Relationships & Community
EVS begins with the family because it is the child's first environment. A nuclear family is small: parents and their children living together. A joint family is large: grandparents, parents, uncles, aunts and cousins living together, common in many Indian homes and a favourite CTET comparison. Children must know kinship terms in standard relation form: the father's sister is the bua / aunt (paternal aunt), the mother's brother is the mama / maternal uncle, the father's brother is chacha or tau, and the mother's sister is the mausi / maasi. Beyond the family the child meets the community: neighbours who live nearby and help in need, and community helpers who provide services everyone depends on (doctor, teacher, postman, farmer, policeman, carpenter, cobbler, milkman, sweeper). EVS stresses respect and gratitude for every kind of work, and the idea that we all depend on one another. CTET often asks who performs a given service or how two family types differ.
✅ Solved examples
✏️ Practice — try these, take hints as needed
📝 Topic test — 8 questions
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Key Concepts — Quick Reference
EVS facts to remember: animals
| Herbivore | Eats only plants (cow, deer, elephant, goat, rabbit) |
|---|---|
| Carnivore | Eats other animals (lion, tiger, frog, snake) |
| Omnivore | Eats both plants and animals (crow, bear, human, dog) |
| Desert adaptation | Camel: hump stores fat, long legs, broad feet for sand |
| Migration | Seasonal long journey (Siberian crane visits India in winter) |
EVS facts to remember: plants
| Root | Anchors plant, absorbs water and minerals from soil |
|---|---|
| Stem | Holds the plant up, carries water and food (transport) |
| Leaf | Makes food using sunlight (photosynthesis); green colour |
| Herb / Shrub / Tree | Soft small stem / bushy woody / tall thick trunk |
| Creeper / Climber | Spreads on the ground / climbs up with support |