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- Town Treasurer Quest: A First Grade Money Mission (1st Grade)
Town Treasurer Quest: A First Grade Money Mission (1st Grade) (Hard) 워크시트 • 무료 PDF 다운로드 정답 키 포함
Solve tricky community puzzles by choosing between building new parks or fixing snowy roads to keep our neighborhood happy and safe.
교육적 개요
This worksheet assesses foundational economic principles through the lens of local government responsibilities and community decision-making. Utilizing a scenario-based inquiry approach, it introduces complex fiscal concepts like trade-offs, budgets, and public spending using age-appropriate terminology. It is an ideal supplemental resource for first-grade social studies units focused on community helpers, civic responsibility, and basic financial literacy.
이 워크시트가 마음에 안 드세요? 한 번의 클릭으로 원하는 Social Studies Economics Government Fiscal Policy 워크시트를 생성하세요.
단 한 번의 클릭으로 여러분의 교실 요구 사항에 맞는 맞춤형 워크시트를 만드세요.
자신만의 워크시트 생성학생들이 배울 내용
- Define the concept of a budget as a plan for spending and saving community resources.
- Identify the trade-offs involved when a local government makes specific spending choices.
- Explain how taxes are collected and used to fund public goods and services like libraries and roads.
All 10 Questions
- The mayor has $10 left in the town's piggy bank. A new playground costs $10, and fixing a broken streetlight costs $10. If the mayor chooses the playground, what is the 'trade-off'?A) The town gets both things for freeB) The town cannot fix the streetlightC) The mayor finds more money on the groundD) The playground is built twice
- True or False: If the government decides to build a giant library, they might need to collect more tax pennies from the people in town.A) TrueB) False
- The town leaders are arguing! Some want to spend money on a pool, and others want to save it for an emergency. This plan for spending and saving is called a _______.A) Grocery listB) Toy boxC) BudgetD) Secret
Show all 10 questions
- Imagine nobody is buying snacks at the town market. To help the shops, the government gives every family 'snack coupons.' Why did they do this?A) To make people go back to the shops and help the economyB) Because they wanted to get rid of the paperC) To make the shopkeepers take a napD) To stop people from eating snacks
- True or False: The government can spend an infinite amount of money without ever running out or needing more taxes.A) TrueB) False
- When the government builds a new bridge, they are using _______ to help people get to work faster.A) MagicB) Public SpendingC) Wishing wellsD) Hide and seek
- The town has a very big problem: there isn't enough snow equipment for a blizzard! What is the best way for the government to fix this quickly?A) Ask everyone to stay home until summerB) Change the budget to spend more on snow plowsC) Give everyone a free ice cream coneD) Lower the taxes and hope snow plows appear
- True or False: If the town lowers taxes, families have more of their own money to spend at the toy store.A) TrueB) False
- A tax on healthy apples is low, but a tax on sugary soda is high. The government does this to _______ people to make healthy choices.A) ScareB) TrickC) EncourageD) Confuse
- If the government spends more money than it collected in taxes this year, what has happened?A) They have extra money left overB) They have a budget deficit (they owe money)C) They are closing the town foreverD) Everything in town becomes free
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자주 묻는 질문
Yes, this social studies quiz is a perfect no-prep resource for a substitute teacher because it uses relatable community scenarios and includes clear explanations for every fiscal concept covered.
Most first-grade students can complete this ten-question social studies quiz in approximately 20 to 30 minutes, depending on whether it is read aloud or completed independently.
This social studies quiz is excellent for differentiation as it scaffolds complex topics like budget deficits and expansionary policy through simple true-false and multiple-choice questions for younger learners.
This social studies quiz teaches students about the relationship between tax revenue and public spending, the necessity of choice when resources are scarce, and how incentives influence economic behavior.
You can use this social studies quiz as an exit ticket or mid-unit check to gauge student understanding of how a town budget works before moving on to more complex civil service topics.