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Study Guide: UN & Global Citizenship Grade 6: SDG 6-10 Planet and Prosperity Goals
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UN & Global Citizenship Grade 6: SDG 6-10 Planet and Prosperity Goals

By Fatskills Exam Guides Team — the exam nerds behind 28,500+ quizzes and 2.1M practice questions across 500+ global exams.

⏱️ ~7 min read

Study Guide: UN Sustainable Development Goals 6–10 (Planet & Prosperity) – Grade 6


1. The Driving Question

"If the whole world agreed on 17 big problems to fix by 2030, why do some goals—like clean water or good jobs—seem to help both people and the planet, while others feel like they’re in conflict? How do countries even decide which problems to tackle first when money, time, and resources are limited?"

By the end of this guide, you’ll be able to explain how these five SDGs connect (or clash) and argue which one your community should prioritize—and why.


2. The Core Idea – Built, Not Listed

Imagine your school is planning a "Field Day" with limited time, money, and volunteers. The principal wants: - Clean water stations (so no one gets dehydrated), - Recycling bins (to keep the field clean), - Fair games (so everyone gets a turn), - Affordable snacks (so no one goes hungry), - A tree-planting ceremony (to offset carbon from buses).

Now, here’s the catch: You can’t do all five perfectly. Maybe the water stations cost so much that you can’t afford fair games, or the recycling bins take volunteers away from planting trees. This is how countries face the SDGs. Goals 6–10 are like your Field Day’s "must-haves"—they’re about balancing people’s needs (prosperity) with the planet’s limits (planet). The UN didn’t just pick random problems; they’re linked. For example: - Clean water (SDG 6) means fewer kids miss school from diarrhea (helping SDG 4: Education), but building pipes might harm rivers (hurting SDG 15: Life on Land). - Decent work (SDG 8) could mean factories pay fair wages, but if those factories pollute, they hurt SDG 13: Climate Action.

The big idea? These goals are like a Jenga tower—pull one block (like ignoring climate change), and the whole system wobbles.

Key Vocabulary:
1. Sustainable Development - Definition: Meeting today’s needs without ruining the future’s ability to meet theirs. - Example: A city that builds bike lanes and keeps its forests (instead of paving everything for cars). - Grade 6 Note: Later, you’ll learn this includes economic (money), social (people), and environmental (planet) pillars.

  1. Trade-off
  2. Definition: A choice where improving one thing means accepting less of another.
  3. Example: A farmer uses pesticides to grow more food (helping SDG 2: Zero Hunger) but pollutes the river (hurting SDG 6: Clean Water).
  4. Grade 6 Note: In high school, you’ll study "opportunity cost"—the hidden price of every choice.

  5. Interconnected

  6. Definition: Goals that affect each other, like dominoes.
  7. Example: If a country improves SDG 5: Gender Equality (more girls in school), those girls grow up to earn more (helping SDG 8: Decent Work) and have fewer kids (helping SDG 13: Climate Action by reducing overpopulation).
  8. Grade 6 Note: In science, this is like a food web—change one part, and the whole system shifts.

  9. Stakeholder

  10. Definition: A person or group affected by a decision (and who gets a say in it).
  11. Example: If a company wants to build a dam (SDG 7: Affordable Energy), stakeholders include:
    • Local farmers (who might lose water),
    • Factory owners (who need electricity),
    • Indigenous communities (whose land might flood).
  12. Grade 6 Note: In civics, this is why protests and town halls exist—stakeholders fight for their interests.

3. Assessment Translation

How This Appears on Tests: - Multiple Choice: Questions will ask you to identify trade-offs or explain connections between goals. - Example: "A country builds a coal power plant to create jobs (SDG 8). Which SDG is most likely harmed?" - A) SDG 6 (Clean Water) – Distractor: Coal mining can pollute water, but this isn’t the most direct harm. - B) SDG 13 (Climate Action) – Correct: Coal is a major CO? emitter. - C) SDG 1 (No Poverty) – Distractor: Jobs reduce poverty, but the question asks which goal is harmed. - D) SDG 4 (Quality Education) – Distractor: Unrelated to coal plants. - Teacher Tip: Look for answers that show cause-and-effect, not just memorization.

  • Short Answer/Evidence-Based Writing:
  • Prompt: "Explain how improving SDG 6 (Clean Water) could help achieve SDG 3 (Good Health) and SDG 4 (Quality Education). Use one real-world example."
  • Proficient Response (Model): > "Clean water (SDG 6) helps good health (SDG 3) because dirty water spreads diseases like cholera. For example, in Rwanda, a project to filter water in schools reduced student absences by 40% (SDG 4) because kids weren’t getting sick. When students aren’t sick, they can go to school more often, which improves their education. This shows how one goal can ‘lift’ others."

    • What Makes It Proficient?
    • Names a specific country and statistic.
    • Explains the chain reaction (water-health-education).
    • Uses SDG numbers correctly.
  • Classroom Formative Assessments:

  • Exit Ticket: "Pick two SDGs from 6–10. Draw a comic strip showing how they help or hurt each other."
    • Proficient: Shows a clear trade-off (e.g., a factory creating jobs but polluting a river).
    • Developing: Just lists the goals without showing a connection.
  • Debate: "Should your town prioritize SDG 7 (Affordable Energy) or SDG 13 (Climate Action) first? Give one reason for each side."
    • Teacher Looks For: Students who weigh short-term needs (jobs, electricity) vs. long-term costs (pollution, climate change).

4. Mistake Taxonomy

Mistake 1: The "One-Goal Wonder" - Prompt: "Explain how SDG 8 (Decent Work) can help reduce poverty (SDG 1)." - Common Wrong Response:

"SDG 8 is about jobs, and SDG 1 is about poverty, so if people have jobs, they won’t be poor." - Why It Loses Credit: - Too vague—doesn’t explain how jobs reduce poverty (e.g., fair wages, safe conditions). - Ignores trade-offs (e.g., some jobs pay too little to escape poverty). - Correct Approach: "Decent work (SDG 8) means jobs that pay fair wages and are safe. For example, in Bangladesh, garment workers who got paid a living wage could afford food and school for their kids (helping SDG 1). But if the jobs are dangerous (like child labor in mines), they might hurt health (SDG 3) instead. So SDG 8 only reduces poverty if the jobs are decent."

Mistake 2: The "All-or-Nothing" Thinker - Prompt: "Can a country achieve SDG 9 (Industry & Infrastructure) without harming SDG 13 (Climate Action)? Explain." - Common Wrong Response:

"No, because factories always pollute." - Why It Loses Credit: - Overgeneralizes—ignores sustainable solutions (e.g., solar-powered factories). - Doesn’t consider innovation (e.g., carbon-capture technology). - Correct Approach: "It’s hard but possible. For example, Costa Rica built roads (SDG 9) using recycled materials and electric buses, which cut pollution (helping SDG 13). The key is sustainable infrastructure—like using wind energy for factories instead of coal. It costs more upfront, but it avoids long-term climate damage."

Mistake 3: The "Memorization Trap" - Prompt: "Give one example of how SDG 10 (Reduced Inequalities) connects to SDG 12 (Responsible Consumption)." - Common Wrong Response:

"SDG 10 is about equality, and SDG 12 is about recycling." - Why It Loses Credit: - Just lists the goals without explaining the connection. - Uses a textbook example (recycling) instead of a fresh one. - Correct Approach: "When companies pay workers fairly (SDG 10), those workers can afford to buy products that last longer (like a sturdy phone instead of a cheap one that breaks). This reduces waste (SDG 12) because people don’t have to keep replacing things. For example, Patagonia’s fair-wage factories make expensive but durable jackets, so customers buy fewer over time."


5. Connection Layer

  1. Within Subject: SDG 6 (Clean Water)-SDG 14 (Life Below Water)
  2. Why? If rivers are polluted (hurting SDG 6), that pollution flows into oceans, killing fish and coral reefs (hurting SDG 14). Clean water upstream protects marine life downstream.

  3. Across Subjects: SDG 8 (Decent Work)-Math (Statistics & Graphs)

  4. Why? Economists use unemployment rates and wage gaps (math) to measure if SDG 8 is improving. For example, a bar graph showing women’s vs. men’s wages in a country reveals inequality (SDG 5 and SDG 10).

  5. Outside School: SDG 12 (Responsible Consumption)-Your Closet

  6. Why? Fast fashion (cheap clothes made quickly) is a huge SDG 12 problem—it creates waste and exploits workers (hurting SDG 8). Now, when you see a "$5 T-shirt," you’ll ask: "Who made this? How long will it last?"

6. The Stretch Question

"If the UN had to pick just ONE of the SDGs 6–10 to focus on for the next 10 years, which should it be—and why? Defend your answer with two trade-offs your choice would create."

Pointer Toward the Answer: - If you pick SDG 6 (Clean Water): - Pros: Saves lives now (SDG 3), helps girls stay in school (SDG 4), reduces conflict over water (SDG 16). - Trade-offs: Expensive pipes might take money from education (SDG 4) or renewable energy (SDG 7). Some solutions (like dams) can displace communities (hurting SDG 10). - If you pick SDG 8 (Decent Work): - Pros: Lifts people out of poverty (SDG 1), funds education (SDG 4), reduces child labor (SDG 16). - Trade-offs: Some jobs (like mining) harm the environment (SDG 13). If wages rise too fast, companies might move to cheaper countries (hurting SDG 10). - The Real Answer? There isn’t one—it depends on who you ask (stakeholders!) and what you value (short-term needs vs. long-term costs). The UN’s genius is that it forces countries to balance these goals, not pick just one.

Bonus Challenge: Research your town’s biggest employer. Which SDG does it help? Which does it hurt? Write a letter to the mayor with one suggestion to improve its impact.