.g. home, school, recreational activities).
Identify the concepts and principles used in planning space for activities.
Describe the role of technology within a community in maintaining a safe and healthy living environment (e.g., safety, hospitals, waste treatment, water quality, schools).
Compare and contrast how different cultures meet family responsibilities within differing configurations (e.g., new parent, just married, single adult living alone, “empty nest”, retired, senior citizen).
Identify the characteristics of the stages of the family life cycle (e.g., beginning, expanding, developing, launching, middle years, retirement, variations).
Describe positive and negative interactions within patterns of interpersonal communications.
- Placating
- Blaming
- Distracting
- Intellectualizing
- Asserting
- Standard Area - 11.2: Balancing Family, Work, and Community Responsibility
- Grade Level - 11.2.9: Grade 9
Solve dilemmas using a practical reasoning approach
- Identify situation
- Identify reliable information
- List choices and examine the consequences of each
- Develop a plan of action
- Draw conclusions
- Reflect on decisions
Know FCCLA action planning procedure and how to apply it to family, work and community decisions.
Assess the effectiveness of the use of teamwork and leadership skills in accomplishing the work of the family
Analyze the space requirements for a specified activity to meet a given need (e.g., family room, home office, kitchen).
Evaluate the impact of technology and justify the use or nonuse of it (e.g., safety, cost/budget, appearance, efficiency).
Contrast past and present family functions and predict their probable impact on the future of the family.
Explain the influences of family life cycle stages on the needs of families and communities (e.g., a large number of young families needing day care, fixed income senior citizens, school age children).
Justify the significance of interpersonal communication skills in the practical reasoning method of decision making.
- Standard Area - 11.2: Balancing Family, Work, and Community Responsibility
- Grade Level - 11.2.12: Grade 12
Justify solutions developed by using practical reasoning skills.
Evaluate the effectiveness of action plans that integrate personal, work, family and community responsibilities.
Analyze teamwork and leadership skills and their application in various family and work situations.
Based on efficiency, aesthetics and psychology, evaluate space plans (e.g., home, office, work areas) for their ability to meet a variety of needs including those of individuals with special needs.
Assess the availability of emerging technology that is designed to do the work of the family and evaluate the impact of its use on individuals, families and communities.
Assess the relationship of family functions to human developmental stages.
Hypothesize the impact of present family life-cycle trends on the global community (e.g., over population, increase in an aging population, economic base).
Evaluate the effectiveness of using interpersonal communication skills to resolve conflict.
- Standard Area - 11.3: Food Science and Nutrition
- Grade Level - 11.3.3: GRADE 3
Know the production steps that a food travels from the farm to the consumer.
Describe personal hygiene techniques in food handling (e.g., handwashing, sneeze control, signs of food spoilage).
Classify foods by food group within the food guide pyramid including the serving size and nutrient function within the body.
Identify components of a basic recipe (e.g., volume, weight, fractions, recipe ingredients, recipe directions, safety techniques).
Classify foods according to senses (e.g., taste, touch, smell, mouth feel, sight, sound).
- Standard Area - 11.3: Food Science and Nutrition
- Grade Level - 11.3.6: Grade 6
Demonstrate knowledge of techniques used to evaluate food in various forms (e.g., canned, frozen, dried, irradiated).
Describe safe food handling techniques (e.g., storage, temperature control, food preparation, conditions that create a safe working environment for food production).
Describe a well-balanced daily menu using the dietary guidelines and the food guide pyramid.
Explain the relationship between calories, nutrient and food input versus energy output; describe digestion.
Analyze basic food preparation techniques and food-handling procedures.
Describe the physical, biological, and chemical changes that take place in food preparation.
- Standard Area - 11.3: Food Science and Nutrition
- Grade Level - 11.3.9: Grade 9
Explain how scientific and technological developments enhance our food supply (e.g., food preservation techniques, packaging, nutrient fortification).
Identify the cause, effect and prevention of microbial contamination, parasites and toxic chemicals in food.
Analyze relationship between diet and disease and risk factors (e.g., calcium and osteoporosis; fat, cholesterol and heart disease; folate and birth defects; sodium and hypertension).
Analyze the energy requirements, nutrient requirements and body composition for individuals at various stages of the life cycle.
Hypothesize the effectiveness of the use of meal management principles (e.g., time management, budgetary considerations, sensory appeal, balanced nutrition, safety, sanitation).
Analyze the application of physical and chemical changes that occur in food during preparation and preservation.
- Standard Area - 11.3: Food Science and Nutrition
- Grade Level - 11.3.12: Grade 12
Analyze how food engineering and technology trends will influence the food supply.
Evaluate the role of Government agencies in safeguarding our food supply (e.g., USDA, FDA, EPA and CDC).
Evaluate sources of food and nutrition information.
Critique diet modifications for their ability to improve nutritionally-related health conditions (e.g., diabetes, lactose-intolerance, iron deficiency).
Analyze the breakdown of foods, absorption of nutrients and their conversion to energy by the body.
Evaluate the application of nutrition and meal planning principles in the selection, planning, preparation and serving of meals that meet the specific nutritional needs of individuals across their lifespan.
Analyze the relevance of scientific principles to food processing, preparation and packaging.
- Standard Area - 11.4: Child Development
- Grade Level - 11.4.3: GRADE 3
Identify characteristics in each stage of child development.
- Infancy/BIRTH TO 1 YEAR
- Early childhood/1 TO 6 YEARS
- Middle childhood/6 TO 9 YEARS
- Late childhood/NINE – 13 YEARS
- Adolescence/13 – 18 YEARS
Identify health and safety needs for children at each stage of child development.
Identify the characteristics of a learning environment.
Explain how the home and community help a person learn to read, write and compute.
- Standard Area - 11.4: Child Development
- Grade Level - 11.4.6: Grade 6
Compare and contrast child development guided practices according to the stage of child development.
Identify ways to keep children healthy and safe at each stage of child development.
Identify the role of the caregiver in providing a learning environment (e.g., babysitting, daycare, preschool).
Identify characteristics of quality literature for children and other literacy enhancing activities.
- Standard Area - 11.4: Child Development
- Grade Level - 11.4.9: Grade 9
Analyze physical, intellectual and social/emotional development in relation to theories of child development.
Evaluate health and safety hazards relating to children at each stage of child development.
Evaluate various environments to determine if they provide the characteristics of a proper learning environment.
Analyze the roles, responsibilities and opportunity for family involvement in schools.
Explain how storytelling, story reading and writing enhance literacy development in children.
- Standard Area - 11.4: Child Development
- Grade Level - 11.4.12: Grade 12
Analyze current research on existing theories in child development and its impact on parenting (e.g., Piaget, Erikson and prior findings versus new brain development research).
Analyze current issues in health and safety affecting children at each stage of child development.
Analyze practices that optimize child development (e.g., stimulation, safe environment, nurturing caregivers, reading to children).
Analyze plans and methods to blend work and family responsibilities to meet the needs of children.
Identify practices that develop the child’s imagination, creativity and reading and writing skills through literature.