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Name ______________________________________ A B AP World History Unit Syllabus* – B Day Intro to AP World and Period 1: Technological and Environmental Transformations, to c. 600 B.C.E. Strayer - Ways of the World Ch. 1-3 Bentley Traditions and Encounters Ch. 1-6 Date Tue 8/11 Thur 8/13 Topics / Class Activities • General Introduction to AP World • Assign Textbooks • APWH Course Syllabus • Where is everything??? • Fill out Student Info form HERE • Bell Ringers • Set up Binders • Historical Thinking Skills • What is History? BWH Film Clip • AP Regions Map and Must Know Countries • Homework packet / Unit Syllabus Handouts / Homework / Reading Assignments • Parent Letter signed • Read Overview of AP World History HERE • Read Course Syllabus • Read Prologue and Ch. 1 outlines. • Read Barron’s 6-9, 37-72 • Unit Terms / Dates • Review What is History handout • Listen to Podcast #1 HERE • Work on assignment packet •Read Strayer pgs. v-xii and xlv-lvii and Ch. 1 • Purchase Binder Same as above • Unit Terms / Dates • Review 5 Themes of World History • Study for Map Test • Take the self-test and Vocab Quiz • The Battle of Lexington. (~30-40 minutes) http://historicalthinkingmatters.org/why/This is history done as an investigative mystery, not a bunch of boring facts to memorize! There are a series of 10 ?s for you to contemplate as you ask yourself, “What is History?” Mon 8/17 • Video: History of the World in 7 min. • Discussion: If one organizes the study of world history around the topic of “civilizations,” what might such a discussion leave out? • 5 Themes of AP World History • Historical Map Activity #1 Wed 8/19 • SPICE - Put me in a Category! Group activity • Human Migration – BWH Film Clip • Map Test • Jared Diamond, Guns, Germs, and Steel film clips and discuss Worst Mistake article •Early agriculture – BWH Film Clip Fri 8/21 • Read Chapter 2 outline • Read Worst Mistake in History... • Read Strayer Chapter 2 • Study for Map Test • Unit Terms / Dates • Work on assignment packet • Listen to Podcast #2 HERE • Read Barron’s 6-9, 37-72 Same as above • Watch Crash Course #1 • Take the self-test and Vocab Quiz • Read Chapter 3 outline • Read Strayer Chapter 3 • Read Barron’s 6-9, 37-72 • Finish Terms • Work on assignment packet • Listen to Podcast #3 HERE Same as above • Watch Crash Course #2, #3, #4 • Take the self-test and Vocab Quiz Tue 8/25 • Mankind #1-Inventors Thur 8/27 • Comparison – Mesopotamia and Egypt Read Primary Sources: - Code of Hammurabi - Epic of Gilgamesh Mon 8/31 • Working with Primary Sources Wed 9/2 Fri 9/4 •Neolithic / Paleolithic Gallery Walk activity • Read Strayer Chapter 3 • Watch Crash Course #2, #3, #4 • Study for Vocab test • Take the self-test and Vocab Quiz Same as above • Comparative reading of Gilgamesh & Hammurabi primary sources • Unit 1 Vocab and Dates Test • Kahoot Review • Study for Exam and finish packet Mon 9/7 Wed 9/9 LABOR DAY – NO SCHOOL • Study for Exam and finish notes • Unit 1 Exam • Intro to Comparative Essay Fri 9/11 BRING TEXTBOOKS / HOMEWORK DUE!!! • Corrections and new homework packet • BRING TEXTBOOK TUESDAY • Read Strayer Chapter 4 • Read Barron’s 75-118 • Unit Terms / Dates • Work on assignment packet Same as above * Schedule is TENTATIVE and may possibly change. Essential Question: ▼ In what ways did the Neolithic Revolution lead to new and more complex economic and social systems within human societies after 10,000 B.C.E.? Main Topics for Discussion · Hunting & gathering societies were relatively egalitarian, small, mobile and spiritual. · Early humans spread out from Africa to the entire world and adapted to a variety of climates. · After the last Ice Age, humans settled around available sources of grains and water forming larger populations and societies. · Agriculture developed independently in many parts of the world. · Agricultural societies became more varied, complex and socially stratified. · Core and foundational civilizations developed around these centers of agriculture. · Because of the Agricultural Revolution, larger and expanding civilizations resulted in more complex, urban, organized, and unequal societal structures. · Power became increasingly consolidated in various forms of government. · Civilization developed unifying cultures based on language, literature, laws, myths, religion, and monumental art. Terminology (you must identify definition, significance, and any specific examples in relation to this unit) Chapter 1 Chapter 2 Chapter 3 General “History Jargon: Vocabulary (You’ll need to know these terms or you won’t be able to understand all of this unit) agrarian, Afro-, Amer-, analyze/analysis, arable, continent, Eurasia, Euro-, fascism, forage, lifeways, Meso-, Neo-, Paleo-, region, ocean basin, urban, ancient, archaic, architecture, authoritarian, city-state, civilization, diffusion, divine, empire, ethnic, historiography, pottery, priest, rural, textile, aristocracy, clergy, craft, deity, divinity, hierarchy, incarnation, nomad/-ic,, patriarchy, scholar, sedentary Dates to Remember (will be on vocab test) – COPY FROM MS. SULLIVAN Utilize correlation guide for Key Concept – Period 1 Chapter 1 - First Peoples Populating the Planet, to 10,000 B.C.E. _______________________________________________________________________________________________________ Chapter Learning Targets To familiarize students with the spread of human societies in the Paleolithic era To explore the conditions of life in gathering and hunting societies To examine factors that eventually led to change in the gathering and hunting societies 1. Why were the Paleolithic people known as “gathering and hunting” peoples? Out of Africa to the Ends of the Earth: First Migrations 1. What kinds of uniquely human behavior /activity show up in Africa long before it shows up elsewhere? 2. What was the sequence of human migration across the planet? The Ways We Were 1. What were some of the common features of the Paleolithic societies? 2. In what ways did a gathering and hunting economy shape other aspects of Paleolithic societies? 3. Describe the possible spiritual life of Paleolithic societies. 4. Why did some Paleolithic peoples abandon earlier, more nomadic ways and begin to live a more settled life? THE BIG PICTURE QUESTIONS 1. What is the significance of the Paleolithic era in world history? 2. In what ways did various Paleolithic societies change over time? Chapter 2 - First Farmers: The Revolutions of Agriculture, 10,000 BCE to 3,000 BCE _________________________________________________________________________________________ LEARNING TARGETS To make students aware that agriculture evolved independently in several regions of the world To trace the development of agriculture and its local variations To consider the social implications of the Agricultural Revolution Agricultural Revolution in World History 1. What does “Neolithic” mean? 2. What were the revolutionary aspects of the Agricultural Revolution? Comparing Agricultural Beginnings 1. What did the different areas of agricultural societies have in common? 2. List the differences among the first Agricultural societies. The Globalization of Agriculture 1. How did the extension of farming occur? 2. What affect did the Bantu-speaking people have on migration? 3. How did societies based on domestication (Agricultural Revolution) differ from those rooted in hunting and gathering? Social Variation in the Age of Agriculture 1. Describe Pastoral Societies 2. Describe Agricultural Village Societies 3. Describe Chiefdoms THE BIG PICTURE QUESTIONS 1. Was the Agricultural Revolution inevitable? Why did it occur so late in the story of humankind? Chapter 3 - First Civilizations: Cities, States & Unequal Societies 3,500 BCE to 500 BCE _________________________________________________________________________________________ LEARNING TARGETS To establish the relationship between the First Civilizations and the Agricultural Revolution To contrast civilizations with other forms of human communities To explore when, where, and how the First Civilizations arose in human history To explore how the emergence of civilizations transformed how humans lived and how their societies were structured To show the various ways in which civilizations differed from one another To explore the outcomes of the emergence of civilizations, both positive and negative, for humankind Something New: The Emergence of Civilizations 1. When and where did the first civilizations emerge? 2. How did civilizations get started? 3. What do all civilizations have? 4. Why were cities the heart of all civilizations? The Erosion of Equality 1. What is considered a turning point in the social history of mankind? 2. Describe the class hierarchy of early civilizations. 3. Why was there an emergence of patriarchy? 4. How did Mesopotamian and Egyptian patriarchy differ from each other? The Rise of the State 1. What were the sources of state authority in the First Civilizations? 2. What form of writing is associated with each of the ancient civilizations and what was it used for? THE BIG PICTURE QUESTIONS 1. In the development of the First Civilizations, what was gained for humankind, and what was lost?