Journey of a River - Class 5 Social Studies (CBSE)
Based on NCERT Our Wondrous World for Grade 5. The same integrated chapter supports EVS, Science, and Social Studies learning; this page frames it through the Social Studies tile.
1. Chapter at a glance
Journey of a River belongs to the Life Around Us unit. The chapter focuses on the Godavari river, river journeys, settlements, farming, and interdependence. For Social Studies, read it through people, places, maps, culture, occupations, communities, and shared responsibilities.
The new Class 5 approach is inquiry-based. That means students should observe, ask questions, compare examples, record information, and explain connections between people, nature, places, materials, and choices.
2. What to understand
Main idea
the Godavari river, river journeys, settlements, farming, and interdependence.
Social Studies lens
When studying this chapter as Social Studies, focus on people, places, maps, culture, occupations, communities, and shared responsibilities. This helps you write answers that are more useful than memorised one-line definitions.
Connections
This chapter connects daily life with bigger ideas. A simple home or school example can show a science idea, an environmental responsibility, or a social studies connection. Always try to answer with one real example.
3. Inquiry activity
Do this before writing long answers:
- Write one question about the chapter.
- Observe something at home, school, neighbourhood, map, picture, or textbook illustration.
- Record what you noticed in a table or 4-5 points.
- Discuss what might be the reason behind it.
- Write one action that people can take responsibly.
4. Notebook table
| What I observed | What it shows | My question |
|---|---|---|
| A real example from the chapter or surroundings | The idea, process, place, habit, or relationship it shows | A question beginning with why, how, what if, or where |
5. Common mistakes
- Mistake: Memorising facts without observing examples Fix: Add one example from home, school, map, local area, or nature.
- Mistake: Writing vague answers such as 'it is important' Fix: Explain why it is important and who is affected.
- Mistake: Skipping diagrams, maps, tables, or observations Fix: Use visuals when the question asks to compare, locate, classify, or explain a process.
6. How to score well
- Use exact chapter words, but explain them in your own language.
- Add one example from the textbook and one from your surroundings.
- Draw and label when the answer involves a process, place, route, object, or comparison.
- For map or place questions, mention direction, location, or feature clearly.
- For environment questions, include both cause and responsible action.
7. Practice set
- What is the main idea of Journey of a River?
- Write two things you can observe in your surroundings related to this chapter.
- Why is Journey of a River useful for understanding the world around us?
- Suggest one class activity for this chapter.
- Write one responsible action connected with this chapter.
- How should you answer a 3-mark question from this chapter?
8. Answer key
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What is the main idea of Journey of a River? Answer: The chapter mainly explores the Godavari river, river journeys, settlements, farming, and interdependence.
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Write two things you can observe in your surroundings related to this chapter. Answer: Answers will vary. Strong answers name exact objects, people, places, changes, or practices.
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Why is Journey of a River useful for understanding the world around us? Answer: It connects everyday experiences with people, places, maps, culture, occupations, communities, and shared responsibilities, so students can explain what they see instead of only naming facts.
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Suggest one class activity for this chapter. Answer: A survey, map-reading task, nature walk, interview, model, table, poster, or observation journal can work depending on the topic.
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Write one responsible action connected with this chapter. Answer: Examples include saving water, keeping surroundings clean, respecting workers, using energy carefully, observing nature, or protecting shared spaces.
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How should you answer a 3-mark question from this chapter? Answer: Write the idea, give one example, and add a reason or observation.
9. Project idea
Create a one-page project on Journey of a River. Include a title, one labelled drawing or map/table, three facts, two observations, and one action you can take.
10. Quick revision
- Unit: Life Around Us.
- Main focus: the Godavari river, river journeys, settlements, farming, and interdependence.
- Subject lens: people, places, maps, culture, occupations, communities, and shared responsibilities.
- Revise one example, one diagram/table, and one responsible action.
- Use complete sentences and clear labels.
