How the Land Becomes Sacred - Class 7 Social Studies (CBSE)
Current 2026 sequence: NCERT Exploring Society: India and Beyond, Part I. This page follows the same tuition.in chapter structure as the Class 9 Social Studies pages: story first, concepts next, then revision and practice.
1. Chapter Snapshot
- Book: Exploring Society: India and Beyond, Part I
- Subject: Social Studies / Social Science
- Domain focus: Culture
- Core themes: sacred geography, tirthas, traditions, conservation
- Exam use: short answers, map/activity questions, source-based questions, and competency-based reasoning.
2. Big Ideas
Sacred place
A place becomes sacred through stories, memories, worship, journeys, festivals, and community practices.
Tirtha
A tirtha is a place of crossing or pilgrimage where geography, faith, and culture meet.
Conservation
Sacred sites need care so that heritage, ecology, and public access are protected.
3. What You Should Be Able To Do
- Explain how beliefs and practices make places sacred.
- Identify ways to conserve and restore sacred sites.
- Trace links between routes, rivers, mountains, and pilgrimage.
- Present a local sacred site with location and significance.
4. Map and Activity Focus
- Overlay trade-route and sacred-site maps.
- Collect information on a local sacred place.
- Discuss how visitors can protect heritage sites.
5. How To Write Better Answers
- Start with a clear definition or context sentence.
- Add two or three precise points from the chapter.
- Use an example from India, your locality, a map, or a classroom activity.
- End with the wider importance: citizenship, environment, economy, culture, or democratic life.
6. Quick Recap
- Sacred place: learn the definition, one example, and why it matters.
- Tirtha: learn the definition, one example, and why it matters.
- Conservation: learn the definition, one example, and why it matters.
7. Practice Prompts
- Give a one-line definition of the most important concept in this chapter.
- Explain one cause-and-effect relationship from the chapter.
- Give one real-life example from India or your neighbourhood.
- If a map is involved, locate the relevant place or feature and explain why it matters.
8. Teacher Note
This chapter works best when students combine reading with map work, short local observations, and discussion. Ask students to connect the textbook idea to a familiar place, service, market, crop, weather event, institution, or community practice.
