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2014-2015 Curriculum Blueprint Grade: 9-12 Course: World History Time Allowed: Topic/Idea: 1. The Medieval World (Weeks) Traditional: 3 weeks Block: 1.5 weeks Instructional Focus Benchmarks Learning Goal: Understand the development of political, social, economic and religious systems in Europe during the Middle Ages. Objectives: Annually Assessed Benchmark(s): N/A Students will analyze why the Roman Empire fell. Students will identify how Germanic tribes divided Western Europe. EduSoft MiniStudents will identify life under feudalism and the manor economy. Assessment(s): N/A Students will analyze the importance of the church in medieval society. Students will compare the different factors that led to the growth of modern economy. Date Range: N/A a) Agricultural improvements b) trade c) guilds d) merchant classes e) towns Students will compare the Byzantine Empire with the Roman Empire. Item Specification Notes: Students will analyze the major events of England, France, Spain and Russia during the Middle Ages. Students will analyze the emergence of Japan and its feudal system. Content Limits: N/A Benchmarks/Standards Essential Content & Understanding: Attributes/Stimulus: N/A Key Vocabulary: Feudalism- the legal and social system that evolved in W Europe in the 8th and 9th centuries, in which vassals were protected and maintained by their lords, usually through the granting of fiefs, and were required to serve under them in war Supporting LAFS and MAFS Standards SS.912.W.2.1: Locate the extent of Byzantine territory at the height of the empire. SS.912.W.2.2: Describe the impact of Constantine the Great’s establishment of “New Rome” (Constantinople) and his recognition of Christianity as a legal religion. SS.912.W.2.3: Analyze the extent to which the Byzantine Empire was a continuation of the old Roman Empire and in what ways it was a departure. Usury-the lending or SS.912.W.2.4: Identify key figures practice of lending money associated with the Byzantine Empire. at an exorbitant interest SS.912.W.2.5: Explain the contributions Monarchy-supreme of the Byzantine Empire. power or sovereignty held by a single person. SS.912.W.2.6: Describe the causes and effects of the Iconoclast controversy of the 8th and 9th centuries and the 11th century Christian schism between the churches of Higher Order Questions Stems “Fall” of the Roman Empire • Increased pressures on the frontiers from invading tribal peoples, particularly from Central Asia and Eastern Europe (Huns, Lombards, Ostrogoths, Visigoths, Vandals) • Migration of Germanic-speaking peoples from the frontier edges into the Empire • Gradual disintegration of the political, economic, military and other social institutions of Rome • Christianity and the splitting of the Empire into a Western and Eastern half Essential Questions: Byzantine Empire • Established by Constantine the Great • Continued to exist and thrive after the fall of the Western Roman Empire • Developed in different ways culturally and socially; attempts to reunite the old Roman Empire abandoned after Justinian • Contributions such as mosaics, preservation of classical knowledge, Justinian’s Code • Christianity was the official religion, but the Byzantine church developed differently from the Catholic church • Iconoclast Movement – reaction against the use of icons; schism between western Roman Catholic Church and eastern Orthodox Church Why did the Orthodox Church develop differently than the Roman Catholic Church? Foundations of Early Medieval Society • Classical heritage of Rome • Christian beliefs • Customs of Germanic tribes and Huns • The effects of the decline of the Roman Empire (splitting of Empire, Constantine) How did feudalism and the manor system emerge to shape medieval society? Influence of the Roman Catholic Church • Roman authority declined, while church authority grew. • Monasteries preserved Greco-Roman cultural achievements. What led to the fall of the Roman Empire? How was the Byzantine Empire similar and different from the Roman Empire? What was the nature of Byzantine society? What differences can be seen between the Roman Catholic Church and the Orthodox Church? What effects can be seen from the schism between the two churches? How did the church play a vital role in medieval life? How did the Church provide unity in Europe? 2014-2015 Curriculum Blueprint Grade: 9-12 Course: World History Topic/Idea: 1. The Medieval World Time Allowed: (Weeks) Traditional: 3 weeks Block: 1.5 weeks Honors/Advanced courses offer scaffold learning opportunities for students to develop the critical skills of analysis, synthesis, and evaluation in a more rigorous and reflective academic setting. Students are empowered to perform at higher levels as they engage in the following: analyzing historical documents and supplementary readings, working in the context of thematically categorized information, becoming proficient in note-taking, participating in Socratic seminars/discussions, emphasizing free-response and document-based writing, contrasting opposing viewpoints, solving problems, etc. Students will develop and demonstrate their skills through participation in a capstone and/or extended research-based paper/project (e.g., history fair, participatory citizenship project, mock congressional hearing, projects for competitive evaluation, investment portfolio contests, or other teacher-directed projects). • Missionaries carried Christianity and Latin alphabet to Germanic tribes. • Parish priests served religious and social needs of the people. SS.912.W.2.7: Analyze causes (Justinian’s • Invasions shattered Roman protection over the Empire. Plague, ongoing attacks from the “barbarians,” the Crusades, and internal Age of Charlemagne • Franks emerged as a force in Western Europe; used military power to expand political turmoil) of the decline of the territory Byzantine Empire. • Pope crowned Charlemagne the Emperor of the Holy Roman Empire in 800 Constantinople and Rome. SS.912.W.2.8: Describe the rise of the Ottoman Turks, the conquest of Constantinople in 1453, and the subsequent growth of the Ottoman empire under the sultanate including Mehmet the Conqueror and Suleyman the Magnificent. • The alliance between Frankish kings and the Church reestablished Roman culture in Western Europe Feudal Society • Fiefs, Vassals, Serfs • Feudal obligations Manorial System during the Middle Ages • Rigid class structure • Self-sufficient manors SS.912.W.2.9: Analyze the impact of the collapse of the Western Roman Empire on England • William the Conqueror, leader of the Norman Conquest, united most of England Europe. • Common law had its beginnings during the reign of Henry II • King John signed the Magna Carta, limiting the King’s power SS.912.W.2.10: Describe the orders of • The Hundred Years’ War between England and France helped define England as medieval social hierarchy, the changing a nation role of the Church, the emergence of feudalism, and the development of private France property as a distinguishing feature of • Hugh Capet established the French throne in Paris, and his dynasty gradually Western Civilization. expanded their control over most of France • The Hundred Years’ War between England and France helped define France as a SS.912.W.2.11: Describe the rise and nation achievements of significant rulers in • Joan of Arc was a unifying force medieval Europe. SS.912.W.2.12: Recognize the importance of Christian monasteries and convents as centers of education, charitable and missionary activity, economic productivity, and political power. Spain • Ferdinand and Isabella unified the country and expelled Muslim Moors • Spanish Empire in the Western Hemisphere expanded under Phillip II Russia • Ivan the Great threw off the rule of the Mongols, centralized power in Moscow, and expanded the Russian nation SS.912.W.2.13: Explain how Western • Power was centralized in the hands of the tsar civilization arose from a synthesis of classical Greco-Roman civilization, Judeo- • The Orthodox Church influenced unification Christian influence, and the cultures of northern European peoples promoting a Areas of Barbaric Settlement • Goths and Saxons from continental Europe to England cultural unity in Europe. • Magyars and Huns from Central Asia to Hungary How did the Franks help reunify the West? How did changes in agriculture and trade lead to the growth of towns and commerce? What were the consequences of the struggle for power between kings and nobles in England? How did European nation-state expand their territories and consolidate their power? How did the invasions by the Goths, Saxons, Magyars, Huns and Vikings influence the development of Europe? How and why did Japan develop a decentralized government? How does Japanese feudalism compare with Western European feudalism? How did Chinese culture influence Japan and Korea? Who gained more from the cultural and economic relationships between China, Japan and Korea? What are the key beliefs of Islam? How did this major world religion spread? What effects did the spread of Islam have on Europe, Asia and Africa? How has Islam influenced Western civilization? What were the effects of the Ottoman invasions of Europe? What were key events and effects of the Crusades? 2014-2015 Curriculum Blueprint Grade: 9-12 Course: World History Topic/Idea: 1. The Medieval World Time Allowed: (Weeks) Traditional: 3 weeks Block: 1.5 weeks SS.912.W.2.14: Describe the causes and effects of the Great Famine of 1315-1316, The Black Death, The Great Schism of 1378, and the Hundred Years War on Western Europe. SS.912.W.2.15: Determine the factors that contributed to the growth of a modern economy. SS.912.W.2.16: Trace the growth and development of national identify in England, France, and Spain. SS.912.W.2.17: Identify key figures, artistic, and intellectual achievements of the medieval period in Western Europe. SS.912.W.2.18: Describe developments in medieval English legal and constitutional history and their importance to the rise of modern democratic institutions and procedures. SS.912.W.2.19: Describe the impact of Japan's physiographic on its economic and political development. SS.912.W.2.20: Summarize the major cultural, economic, political, and religious developments in medieval Japan. SS.912.W.2.21: Compare Japanese feudalism with Western European feudalism during the Middle Ages. SS.912.W.2.22: Describe Japan's cultural and economic relationship to China and Korea. Additional Reoccurring Standards • Vikings from Scandinavia to Russia How did the Crusades stimulate trade between Europe and the Muslim Empire? Influence of the Barbaric Peoples • Manors with castles provided protection • Invasions disrupted trade, towns declined and feudal system strengthened • Invasions by barbarians disrupted the social, economic and political order of Europe The Rise of Japanese Civilization • Strongly influenced by geography and location – chain of several thousand islands stretching nearly 1400 miles wedded Japan to the sea. Very mountainous – little farming • Society organized in clans; Shintoism • Koreans introduced Chinese writing into Japan as well as Chinese Buddhism • Heian period (794-1185) – Japanese culture flourished; much of Japanese literature written by women The Emergence of Feudal Japan • Japanese cultural development was influenced by proximity to China. • Shinto and Buddhism coexisted as religious traditions in the Japanese culture. • Characterized by powerless emperor ruled by military leader (shogun) • Adopted policy of isolation to limit foreign influences Shinto • Ethnic religion unique to Japan • Importance of natural features, forces of nature, and ancestors • State religion; worshipping the emperor • Coexistence with Buddhism Resources/Links: Haiku Learning - AP World World History Practice Test World History for All History World World History Matters Federal Resources for Education Excellence Discovery Education History Channel World History Archives U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum Times (Around the World) Teachers will complete 4 DBQs within a full year course. DBQ Option: What is the primary reason to study the Byzantines? DBQ Option: Samurai and Knights: Were the similarities greater than the differences? 2014-2015 Curriculum Blueprint Grade: 9-12 Course: World History Topic/Idea: 2. Religious Encounters during the Medieval Period Instructional Focus Benchmarks Time Allowed: (Weeks) Traditional: 2.5 weeks Block: 1 week Learning Goal: Analyze the role religion played during the medieval period. Annually Assessed Benchmark(s): N/A Objectives: Students will critique the key beliefs of Islam. EduSoft Mini-Assessment(s): N/A Students will analyze causes, events and effects of the Crusades. Students will understand the emergence of Constantinople. Date Range: N/A Students will analyze the causes and impact of the Black Death. Item Specification Notes: Content Limits: N/A Attributes/Stimulus: N/A Key Vocabulary: Benchmarks/Standards Essential Content & Understanding: Essential Questions: Supporting LAFS and MAFS Standards Key Beliefs of Islam • Five Pillars of Faith • Monotheism • Founder is Mohammad • Holy book is the Quran/Koran • Spread by way of missionaries, trade/migration, and conquest • Muslims preserved mathematical and scientific knowledge of the West during the Middle Ages • Created algebra, unique artwork and architecture, poetry, etc. What are the key beliefs of Islam? SS.912.W.3.1: Discuss significant people and beliefs associated with Islam. SS.912.W.3.2: Compare the major beliefs and principles of Judaism, Christianity, and Islam. Judaism – the monotheistic religion of the Jews, having its ethical, ceremonial, and SS.912.W.3.3: Determine the causes, effects, and legal foundation in the precepts of the Old extent of Islamic military expansion through Central Testament. Asia, North Africa, and the Iberian Peninsula. Christianity – a monotheistic and Abrahamic relgion based on the life and teachings of Jesus Christ as presented in canonical gospels and other New Testament writing as well as the Old Testament. SS.912.W.3.4: Describe the expansion of Islam into India and the relationship between Muslims and Hindus. SS.912.W.3.5: Describe the achievements, contributions, and key figures associated with the Islamic Golden Age. Islam – the religious faith of Muslims, based on the words and religious systems SS.912.W.3.6: Describe key economic, political, and founded by the prophet Muhammad and social developments in Islamic history. taught by the Koran. SS.912.W.3.7: Analyze the causes, key events, and Hinduism – the common religion of India, effects of the European response to Islamic expansion based upon the religion of the Aryan beginning in the 7th century. settlers. SS.912.W.3.8: Identify important figures associated Muslim – a follower of the religion of with the Crusades. Islam. Additional Reoccurring Standards Key Events of Crusades • Pope Urban’s speech • The capture of Jerusalem • Founding of Crusader states • Loss of Jerusalem to Saladin • Sack of Constantinople by western Crusaders Effects of the Crusades • Weakened the Popes and nobles; strengthened monarchs • Stimulated trade throughout the Mediterranean area and the Middle East • Left a legacy of bitterness among Christians, Jews and Muslims • Weakened the Byzantine Empire Constantinople • Fell to the Ottoman Turks in 1453, ending the Byzantine Empire How did this major world religion spread? What effects did the spread of Islam have on Europe, Asia and Africa? How has Islam influenced Western civilization? What were the effects of the Ottoman invasions of Europe? What were key events and effects of the Crusades? How did the Crusades stimulate trade between Europe and the Muslim Empire? Resources/Links: Haiku Learning - AP World World History Practice Test World History for All History World World History Matters Federal Resources for Education Excellence Discovery Education History Channel World History Archives U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum Times (Around the World) 2014-2015 Curriculum Blueprint Grade: 9-12 Course: World History Topic/Idea: 2. Religious Encounters during the Medieval Period Crusades – military expeditions undertaken by the Christians of Europe in the 11th, 12th, and 13th centuries for the recovery of the Holy Land from the Muslims. • Became capital of the Ottoman Empire Time Allowed: (Weeks) Traditional: 2.5 weeks Block: 1 week Teachers will complete 4 DBQs within a full year course. Economic Effects of the Crusades • Increased demand for Middle Eastern DBQ Option: The Black Death: How Different products Were the Christian and Muslim Responses? • Stimulated production of goods to trade in Middle Eastern markets DBQ Option: Why did Islam spread so quickly? • Encouraged the use of credit and banking Important Economic Concepts • Church rule against usury and the banks’ practice of charging interest helped to secularize northern Italy • Letters of credit served to expand the supply of money and expedite trade • New accounting and bookkeeping practices (use of Arabic numerals) were introduced. • Commercial Revolution Intellectual Effects of the Crusades • Reacquisition of Greek and Roman text • Scholasticism and the beginnings of the scientific method on European civilization • Foundation for the rise of universities in Europe Impact of the Black Death • Decline in population • Scarcity of labor force • Towns freed from feudal obligations • Decline of church influence • Disruption of trade Essential Understandings • In the fourteenth century, the Black Death (bubonic plague) decimated the population of much of Asia and eventually much of the population of Europe. • Muslims and Christians reacted in widely divergent ways. While society seemed to decline and the power of the church weakened in Europe, Muslim areas seemed to experience less disruption. 2014-2015 Curriculum Blueprint Grade: 9-12 Course: World History (Weeks) Topic/Idea: 3. Civilizations of Africa and Americas Instructional Focus Benchmarks Time Allowed: Traditional: 2 weeks Block: 1 week Learning Goal: Understand the culture, economies, governments and important events during the early civilizations of Africa and the Americas. Annually Assessed Benchmark(s): N/A Objectives: Students will describe the different civilizations that developed in Africa. EduSoft Mini-Assessment(s): N/A Students will compare different religious backgrounds of African civilizations. Students will analyze major trade patterns that developed in the Eastern Hemisphere. Date Range: N/A Students will analyze how ideas were spread throughout the Eastern Hemisphere. Students will describe the culture and civilizations of Mesoamerica. Item Specification Notes: Students will compare the civilizations of South America. Content Limits: N/A Benchmarks/Standards Attributes/Stimulus: N/A Supporting LAFS and MAFS Standards Key Vocabulary: Maritime-connected with the sea in relation to navigation, shipping, etc. Textile-any cloth or goods produced by weaving, knitting, or felting. Isolationism-the policy or doctrine of isolating one's country from the affairs of other nations by declining to enter into alliances, foreign economic commitments, international agreements, etc., seeking to devote the entire efforts of one's country to its own advancement and remain at peace by avoiding foreign entanglements and responsibilities. Essential Content & Understanding: The Mutapa Empire • Numerous Bantu-speaking , pastoral peoples began to develop SS.912.W.3.9: Trace the growth of major small kingdoms by the 900s sub-Saharan African kingdoms and • By 1300s, the Shona people arrived building their kingdom of empires. Great Zimbabwe • King Mutota brought much of the territory surrounding Great SS.912.W.3.10: Identify key significant Zimbabwe under his control; took the title of Mwene Mutapa economic, political, and social • Shona believed Mwene Mutapa was only one able to characteristics of Ghana. communicate with spirits; had complete religious authority SS.912.W.3.11: Identify key figures and significant economic, political, and social characteristics associated with Mali. SS.912.W.3.12: Identify key figures and significant economic, political, and social characteristics associated with Songhai. Sub-Saharan Africa • City states that developed on or near the eastern coast of Africa • Both Christian (Ethiopia)and Muslim • Based on trade • Developed the Swahili language as a way to communicate with Muslim traders. Ghana, Mali and Songhai SS.912.W.3.13: Compare economic, • Trade-based civilizations that grew up in Western Africa.; political, and social developments in East, traded salt and gold West, and South Africa. • Developed unique cultures • Mansa Musa and the spread of Islam SS.912.W.3.14: Examine the internal and • Timbuktu was a center of learning and trade external factors that led to the fall of the • Became a center for slave trading as Europeans arrived. empires of Ghana, Mali, and Songhai. SS.912.W.3.15: Analyze the legacies of the Olmec, Zapotec, and Chavin on later Meso and South American civilizations. Essential Questions: How did the East African Swahili states represent a blend of several cultures? What role did the spread of ideas and trade play in the development of empires in Africa from the 1300s to the 1500s? What led to the “fall” of the Ghana, Mail and Songhai empires? What effect did these civilizations have on the expansion of the slave trade outside Africa? Where were the major trade routes in the Eastern Hemisphere from 1000 to 1500 A.D.? How did trade facilitate the diffusion of goods and ideas among different cultures? Was trade good for all parties involved? How were the Aztecs able to build such a powerful empire? Major trade patterns of the Eastern Hemisphere from 1000 How did Andean peoples adapt to their to 1500 A.D. environment? • Silk roads across Asia to the Mediterranean basin • Maritime routes across the Indian Ocean What factors allowed the Inca to control their 2014-2015 Curriculum Blueprint Grade: 9-12 Course: World History Topic/Idea: 3. Civilizations of Africa and Americas SS.912.W.3.16: Locate major civilizations • Trans-Saharan routes across North Africa vast empire? of Mesoamerica and Andean South • Northern European links with the Black Sea America. • Western European sea and river trade • South China Sea and lands of Southeast Asia SS.912.W.3.17: Describe the roles of people in the Maya, Inca, and Aztec Goods societies. • Gold from West Africa • Spices from lands around the Indian Ocean SS.912.W.3.18: Compare the key • Textiles from India, China, the Middle East, and later Europe economic, cultural, and political • Porcelain from China and Persia characteristics of the major civilizations of Meso and South America. Technology • Paper from China through the Muslim world to Byzantium and SS.912.W.3.19: Determine the impact of Western Europe significant Meso and South American • New crops from India (e.g., for making sugar) rulers such as Pacal the Great, Montezuma • Waterwheels and windmills I, and Huayna Capac. • Navigation—Compass from China, lateen sail from Indian Ocean Additional Reoccurring Standards Ideas • Spread of religions across the hemisphere – Buddhism from China to Korea and Japan – Hinduism and Buddhism from India to Southeast Asia – Islam into West Africa, Central and Southeast Asia • Printing and paper money from China Shinto • Ethnic religion unique to Japan • Importance of natural features, forces of nature, and ancestors • State religion; worshipping the emperor • Coexistence with Buddhism Essential Understandings During the Medieval Period, several major trading routes developed in the Eastern Hemisphere. These trading routes developed among Europe, Africa, and Asia. Regional trade networks and long-distance trade routes in the Eastern Time Allowed: (Weeks) Traditional: 2 weeks Block: 1 week 2014-2015 Curriculum Blueprint Grade: 9-12 Course: World History Topic/Idea: 3. Civilizations of Africa and Americas Time Allowed: (Weeks) Traditional: 2 weeks Block: 1 week Hemisphere aided the diffusion and exchange of technology and Resources/Links: culture between Europe, Africa, and Asia. Haiku Learning - AP World Mesoamerica World History Practice Test • Zapotec peoples among the earliest Mesoamericans to develop World History for All an urban civilization (Monte Alban, Teotihuacan); Trade and History World farming an important part of Mesoamerican economy; declined World History Matters after 700. Federal Resources for Education Excellence • Mayans flourished around Yucatan Peninsula from 200-900; Discovery Education developed the only complete writing system in the Americas; History Channel refined calendar to track various cycles of time; cities – Tikal, World History Archives Copan; leaders – Pacal U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum • Toltecs, descendants of nomadic tribes migrated to central Times (Around the World) Mexico from the north around 900; similar religious beliefs & architecture with Mayans; gone by 1100 Teachers will complete 4 DBQs within a full • Aztec Empire (1200s – 1500s) – Tenochtitlan; year course. conquered area tribes and forced them to pay tribute; pyramids, causeways and acqueducts; religion aimed at pleasing gods – human sacrifices South America • Nazca culture (370 BC – 450 AD) – coastal desert plain in present-day Peru; agricultural gods demanded sacrifices of human heads and blood; geoglyphs • Moche culture (100-700) and Chimu (1000-1470) emerged to the north of the Nazca • The Inca (1438-1535), the most powerful American empire came from the region of Cuzco high in the Andes Mountains; conquered surrounding lands; religion based on worship of sun and royal ancestors; irrigation canals, roads, terraces, quipus; civil war severely weakened Inca before Spanish arrived Essential Understandings By 1500 A.D., major states and empires had developed in various regions of the world. These civilizations were unique and highly adapted to their individual geographic locations. These civilizations were devastated by the arrival of Europeans in their area. 2014-2015 Curriculum Blueprint Grade: 9-12 Course: World History Topic/Idea: 4. Renaissance and Reformation Instructional Focus Benchmarks Annually Assessed Benchmark(s): N/A EduSoft Mini-Assessment(s): N/A Date Range: N/A Item Specification Notes: Time Allowed: (Weeks) Traditional: 2.5 weeks Block: 1 week Learning Goal: The student will demonstrate an understanding of the political, cultural, and economic conditions during the Renaissance period. Objectives: Students will describe the meaning of “renaissance.” Students will analyze the contributions of the Renaissance. a) art b) science c) ideas d) literature Students will critique the importance of the printing press. Students will analyze the impact of the Reformation in Germany. Students will assess the reasons for Henry VIII’s creation of the Anglican Church. Students will compare the Reformations of Germany, England and France. Students will analyze the events of the Catholic Counter-Reformation. Students will analyze the changing cultural, philosophical and traditional ideas that were spread. Content Limits: N/A Attributes/Stimulus: N/A Benchmarks/Standards Essential Content & Understanding: Supporting LAFS and MAFS Standards Renaissance • “Rebirth” of classical knowledge, “birth” of the modern world SS.912.W.4.1: Identify the economic • Spread of the Renaissance from the Italian city states to northern Key Vocabulary: and political causes for the rise of Europe the Italian city-states (Florence, Renaissance- the activity, spirit, or Milan, Naples, Rome, Venice). Contributions of the Renaissance time of the great revival of art, • Accomplishments in the visual arts—Michelangelo, Leonardo da literature, and learning in Europe SS.912.W.4.2: Recognize major Vinci beginning in the 14th century and influences on the architectural, • Accomplishments in literature (sonnets, plays, essays)—Shakespeare extending to the 17th century, artistic, and literary developments • Accomplishments in intellectual ideas (humanism)—Erasmus of Renaissance Italy marking the transition from the (Classical, Byzantine, Islamic, Role of the printing press medieval to the modern world. Western European). • Growth of literacy was stimulated by the Gutenberg printing press. • The Bible was printed in English, French, and German. Reformation-the religious SS.912.W.4.3: Identify the major movement in the 16th century that artistic, literary, and technological Impact of Gutenberg’s Printing Press had for its object the reform of the contributions of individuals during Roman Catholic Church, and that led the Renaissance. Reformation in Germany to the establishment of the Protestant • Princes in Northern Germany converted to Protestantism, ending SS.912.W.4.4: Identify churches. authority of the Pope in their states. characteristics of Renaissance • The Hapsburg family and the authority of the Holy Roman Empire humanism in works of art. Secular-not pertaining to or continued to support the Roman Catholic Church. • Conflict between Protestants and Catholics resulted in devastating SS.912.W.4.5: Describe how ideas Essential Questions: What caused the Commercial Revolution in Italy in the 1300s and 1400s? What influences inspired Italian humanists? How do advances in science and technology change society? How did Renaissance ideas spread across Europe? What issues led to the Protestant Reformation? How and why did the Protestant Reformation spread to other parts of Europe? What were the problems and issues that provoked religious reforms in Western Christianity? What were the causes of the wars of religion? What were some of the changing cultural values, traditions, and philosophies during the Reformation? 2014-2015 Curriculum Blueprint Grade: 9-12 Course: World History Topic/Idea: 4. Renaissance and Reformation connected with religion. from the Middle Ages and Renaissance led to the Scientific Revolution. SS.912.W.4.9: Analyze the Roman Catholic Church's response to the Protestant Reformation in the forms of the Counter and Catholic Reformation. (Weeks) Traditional: 2.5 weeks Block: 1 week wars (e.g., Thirty Years’ War). Reformation in England • Anglican Church became a national church throughout the British Isles under Elizabeth I. • The Reformation contributed to the rise of capitalism. SS.912.W.4.6: Describe how scientific theories and methods of the Scientific Revolution challenged those of the early classical and Reformation in France medieval periods. • Catholic monarchy granted Protestant Huguenots freedom of worship by the Edict of Nantes (later revoked). SS.912.W.4.7: Identify criticisms of • Cardinal Richelieu changed the focus of the Thirty Years’ War from a the Roman Catholic Church by religious to a political conflict. individuals such as Wycliffe, Hus and Erasmus and their impact on Catholic Counter Reformation later reformers. • Catholic Church mounted a series of reforms and reasserted its SS.912.W.4.8: Summarize religious reforms associated with Luther, Calvin, Zwingli, Henry VIII, and John of Leyden and the effects of the Reformation on Europe. Time Allowed: authority. • Society of Jesus (The Jesuits) was founded to spread Catholic doctrine around the world. Inquisition was established to reinforce Catholic doctrine. • The Reformation had its roots in theology, but it led to important economic and political changes. Religious differences and hatreds caused war and destruction. Changing cultural values, traditions, and philosophies • Growth of secularism • Growth of individualism • Growth of religious tolerance Resources/Links: Haiku Learning - AP World World History Practice Test World History for All History World World History Matters Federal Resources for Education Excellence Discovery Education History Channel World History Archives U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum Times (Around the World) SS.912.W.4.10: Identify the major contributions of individuals associated with the Scientific Revolution. Essential Understandings New intellectual and artistic ideas that Teachers will complete 4 DBQs within a full developed during the Renaissance marked the beginning of the year course. modern world. At first the Reformation divided the countries of Europe on religious principles, leading to religious intolerance. Gradually DBQ Option: What was the Most Important Additional Reoccurring Standards Consequence of the Printing Press? religious toleration emerged, along with democratic thought. DBQ Option: How did the Renaissance change man’s view of man? 2014-2015 Curriculum Blueprint Grade: 9-12 Course: World History Topic/Idea: 5. Age of Exploration and Encounter Time Allowed: (Weeks) Traditional: 2 weeks Block: 1 week Instructional Focus Benchmarks Annually Assessed Benchmark(s): N/A EduSoft Mini-Assessment(s): N/A Date Range: N/A Item Specification Notes: Learning Goal: The student will demonstrate knowledge of the status and impact of global trade on regional civilizations of the world during the period of exploration. Objectives: Students will analyze the importance of trade patterns. Students will compare the political, economical and cultural effects on European countries as they competed for land and sea. Students will analyze the exchanges that took place between different cultures. a) Ideas b) science c) goods d) culture Students will compare the effects of the Columbian Exchange Students will critique the diffusion of religion during exploration. Students will analyze the effects on the Americas during exploration. Content Limits: N/A Benchmarks/Standards Attributes/Stimulus: N/A Supporting LAFS and MAFS Standards Traditional trade patterns linking Europe with Asia and Africa Key Vocabulary: Technological- pertaining to technology; relating to science and industry. SS.912.W.4.11: Summarize the causes that led to the Age of Exploration, and identify major voyages and sponsors. SS.912.W.4.12: Evaluate the scope and impact of the Columbian Exchange on Europe, Africa, Asia, Indigenous- originating in and and the Americas. characteristic of a particular region or country. SS.912.W.4.13: Examine the various economic and political Migration- to go from one systems of Portugal, Spain, the country, region, or place to Netherlands, France, and England in the Americas. another. Mercantilism- a system of political and economic policy, evolving with the modern national state and seeking to secure a nation's political and economic supremacy in its rivalry with other states. According to this system, money was regarded as a store of SS.912.W.4.14: Recognize the practice of slavery and other forms of forced labor experienced during the 13th through 17th centuries in East Africa, West Africa, Europe, Southwest Asia, and the Americas. Essential Content & Understanding: • Silk roads across Asia to the Mediterranean basin • Maritime routes across the Indian Ocean • Trans-Saharan routes across North Africa • Northern European links with the Black Sea • Western European sea and river trade • South China Sea and lands of Southeast Asia Essential Questions: Why are regional trading patterns important? What technological developments made European exploration possible? Why were Europeans interested in discovering new lands and markets? Importance of trade patterns • Exchange of products and ideas Why did nations place such importance on mercantilism? Advancements exchanged along trade routes • Paper, compass, silk, porcelain (China) • Textiles, numeral system (India and Middle East) • Scientific transfer—Medicine, astronomy, Mathematics How did the expansion of European empires into the Americas and Africa affect the religion in those areas? What was the effect of European migration and settlement on the Americas and Africa? Essential Understandings By 1500, regional trade patterns had developed that linked Africa, the Why were the Spanish able to conquer the powerful Middle East, Asia, and Europe. Aztec and Inca empires? By 1500 A.D., technological and scientific advancements had been exchanged among cultures of the world. Factors contributing to the European discovery of lands in the SS.912.W.4.15: Explain the origins, Western Hemisphere • Demand for gold, spices, and natural resources in Europe developments, and impact of the What was the impact of the Columbian Exchange between European and indigenous cultures? What was the triangular trade? What was the impact of precious metal exports from the Americas? 2014-2015 Curriculum Blueprint Grade: 9-12 Course: World History Topic/Idea: 5. Age of Exploration and Encounter Time Allowed: (Weeks) Traditional: 2 weeks Block: 1 week wealth, and the goal of a state was the accumulation of precious metals, by exporting the largest possible quantity of its products and importing as little as possible, thus establishing a favorable balance of trade. trans-Atlantic slave trade between West Africa and the Americas. • Support for the diffusion of Christianity • Political and economic competition between European empires • Innovations in navigational arts (European and Islamic origins) • Pioneering role of Prince Henry the Navigator SS.912.G.2.2-Describe the factors and processes that contribute to the differences between developed and Establishment of overseas empires and decimation of indigenous developing regions of the world. populations • Portugal—Vasco da Gama Additional Reoccurring Standards • Spain—Christopher Columbus, Hernando Cortez, Francisco Pizarro, Ferdinand Magellan Balance of trade- the • England—Francis Drake difference between the values of • France—Jacques Cartier exports and imports of a country, said to be favorable or unfavorable as exports are greater or less than imports. Means of diffusion of Christianity • Migration of colonists to new lands • Influence of Catholics and Protestants, who carried their faith, language, and cultures to new lands • Conversion of indigenous peoples Americas • Expansion of overseas territorial claims and European emigration to North and South America • Demise of Aztec, Maya, and Inca Empires • Legacy of a rigid class system and dictatorial rule in Latin America • Forced migration of some Africans into slavery • Colonies’ imitation of the culture and social patterns of their parent country Africa • European trading posts along the coast • Trade in slaves, gold, and other products Columbian Exchange • Western Hemisphere agricultural products such as corn, potatoes, and tobacco changed European lifestyles. • European horses and cattle changed the lifestyles of American Indians (First Americans). How did Africa become involved in foreign trade? 2014-2015 Curriculum Blueprint Grade: 9-12 Course: World History Topic/Idea: 5. Age of Exploration and Encounter Time Allowed: (Weeks) Traditional: 2 weeks Block: 1 week • European diseases like smallpox killed many American Indians (First Resources/Links: Americans). Haiku Learning - AP World World History Practice Test Impact of the Columbian Exchange • Shortage of labor to grow cash crops led to the use of African slaves. World History for All History World • Slavery was based on race. World History Matters • European plantation system in the Caribbean and the Americas Federal Resources for Education Excellence destroyed indigenous economics and damaged the environment. Discovery Education History Channel Export of precious metals World History Archives • Gold and silver (exported to Europe and Asia) U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum • Impact on indigenous empires of the Americas Times (Around the World) • Impact on Spain and international trade African exports • Slaves (triangular trade) • Raw materials African imports • Manufactured goods from Europe, Asia, and the Americas • New food products (corn, peanuts) Essential Understandings • The expanding economies of European states stimulated increased trade with markets in Asia. • With the loss of Constantinople in 1453, European nations fronting the Atlantic sought new maritime routes for trade. • Europeans migrated to new colonies in the Americas, creating new cultural and social patterns. • The discovery of the Americas by Europeans resulted in an exchange of products and resources between the Eastern and Western Hemispheres. • The triangular trade linked Europe, Africa, and the Americas. Slaves, sugar, and rum were traded. • The European nations established a trade pattern known as the triangular trade and exported precious metals from the Americas. • The exportation of slaves and demand for imported goods began to alter traditional economic patterns in Africa. • Europeans established trading posts and colonies in Africa and Asia. Teachers will complete 4 DBQs within a full year course. 2014-2015 Curriculum Blueprint Grade: 9-12 Course: World History Topic/Idea: 6. Absolutism, Enlightenment and Revolutions Instructional Focus Benchmarks Annually Assessed Benchmark(s): N/A EduSoft Mini-Assessment(s): N/A Date Range: N/A Item Specification Notes: Content Limits: N/A Attributes/Stimulus: N/A Key Vocabulary: Social contract-the voluntary agreement among individuals by which, according to any of various theories, as of Hobbes, Locke, or Rousseau, organized society is brought into being and invested with the right to secure mutual protection and welfare or to regulate the (Weeks) Traditional: 2.5 weeks Block: 1 week Learning Goal: The student will demonstrate knowledge of scientific, political, economic, and religious changes during the sixteenth, seventeenth, and eighteenth centuries. Objectives: Students will analyze the importance of the Scientific Revolution. Students will compare new scientific discoveries during the Scientific Revolution. Students will compare the different absolute monarchies of this time period. Students will analyze the effects of the Glorious Revolution and the development of rights for the English. Students will compare different ideas and thinkers during the Enlightenment. a)Literature b) technology c)philosophy d) art Students will analyze the causes of the French Revolution. Students will define the key events of the French Revolution. Students will compare the revolutions in the Americas. Students will be able to critique Napoleon and the decisions he made. Benchmarks/Standards Essential Content & Understanding: Essential Questions: Supporting LAFS and MAFS Standards Importance of the Scientific Revolution • Emphasis on reason and systematic observation of nature • Formulation of the scientific method • Expansion of scientific knowledge Why did some European begin to question the medieval Christian worldview, and how did they finally shatter it? SS.912.W.4.5: Describe how ideas from Rationalism- the principle or the Middle Ages and Renaissance led to habit of accepting reason as the the Scientific Revolution. supreme authority in matters of SS.912.W.4.6: Describe how scientific opinion, belief, or conduct. theories and methods of the Scientific Deism-belief in the existence of Revolution challenged those of the early classical and medieval periods. a God on the evidence of reason and nature only, with rejection of supernatural revelation Time Allowed: SS.912.W.4.10: Identify the major contributions of individuals associated with the Scientific Revolution. SS.912.W.1.1-Use timelines to establish cause and effect relationships of historical events. SS.912.W.5.1: Compare the causes and effects of the development of constitutional monarchy in England with those of the development of absolute monarchy in France, Spain, and Russia. Individuals of the Scientific Revolution • Johannes Kepler – used new mathematics to prove Copernicus’s heliocentric theory • Galileo – used telescope to prove Kepler and Copernicus correct; calculated acceleration, law of inertia; condemned by Catholic Church • Antoni van Leeuwenhock – microscope • Francis Bacon – rejected deductive reasoning and believed only experimental data could be foundation of knowledge • Rene Descartes – believed in questioning all ideas before accepting them as knowledge • Sir Isaac Newton – laws of motion and Gravity Essential Understandings With its emphasis on reasoned observation and systematic measurement, the scientific revolution changed the way people viewed the world and their place in it. Characteristics of absolute monarchies • Centralization of power What is the scientific method, and how did it affect the European worldview? How did some Europeans justify absolutism? What effect did the absolute monarchs have on the countries of continental Europe? Why did absolutism fail in England? How did the English Civil War and the Glorious Revolution promote the development of the rights of Englishmen? What was the Enlightenment? How did philosophers of the Enlightenment influence thinking on political issues? How did the Enlightenment affect common conceptions about the role of women? 2014-2015 Curriculum Blueprint Grade: 9-12 Course: World History Topic/Idea: 6. Absolutism, Enlightenment and Revolutions SS.912.W.5.2: Identify major causes of the • Concept of rule by divine right Enlightenment. Absolute monarchs Bourgeoisie- the middle SS.912.W.5.3: Summarize the major ideas • Louis XIV—France, Palace of Versailles as a symbol of royal power classes of Enlightenment philosophers. • Frederick the Great—Prussia, emphasis on military power • Peter the Great—Russia, westernization of Russia Philosophy- the rational SS.912.W.5.4: Evaluate the impact of investigation of the truths and Enlightenment ideals on the development Essential Understandings principles of being, knowledge, of economic, political, and religious The Age of Absolutism takes its name from a series of European or conduct. structures in the Western world. monarchs who increased the power of their central governments. Time Allowed: (Weeks) Traditional: 2.5 weeks Block: 1 week relations among its members. Succession-the right, act, or process, by which one person succeeds to the office, rank, estate, or the like, of another. SS.912.W.5.5: Analyze the extent to which the Enlightenment impacted the American and French Revolutions. SS.912.W.5.6: Summarize the important causes, events, and effects of the French Divine right-the doctrine that Revolution including the rise and rule of the right of rule derives directly Napoleon. from God, not from the consent of the people. SS.912.W.5.7: Describe the causes and effects of 19th Latin American and Caribbean independence movements led by people including Bolivar, de San Martin, and L' Ouverture. Additional Reoccurring Standards Development of the rights of Englishmen • Oliver Cromwell and the execution of Charles I • The restoration of Charles II • Development of political parties/factions • Glorious Revolution (William and Mary) • Increase of parliamentary power over royal power • English Bill of Rights of 1689 How did the Enlightenment promote revolution in the American colonies? How did the struggle for power in Europe contribute to the founding of the United States? Who were some artists, philosophers, and writers of the period? What improved technologies and institutions were important to European economies? How did Enlightenment ideas play a role in France’s revolutionary government? How effective were the revolutionaries in reforming the French government? How did the French and American Revolutions Essential Understandings influence Latin American independence Political democracy rests on the principle that government derives movements? power from the consent of the governed. The foundations of English freedoms included the jury trial, the Magna Carta, and common law. What was the legacy of Napoleon? The English Civil War and the Glorious Revolution prompted further development of the rights of Englishmen. What was the significance of the Congress of Vienna? The Enlightenment • Applied reason to the human world, not just the natural world How did nationalism and democracy influence • Stimulated religious tolerance national revolutions? • Fueled democratic revolutions around the World Enlightenment thinkers and their ideas • Thomas Hobbes’ Leviathan—The state must have central authority to manage behavior. • John Locke’s Two Treatises on Government—People are sovereign; monarchs are not chosen by God. • Montesquieu’s The Spirit of Laws—The best form of government includes a separation of powers. • Jean-Jacques Rousseau’s The Social Contract—Government is a contract between rulers and the people. • Voltaire—Religious toleration should triumph over religious How did liberal revolutions affect Europe? Resources/Links: Haiku Learning - AP World World History Practice Test World History for All History World World History Matters Federal Resources for Education Excellence Discovery Education History Channel 2014-2015 Curriculum Blueprint Grade: 9-12 Course: World History Topic/Idea: 6. Absolutism, Enlightenment and Revolutions Time Allowed: (Weeks) Traditional: 2.5 weeks Block: 1 week fanaticism; separation of church and state • Mary Wollstonecraft – believe Enlightenment principles should be extended to women World History Archives U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum Times (Around the World) Influence of the Enlightenment • Political philosophies of the Enlightenment fueled revolution in the Americas and France. • Thomas Jefferson’s Declaration of Independence incorporated Enlightenment ideas. • The Constitution of the United States of America and Bill of Rights incorporated Enlightenment ideas. Teachers will complete 4 DBQs within a full year course. Essential Understandings Enlightenment thinkers believed that human progress was possible through the application of scientific knowledge and reason to issues of law and government. Enlightenment ideas influenced the leaders of the American Revolution and the writing of the Declaration of Independence. Representative artists, philosophers, and writers • Johann Sebastian Bach— Composer • Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart— Composer • Eugène Delacroix—Painter • Voltaire—Philosopher • Miguel de Cervantes—Novelist New forms of art and literature • Paintings depicted classical subjects, public events, natural scenes, and living people (portraits). • New forms of literature evolved—the novel (e.g., Cervantes’ Don Quixote). Technologies • All-weather roads improved year- round transport and trade. • New designs in farm tools increased productivity (agricultural revolution). • Improvements in ship design lowered the cost of transport. Essential Understandings The Enlightenment brought a new emphasis on order and balance in the arts as artists borrowed heavily from classical Greece and 2014-2015 Curriculum Blueprint Grade: 9-12 Course: World History Topic/Idea: 6. Absolutism, Enlightenment and Revolutions Rome, and new forms of literature were established. Causes of the French Revolution • Influence of Enlightenment ideas • Influence of the American Revolution Events of the French Revolution • Storming of the Bastille • Reign of Terror Outcomes of the French Revolution • End of the absolute monarchy of Louis XVI • Rise of Napoleon Influence of the American and French Revolutions on the Americas • Independence came to French, Spanish, and Portuguese colonies • Toussaint L’Ouverture—Haiti • Simon Bolivar—South America Essential Understandings The ideas of the Enlightenment and French participation in the American Revolution influenced the French people to view their government in new ways. They overthrew the absolute monarchy, and a new government was established. These ideas and examples of the American and French Revolutions influenced the people of Latin America to establish independent nations. Legacy of Napoleon • Unsuccessful attempt to unify Europe under French domination • Napoleonic Code • Awakened feelings of national pride and growth of nationalism Legacy of the Congress of Vienna • “Balance of power” doctrine • Restoration of monarchies • New political map of Europe • New political philosophies (liberalism, conservatism) Essential Understandings The French Revolution left a powerful legacy for world history: secular society, nationalism, and democratic ideas. Time Allowed: (Weeks) Traditional: 2.5 weeks Block: 1 week 2014-2015 Curriculum Blueprint Grade: 9-12 Course: World History Topic/Idea: 6. Absolutism, Enlightenment and Revolutions Napoleon’s attempt to unify Europe under French domination was unsuccessful. The Congress of Vienna attempted to restore Europe as it had been before the French Revolution and Napoleonic conquests. National pride, economic competition, and democratic ideals stimulated the growth of nationalism. The terms of the Congress of Vienna led to widespread discontent in Europe. Unsuccessful revolutions of 1848 increased nationalistic tensions. In contrast to continental Europe, Great Britain expanded political rights through legislative means and made slavery illegal in the British Empire. Essential Understandings The rise of nationalism was a powerful force behind European politics during the nineteenth century. Widespread demands for political rights led to revolutions and legislative actions in Europe. Time Allowed: (Weeks) Traditional: 2.5 weeks Block: 1 week 2014-2015 Curriculum Blueprint Topic/Idea: 7. Instructional Focus Benchmarks 19th Grade: 9-12 Course: World History Century Industrialism, Nationalism, and Imperialism Time Allowed: (Weeks) Traditional:2.5 weeks Block: 1.5 Learning Goal: The student will demonstrate knowledge of the effects of the Industrial Revolution during the nineteenth century. Annually Assessed Benchmark(s): N/A Objectives: Students will compare the unifications of Italy and Germany. EduSoft Mini-Assessment(s): N/A Students will analyze the origins of the Industrial Revolution. Students will compare capitalism and socialism. Date Range: N/A Students will analyze the social effects of the Industrial Revolution. Students will critique the hardships of factory work during the Industrial Revolution. Item Specification Notes: Students will define imperialism. Content Limits: N/A Students will compare imperialized areas. Students will analyze but the short-term and long-term effects of imperialism. Attributes/Stimulus: N/A Benchmarks/Standards Essential Content & Understanding: Essential Questions: Key Vocabulary: Supporting LAFS and MAFS Standards How did Italy achieve unity? Estate- a social or political class; specifically : one of the great classes (as the nobility, the clergy, and the commons) formerly vested with distinct political powers SS.912.W.6.1: Describe the agricultural and technological innovations that led to industrialization in Great Britain and its subsequent spread to continental Europe, the United States, and Japan. Unification of Italy • Count Cavour unified Northern Italy. • Giuseppe Garibaldi joined southern Italy to northern Italy. • The Papal States (including Rome) became the last to join Italy. Unification of Germany • Otto von Bismarck led Prussia in the unification of Germany through war and by appealing to nationalist feelings. • Bismarck’s actions were seen as an example of Realpolitik, which justifies all means to achieve and hold power. • The Franco-Prussian War led to the creation of the German state. Why did the spread of industrialism to Europe and the United States accelerate colonialism and imperialism? Faction-a group or clique within a larger SS.912.W.6.2: Summarize the social and economic effects of the Industrial Revolution. group, party, government, organization, or the like SS.912.W.6.3: Compare the philosophies of capitalism, socialism, and communism as Papal-of or pertaining to the pope or the described by Adam Smith, Robert Owen, and papacy Karl Marx. Consulate-the position, work, authority, SS.912.W.6.4: Describe the 19th and early 20th century social and political reforms and reform Essential Understandings or term of service of a consul. movements and their effects in Africa, Asia, Italy and Germany became nation-states long after the Europe, the United States, the Caribbean, and Bureaucracy-the body of officials and rest of Europe. Latin America. administrators, especially of a government or government department. Capitalism-an economic system in which investment in and ownership of the means of production, distribution, How did Bismarck unite Germany? Why did the Industrial Revolution originate in England? What was the role of capitalism and market competition in the Industrial Revolution? What were some theories opposed to capitalism? How did the Industrial Revolution impact the lives of women, children, and the family? How did the Industrial Revolution produce changes in culture and society? Origins of the Industrial Revolution SS.912.W.6.5: Summarize the causes, key • Began in Great Britain – Why? Geographic advantages, How did the Industrial Revolution affect slavery? events, and effects of the unification of Italy and availability of iron ore and coal, stable political system, Germany. How did many workers respond to large overseas empire, growing global demand for industrialization? manufactured goods, Britain’s ability to adopt old SS.912.W.6.6: Analyze the causes and effects of 2014-2015 Curriculum Blueprint Topic/Idea: 7. and exchange of wealth is made and maintained chiefly by private individuals or corporations, especially as contrasted to cooperatively or state-owned means of wealth. imperialism. 19th Grade: 9-12 Course: World History Century Industrialism, Nationalism, and Imperialism methods from around the world for new uses. SS.912.W.6.7: Identify major events in China The Commercialization of Agriculture during the 19th and early 20th centuries related • Developed in Britain in early 1700s due to to imperialism. European expansion overseas, introduction of new American crops. • Introduction of crop rotation and seed drill led to an Additional Reoccurring Standards Socialism-a theory or system of social increase in crops and wealth – led to enclosure organization that advocates the vesting of movement. • Agriculture, like trade, became a commercial the ownership and control of the means enterprise. Availability of more food = an everof production and distribution, of capital, increasing pop. land, etc., in the community as a whole. Communism-a system of social organization in which all economic and social activity is controlled by a totalitarian state dominated by a single and self-perpetuating political party. Suffrage-the right to vote, especially in a political election. Liberalism-a political or social philosophy advocating the freedom of the individual, parliamentary systems of government, nonviolent modification of political, social, or economic institutions to assure unrestricted development in all spheres of human endeavor, and governmental guarantees of individual rights and civil liberties. Natural selection-the process by which forms of life having traits that better enable them to adapt to specific environmental pressures, as predators, changes in climate, or competition for food or mates, will tend to survive and reproduce in greater numbers than Essential Understandings Development of new technologies and methods of economic organization led Europeans into the Industrial Revolution. Mechanical power replaced muscle power as the primary energy source, which gave rise to a new way of life in western Europe and America. Capitalism • Adam Smith’s Wealth of Nations • Role of market competition and entrepreneurial abilities • Impact on standard of living and the growth of the middle class • Dissatisfaction with poor working conditions and the unequal distribution of wealth in society Socialism and communism • Karl Marx’s Communist Manifesto (written with Friedrich Engels) and Das Capital • Response to the injustices of capitalism • Importance of redistribution of wealth to the Communists Essential Understandings Capitalism and market competition fueled the Industrial Revolution. Wealth increased the standard of living for some. Social dislocations associated with capitalism produced a range of Time Allowed: (Weeks) Traditional:2.5 weeks Block: 1.5 Why did European countries participate in imperialism and a race for colonies? How were these motives justified? How might nations use military strength to gain an unequal trade advantage with other nations? How effective were the responses of colonized peoples towards European imperialism? Resources/Links: Haiku Learning - AP World World History Practice Test World History for All History World World History Matters Federal Resources for Education Excellence Discovery Education History Channel World History Archives U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum Times (Around the World) Teachers will complete 4 DBQs within a full year course. DBQ Option: Female Mill Workers in England and Japan: How similar were there experiences? 2014-2015 Curriculum Blueprint Topic/Idea: 7. others of their kind, thus ensuring the perpetuation of those favorable traits in succeeding generations. Realism-the tendency to view or represent things as they really are. Proletariat-the class of wage earners, especially those who earn their living by manual labor or who are dependent for support on daily or casual employment; the working class. 19th Grade: 9-12 Course: World History Century Industrialism, Nationalism, and Imperialism economic and political ideas, including socialism and communism. The nature of work in the factory system • Family-based cottage industries displaced by the factory system • Harsh working conditions with men competing with women and children for wages • Child labor that kept costs of production low and profits high • Owners of mines and factories who exercised considerable control over the lives of their laborers Impact of the Industrial Revolution on slavery • The cotton gin increased demand for slave labor on American plantations. • The United States and Britain outlawed the slave trade and then slavery. Social effects of the Industrial Revolution • Women and children entering the workplace as cheap labor • Introduction of reforms to end child labor • Expansion of education • Women’s increased demands for suffrage The rise of labor unions • Encouraged worker-organized strikes to increase wages and improve working conditions • Lobbied for laws to improve the lives of workers, including women and children • Wanted worker rights and collective bargaining between labor and management Essential Understandings Agricultural economies were based on the family unit. The Industrial Revolution had a significant impact on the structure and function of the family. The Industrial Revolution placed new demands on the labor of men, women, and children. Workers organized labor unions to fight for improved working conditions Time Allowed: (Weeks) Traditional:2.5 weeks Block: 1.5 2014-2015 Curriculum Blueprint Topic/Idea: 7. 19th Grade: 9-12 Course: World History Century Industrialism, Nationalism, and Imperialism and workers’ rights. Nationalism motivated European nations to compete for colonial possessions. European economic, military, and political power forced colonized countries to trade on European terms. Industrially produced goods flooded colonial markets and displaced their traditional industries. Colonized peoples resisted European domination and responded in diverse ways to Western influences. Forms of imperialism • Colonies and Protectorates • Spheres of influence Imperialism in Africa and Asia • European domination • European conflicts carried to the colonies • Christian missionary efforts • Spheres of influence in China • Suez Canal • East India Company’s domination of Indian states • American opening of Japan to trade • Berlin Conference, 1884-85 • Opium War • Taiping Rebellion • Boxer Rebellion Responses of colonized peoples • Armed conflicts (Events leading to the Boxer Rebellion in China) • Meiji Restoration and westernization in Japan • Rise of nationalism (first Indian nationalist party founded in the mid-1800s) Time Allowed: (Weeks) Traditional:2.5 weeks Block: 1.5 2014-2015 Curriculum Blueprint Grade: 9-12 Course: World History Topic/Idea: 8. World War I and Its Aftermath Time Allowed: (Weeks) Traditional: 2.5 weeks Block: 1 week Instructional Focus Benchmarks Learning Goal: The student will demonstrate knowledge of the worldwide impact of World War I. Annually Assessed Benchmark(s): Objectives: N/A Students will explain the causes of WWI. a) Alliances b) imperialism c) militarism d) nationalism EduSoft Mini-Assessment(s): N/A Students will analyze the major events of WWI. Students will identify major leaders of the war. Date Range: N/A Students will explain the outcomes and major effects of the war. Citing causes and consequences of the Russian Revolution. Item Specification Notes: Students will analyze the aftermath of WWI. a) Rise of communism b) Great depression c) Rise of Stalin, Hitler, Mussolini and Hirohito Content Limits: N/A Attributes/Stimulus: N/A Benchmarks/Standards Essential Content & Understanding: Supporting LAFS and MAFS Standards Causes of World War I • Alliances that divided Europe into competing camps Key Vocabulary SS.912.W.7.1: Analyze the causes of • Nationalistic feelings World War I including the formation of • Diplomatic failures Imperialism-the policy of extending European alliances and the roles of • Imperialism the rule or authority of an empire or imperialism, nationalism, and • Competition over colonies nation over foreign countries, or of militarism. • Militarism acquiring and holding colonies and SS.912.W.7.2: Describe the changing Major events dependencies. nature of warfare during World War I. • Assassination of Austria’s Archduke Ferdinand • United States enters war Protectorate-the relation of a SS.912.W.7.3: Summarize significant • Russia leaves the war strong state toward a weaker state effects of World War I. or territory that it protects and Major leaders partly controls. SS.912.W.7.4: Describe the causes and • Woodrow Wilson effects of the German economic crisis • Kaiser Wilhelm II Indemnity-protection or security of the 1920s and the global depression of the 1930s, and analyze how against damage or loss. Essential Understandings governments responded to the Great Industrial nations in Europe needed natural resources and markets to Depression. Conscription-compulsory expand their economies. enrollment of persons for military or Additional Reoccurring Standards These nations competed to control Africa and Asia to secure their naval service; draft. economic and political success. Mobilization-to organize or adapt (industries, transportation facilities, etc.) for service to the government in Imperialism spread economic, political, and social philosophies of Europe throughout the world. Essential Questions: Why did conflict in the Balkans spread to the rest of Europe in 1914? What were the major events that shaped the course of the war? Who were the major leaders? What were the most significant global effects of World War I? What were the aims and motives of the victorious powers in drawing up the Treaty of Versailles? Was the Treaty a fair one? Was the German response justified? What were the main causes of the Russian Revolution? Why did the Bolsheviks succeed? What was the League of Nations and why did it fail? How was the mandate system structured and what was its purpose? 2014-2015 Curriculum Blueprint Grade: 9-12 Course: World History Topic/Idea: 8. World War I and Its Aftermath time of war. Propaganda-information, ideas, or rumors deliberately spread widely to help or harm a person, group, movement, institution, nation, etc. Armistice-a temporary suspension of hostilities by agreement of the warring parties; truce Reparation-compensation in money, material, labor, etc., payable by a defeated country to another country or to an individual for loss suffered during or as a result of war. Mandate-an authoritative order or command Depression-an economic condition characterized by substantial and protracted unemployment, low output and investment Collective bargaining-the process by which wages, hours, rules, and working conditions are negotiated and agreed upon by a union with an employer for all the employees collectively whom it represents. Deficit-a lack or shortage Fascism-a governmental system led by a dictator having complete power, forcibly suppressing opposition and criticism, regimenting all industry, commerce, etc., and emphasizing an Resistance to imperialism took many forms including armed conflict and intellectual movements. World War I (1914-1918) was caused by competition among industrial nations in Europe and a failure of diplomacy. Outcomes and global effects • Colonies’ participation in the war, which increased demands for independence • End of the Russian Imperial, Ottoman, German, and AustroHungarian empires • Enormous cost of the war in lives, property, and social disruption Time Allowed: (Weeks) Traditional: 2.5 weeks Block: 1 week What problems might have arisen from such a system? How and why did the world economy collapse? How did the effects of the depression change the world? How effective were the responses to the depression by the Western democracies? Why did dictatorial governments emerge in Germany, Italy, Japan, and the U.S.S.R. after World Treaty of Versailles • Forced Germany to accept guilt for war and loss of territory and pay War I? reparations How did these regimes affect the world following • Limited the German military World War I? Essential Understandings Why did various countries around the world The war transformed European and American life, wrecked the economies of Europe, and planted the seeds for a second world war. embrace totalitarianism in the 1920s and 1930s? Causes of 1917 revolutions • Defeat in war with Japan in 1905 • Landless peasantry • Incompetence of Tsar Nicholas II • Military defeats and high casualties in World War I Rise of communism • Bolshevik Revolution and civil war • Vladimir Lenin’s New Economic Policy • Lenin’s successor—Joseph Stalin Essential Understandings Tsarist Russia entered World War I as an absolute monarchy with sharp class divisions between the nobility and peasants. The grievances of workers and peasants were not resolved by the Tsar. Inadequate administration in World War I led to revolution and an unsuccessful provisional government. A second revolution by the Bolsheviks created the communist state that ultimately became the U.S.S.R. Resources/Links: Haiku Learning - AP World World History Practice Test World History for All History World World History Matters Federal Resources for Education Excellence Discovery Education History Channel World History Archives U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum Times (Around the World) Teachers will complete 4 DBQs within a full year course. DBQ Option: What were the Underlying Causes of World War I? 2014-2015 Curriculum Blueprint Grade: 9-12 Course: World History Topic/Idea: 8. World War I and Its Aftermath aggressive nationalism and often racism. Totalitarianism-absolute control by the state or a governing branch of a highly centralized institution. League of Nations • International cooperative organization • Established to prevent future wars • United States not a member • Failure of League because it did not have power to enforce its decisions The mandate system • The system was created to administer the colonies of defeated powers on a temporary basis. • France and Great Britain became mandatory powers in the Middle East. Essential Understandings After World War I, international organizations and agreements were established to avoid future conflicts. Causes of worldwide depression • German reparations • Expansion of production capacities and dominance of the United States in the global economy • High protective tariffs • Excessive expansion of credit • Stock Market Crash (1929) Impact of world depression • High unemployment in industrial countries • Bank failures and collapse of credit • Collapse of prices in world trade • Nazi Party’s growing importance in Germany; Nazi Party’s blame of European Jews for economic collapse Essential Understandings A period of uneven prosperity in the decade following World War I (1920s) was followed by worldwide depression in the 1930s. Depression weakened Western democracies, making it difficult for them to challenge the threat of totalitarianism. U.S.S.R. during the Interwar Period—Joseph Stalin • Entrenchment of communism • Stalin’s policies (five-year plans, collectivization of farms, state industrialization, secret police) Time Allowed: (Weeks) Traditional: 2.5 weeks Block: 1 week 2014-2015 Curriculum Blueprint Grade: 9-12 Course: World History Topic/Idea: 8. World War I and Its Aftermath • Great Purge Germany during the Interwar Period—Adolf Hitler • Inflation and depression • Democratic government weakened • Anti-Semitism • Extreme nationalism • National Socialism (Nazism) • German occupation of nearby countries Italy during the Interwar Period—Benito Mussolini • Rise of fascism • Ambition to restore the glory of Rome • Invasion of Ethiopia Japan during the Interwar Period—Hirohito and Hideki Tojo • Militarism • Industrialization of Japan, leading to drive for raw materials • Invasion of Korea, Manchuria, and the rest of China Essential Understandings Economic dislocations following World War I led to unstable political conditions. Worldwide depression in the 1930s provided opportunities for the rise of dictators in the Soviet Union, Germany, Italy, and Japan. A communist dictatorship was established by Vladimir Lenin and continued by Joseph Stalin in the Soviet Union. The Treaty of Versailles worsened economic and political conditions in Europe and led to the rise of totalitarian regimes in Italy and Germany. Japan emerged as a world power after World War I and conducted aggressive imperialistic policies in Asia. Time Allowed: (Weeks) Traditional: 2.5 weeks Block: 1 week 2014-2015 Curriculum Blueprint Grade: 9-12 Course: World History (Weeks) Topic/Idea: 9. World War II: World View Instructional Focus Benchmarks Annually Assessed Benchmark(s): N/A EduSoft Mini-Assessment(s): N/A Date Range: N/A Item Specification Notes: Content Limits: N/A Attributes/Stimulus: N/A Traditional: 2.5 weeks Block: 1 week Learning Goal: The student will demonstrate knowledge of the worldwide impact of World War II. Objectives: Identify the causes of WWII. Describe the major events of WWII. Identify the key leaders during WWII. Analyze how Hitler was appeased during the build-up before WWII. Describe genocide and why it happens. Describe the elements leading to the Holocaust. Compare examples of genocide throughout history. Analyze the efforts of reconstruction in Germany. Analyze the efforts of reconstruction in Japan. Benchmarks/Standards Essential Content & Understanding: Supporting LAFS and MAFS Standards Economic and political causes of World War II SS.912.W.7.5: Describe the rise of authoritarian • Aggression by totalitarian powers (Germany, Demilitarized-to deprive of military character; governments in the Soviet Union, Italy, Italy, Japan) free from militarism. Germany, and Spain, and analyze the policies • Nationalism and main ideas of Vladimir Lenin, Joseph Stalin, • Failures of the Treaty of Versailles Appeasement-to bring to a state of peace, quiet, Benito Mussolini, Adolf Hitler, and Francisco • Weakness of the League of Nations Franco. ease, calm, or contentment; pacify; soothe • Appeasement • Tendencies towards isolationism and Sanction-a provision of a law enacting a penalty SS.912.W.7.6: Analyze the restriction of pacifism in Europe and the United States individual rights and the use of mass terror for disobedience or a reward for obedience. against populations in the Soviet Union, Nazi Major events of the war (1939-1945) • German invasion of Poland Partisan-an adherent or supporter of a person, Germany, and occupied territories. • Fall of France group, party, or cause, especially a person who SS.912.W.7.7: Trace the causes and key events • Battle of Britain shows a biased, emotional allegiance. related to World War II. • German invasion of the Soviet Union • Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor Genocide-the deliberate and systematic SS.912.W.7.8: Explain the causes, events, and • D-Day (Allied invasion of Europe) extermination of a national, racial, political, or effects of the Holocaust (1933-1945) including • Atomic bombs dropped on Hiroshima and its roots in the long tradition of anti-Semitism, Nagasaki cultural group. 19th century ideas about race and nation, and Nazi dehumanization of the Jews and other Major leaders of the war victims. • Franklin D. Roosevelt—U.S. President Key Vocabulary: Time Allowed: SS.912.W.7.9: Identify the wartime strategy and post-war plans of the Allied leaders. • Harry Truman—U.S. President after death of President Roosevelt • Dwight D. Eisenhower—U.S. general • Douglas MacArthur—U.S. general Essential Questions: What were the causes of World War II? Europe, Asia and the Pacific between 1939 and 1943? How did the war develop in Europe, Africa, Asia and the Pacific between 1943 and 1945? Was dropping the atomic bomb necessary? Who were the major leaders of World War II and what role did they play in the war effort? Why did the Holocaust occur? What are other examples of genocides in the twentieth century? What were the outcomes of World War II? What were the war crimes trials? What were the international cooperative organizations created after World War II? How did the Allies promote reconstruction of the defeated powers? 2014-2015 Curriculum Blueprint Grade: 9-12 Course: World History (Weeks) Topic/Idea: 9. World War II: World View SS.912.W.7.10: Summarize the causes and effects of President Truman's decision to drop the atomic bombs on Japan. • George Marshall—U.S. general • Winston Churchill—British prime minister • Joseph Stalin—Soviet dictator • Adolf Hitler—Nazi dictator of Germany • Hideki Tojo—Japanese general • Hirohito—Emperor of Japan Additional Reoccurring Standards Elements leading to the Holocaust • Totalitarianism combined with nationalism • History of anti-Semitism • Defeat in World War I and economic depression blamed on German Jews • Hitler’s belief in the master race • Final solution—Extermination camps, gas Chambers Time Allowed: Traditional: 2.5 weeks Block: 1 week Resources/Links: Haiku Learning - AP World World History Practice Test World History for All SS.912.W.7.11: Describe the effects of World History World War II. World History Matters Federal Resources for Education Excellence SS.912.W.9.3- Explain cultural, historical, and Essential Understandings economic factors and governmental policies Many economic and political causes led toward Discovery Education History Channel that created the opportunities for ethnic World War II. Major theaters of war included World History Archives cleansing or genocide in Cambodia, the Balkans, Africa, Europe, Asia, and the Pacific Islands. U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum Rwanda and Darfur, and describe various Leadership was essential to the Allied victory. Times (Around the World) governmental and non-governmental responses to them. Terms to know • Genocide: The systematic and purposeful Teachers will complete 4 DBQs within a full SS.912.W.9.2- Describe the causes and effects destruction of a racial, political, religious, or year course. of twentieth century nationalist conflicts. cultural group. Examples of other genocides • Armenians by leaders of the Ottoman Empire • Peasants, government and military leaders, and members of the elite in the Soviet Union by Joseph Stalin • The educated, artists, technicians, former government officials, monks, and minorities by Pol Pot in Cambodia • Tutsi minority by Hutu in Rwanda • Muslims and Croats by Bosnian Serbs in former Yugoslavia Essential Understandings There had been a climate of hatred against Jews in Europe and Russia for centuries. 2014-2015 Curriculum Blueprint Grade: 9-12 Course: World History Topic/Idea: 9. World War II: World View Various instances of genocide have occurred throughout the twentieth century. Outcomes of World War II • European powers’ loss of empires • Establishment of two major powers in the world: The United States and the U.S.S.R. • War crimes trials • Division of Europe—Iron Curtain • Establishment of the United Nations • Marshall Plan • Formation of North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) and Warsaw Pact Efforts for reconstruction of Germany • Democratic government installed in West Germany and West Berlin • Germany and Berlin divided among the four Allied powers • Emergence of West Germany as economic power in postwar Europe Efforts for reconstruction of Japan • U.S. occupation of Japan under MacArthur’s administration • Democracy and economic development • Elimination of Japanese offensive military capabilities; United States’ guarantee of Japan’s security • Emergence of Japan as dominant economy in Asia Essential Understandings The outcomes of World War II included the war crimes trials, the division of Europe, plans to rebuild Germany and Japan, and the establishment of international cooperative organizations. Time Allowed: (Weeks) Traditional: 2.5 weeks Block: 1 week 2014-2015 Curriculum Blueprint Grade: 9-12 Course: World History Topic/Idea: 10. The Cold War Instructional Focus Benchmarks Annually Assessed Benchmark(s): N/A EduSoft Mini-Assessment(s): N/A Date Range: N/A Item Specification Notes: Content Limits: N/A Attributes/Stimulus: N/A Containment-an act or policy of restricting the territorial growth or ideological influence of another, especially a hostile nation. Bloc-a group of nations that share common interests and usually act in concert in international affairs Welfare state-a group of nations that share common interests and usually act in concert in international affairs Traditional: 2.5 weeks Block: 1 week Learning Goal: The student will demonstrate knowledge of major events and outcomes of the Cold War. Objectives: Students will identify the causes of the Cold War. Students will critique what life was like during the Cold War. Students will compare conflicts that occurred during the Cold War. Students will describe the Korean War. Students will describe the Vietnam War. Students will critique the decisions that were made during the Cuban Missile Crisis. Students will analyze how effective containment was. Students will identify the reasons for the collapse of communism in the Soviet Union. Students will analyze the effects of the Cold War on Asia. Students will analyze how the United States became a sole superpower. Benchmarks/Standards Key Vocabulary: Time Allowed: (Weeks) Essential Content & Understanding: Supporting LAFS and MAFS Standards Beginning of the Cold War (1945-1948) • The Yalta Conference and the Soviet control of Eastern SS.912.W.8.1: Identify the United States Europe and Soviet aligned states of Europe, and • Rivalry between the United States and the U.S.S.R. contrast their political and economic • Democracy and the free enterprise system v. dictatorship characteristics. and communism • President Truman and the Policy of Containment SS.912.W.8.2: Describe characteristics • Eastern Europe—Soviet satellite nations; the Iron Curtain of the early Cold War. SS.912.W.8.3: Summarize key developments in post-war China. SS.912.W.8.4: Summarize the causes and effects of the arms race and proxy Satellite states- is a political term that refers to wars in Africa, Asia, Latin America, and the Middle East. a country which is formally independent, but under heavy influence or control by another SS.912.W.8.5: Identify the factors that country. led to the decline and fall of communism in the Soviet Union and Eastern Europe. Détente-a relaxing of tension, especially Additional Reoccurring Standards between nations, as by negotiations or agreements. Characteristics of the Cold War (1948-1989) • North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) v. the Warsaw Pact • Korean Conflict • Vietnam War • Berlin and significance of Berlin Wall • Cuban Missile Crisis • Nuclear weapons and the theory of Deterrence Collapse of Communism in the Soviet Union and Eastern Europe (1989-) • Soviet economic collapse • Nationalism in Warsaw Pact countries • Tearing down of Berlin Wall • Breakup of U.S.S.R. • Expansion of NATO Essential Questions: When did the Cold War begin? Who was to blame? What was the key turning point of the Cold War? Who won the Cold War? What was the impact of nuclear weapons? What were the causes and consequences of the collapse of the Soviet Union? How might changes at the center of an empire affect regions on the empire’s fringes? How was the People’s Republic of China established? How effective were Mao’s Great Leap Forward and Cultural Revolution? Why were the Soviet Union and China unable to maintain strong ties? 2014-2015 Curriculum Blueprint Grade: 9-12 Course: World History Topic/Idea: 10. The Cold War Essential Understandings Competition between the United States and the U.S.S.R. laid the foundation for the Cold War. The Cold War influenced the policies of the United States and the U.S.S.R. towards other nations and conflicts around the world. The presence of nuclear weapons influenced patterns of conflict and cooperation since 1945. Communism failed as an economic system in the Soviet Union and elsewhere. Terms to know • Containment: Policy for preventing the expansion of communism Conflicts and revolutionary movements in China • Division of China into two nations at the end of the Chinese civil war • Chiang Kai-shek (Jiang Jieshi)—Nationalist China (island of Taiwan) • Mao Tse-tung (Mao Zedong)—Communist China (mainland China) • Continuing conflict between the two Chinas • Communist China’s participation in Korean Conflict Conflicts and revolutionary movements in Vietnam • Role of French Imperialism • Leadership of Ho Chi Minh • Vietnam as a divided nation • Influence of policy of containment • The United States and the Vietnam War • Vietnam as a reunited communist country Today Essential Understandings Japanese occupation of European colonies in Asia heightened demands for independence after World War II. After World War II, the United States pursued a policy of containment against communism. This policy included the development of regional alliances against Soviet and Chinese aggression. The Cold War led to armed conflict in Korea and Vietnam. Time Allowed: (Weeks) Traditional: 2.5 weeks Block: 1 week Did the U.S. policy of containment exacerbate regional conflicts or prevent a much wider conflict? Resources/Links: Haiku Learning - AP World World History Practice Test World History for All History World World History Matters Federal Resources for Education Excellence Discovery Education History Channel World History Archives U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum Times (Around the World) Teachers will complete 4 DBQs within a full year course. 2014-2015 Curriculum Blueprint Grade: 9-12 Course: World History Topic/Idea: 11. Independence Movements in the Second Half of the 20th Century Instructional Focus Benchmarks Time Allowed: (Weeks) Traditional: 2.5 weeks Block: 1 week Learning Goal: The student will demonstrate knowledge of political, economic, social, and cultural aspects of independence movements and development efforts. Annually Assessed Benchmark(s): N/A EduSoft Mini-Assessment(s): N/A Date Range: N/A Item Specification Notes: Content Limits: N/A Attributes/Stimulus: N/A Objectives: Students will analyze the events and effects of the Indian Independence movement. Students will identify the steps Gandhi took to ensure independence. Students will analyze the events and effects of the independence movement in Africa. Students will compare ethnic and religious conflicts. a) Middle East b) Northern Ireland c) Balkans d) Africa e) Asia Benchmarks/Standards Essential Content & Understanding: Supporting LAFS and MAFS Standards Regional setting for the Indian independence movement SS.912.W.8.6: Explain the 20th century • Indian sub-continent Key Vocabulary: background for the establishment of the modern • British India state of Israel in 1948 and the ongoing military • India and political conflicts between Israel and the • Pakistan (former West Pakistan) Apartheid-any system or practice that separates Arab-Muslim world. • Bangladesh (former East Pakistan) people according to race, caste, etc. • Sri Lanka (former Ceylon) SS.912.W.8.7: Compare post-war independence Civil-disobedience-the refusal to obey certain movements in African, Asian, and Caribbean Evolution of the Indian independence laws or governmental demands for the purpose countries. movement of influencing legislation or government policy, • British rule in India SS.912.W.8.8: Describe the rise and goals of characterized by the employment of such • Leadership of Mohandas Gandhi nonviolent techniques as boycotting, picketing, nationalist leaders in the post-war era and the • Role of civil disobedience and passive impact of their rule on their resistance and nonpayment of taxes. societies. • Political division along Hindu-Muslim lines, SS.912.W.8.9: Analyze the successes and failures of democratic reform movements in Africa, Asia, the Caribbean, and Latin America. SS.912.W.8.10: Explain the impact of religious fundamentalism in the last half of the 20th century, and identify related events and forces in the Middle East over the last several decades. Additional Reoccurring Standards Pakistan/India Essential Questions: What effects did decolonization have on the Indian subcontinent? How would you describe India’s foreign policy during the Cold War? What path did most British colonies in Africa follow to independence? How did French efforts to maintain a unified African empire affect decolonization? What was the struggle like in Belgium and Portuguese African colonies? What were the results of the United Nations’ decision to end the mandate system in terms of states created (locations) and their subsequent problems? Essential Understandings British policies and the demand for self-rule led to the rise of the Indian independence What caused the Suez Crisis? movement, resulting in the creation of new states in the Indian sub-continent. Resources/Links: The independence movement in Africa • Right to self-determination (U.N. charter) • Peaceful and violent revolutions after World War II • Pride in African cultures and heritage • Resentment toward imperial rule and Haiku Learning - AP World World History Practice Test World History for All History World World History Matters Federal Resources for Education Excellence 2014-2015 Curriculum Blueprint Grade: 9-12 Course: World History Topic/Idea: 11. Independence Movements in the Second Half of the 20th Century economic exploitation • Loss of colonies by Great Britain, France, Belgium, and Portugal Influence of superpower rivalry during the Cold War Examples of independence movements and subsequent development efforts • West Africa—Peaceful transition • Algeria—War for Independence from France • Kenya (Britain)—Violent struggle under leadership of Kenyatta • South Africa—Black South Africans’ struggle against apartheid Essential Understandings The charter of the United Nations guaranteed colonial populations the right to self determination. Independence movements in Africa challenged European imperialism. Mandates in the Middle East • Established by the League of Nations • Granted independence after World War II • Resulted in Middle East conflicts created by religious differences French Mandates in the Middle East • Syria • Lebanon British Mandates in the Middle East • Jordan • Palestine (part became independent as the State of Israel) Essential Understandings The mandate system established after World War I was phased out after World War II. With the end of the mandates, new states were created in the Middle East. Time Allowed: (Weeks) Traditional: 2.5 weeks Block: 1 week Discovery Education History Channel World History Archives U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum Times (Around the World) Teachers will complete 4 DBQs within a full year course. DBQ Option: Gandhi, King, and Mandela: What Made Non-Violence Work? DBQ Option: How did Colonialism affect Kenya? 2014-2015 Curriculum Blueprint Grade: 9-12 Course: World History Topic/Idea: 12. Cultural, Economic and Social Conditions in the Contemporary World Instructional Focus Benchmarks Time Allowed: (Weeks) Traditional: 2 weeks Block: 1 week Learning Goal: The student will demonstrate knowledge of cultural, economic, and social conditions in developed and developing nations of the contemporary World. Annually Assessed Benchmark(s): N/A EduSoft Mini-Assessment(s): N/A Date Range: N/A Item Specification Notes: Content Limits: N/A Attributes/Stimulus: N/A Key Vocabulary: Ethnicity-ethnic traits, background, allegiance, or association. Terrorism-the use of violence and threats to intimidate or coerce, especially for political purposes. Interdependence-the quality or condition of being interdependent, or mutually reliant on each other Objectives: Students will identify conflicts based on ethnicity and religion. Students will indentify the impact of new technologies. Students will compare developed and developing nations. Students will analyze the environmental factors affecting society. Students will analyze the social challenges of society. Benchmarks/Standards Essential Content & Understanding: Essential Questions: Supporting LAFS and MAFS Standards Migrations of refugees and others • Refugees as an issue in international conflicts • Migrations of “guest workers” to European Cities How does the developing world compare with the developed world in terms of economic, social, and population characteristics? SS.912.W.9.1: Identify major scientific figures and breakthroughs of the 20th century, and assess their impact on contemporary life. Ethnic and religious conflicts SS.912.W.9.2: Describe the causes and effects of • Middle East post-World War II economic and demographic • Northern Ireland changes. • Balkans • Africa SS.912.W.9.3: Explain cultural, historical, and • Asia economic factors and governmental policies that created the opportunities for ethnic Impact of new technologies cleansing or genocide in Cambodia, the Balkans, • Widespread but unequal access to Rwanda, and Darfur, and describe various computers and instantaneous governmental and non-governmental responses communications to them. • Genetic engineering and bioethics Economic sanctions-any actions taken by one SS.912.W.9.4: Describe the causes and effects of nation or group of nations to harm the economy twentieth century nationalist conflicts. of another nation or group, often to force a SS.912.W.9.5: Assess the social and economic political change impact of pandemics on a global scale, Refugee-a person who flees for refuge or safety, particularly within the developing and underdeveloped world. especially to a foreign country, as in time of political upheaval, war, etc. Essential Understandings Both developed and developing nations face many challenges. These include migrations, ethnic and religious conflict, and new technologies. Contrasts between developed and developing nations • Geographic locations of major developed and developing countries What impact are economic development and rapid population growth having on the environment? What are the links between economic development and political freedom? How is economic interdependence changing the world? Resources/Links: Haiku Learning - AP World World History Practice Test World History for All History World World History Matters Federal Resources for Education Excellence Discovery Education History Channel World History Archives U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum Times (Around the World) 2014-2015 Curriculum Blueprint Grade: 9-12 Course: World History Topic/Idea: 12. Cultural, Economic and Social Conditions in the Contemporary World SS.912.W.9.6: Analyze the rise of regional trade blocs such as the European Union and NAFTA, and predict the impact of increased globalization in the 20th and 21st centuries. • Economic conditions • Social conditions (literacy, access to health care) • Population size and rate of growth SS.912.W.9.7: Describe the impact of and global Factors affecting environment and society response to international terrorism. • Economic development • Rapid population growth Environmental challenges Additional Reoccurring Standards • Pollution • Loss of habitat • Ozone depletion Social challenges • Poverty • Poor health • Illiteracy • Famine • Migration Relationship between economic and political freedom Free market economies produce rising standards of living and an expanding middle class, which produces growing demands for political freedoms and individual rights. Recent examples include Taiwan and South Korea. Essential Understandings Developed and developing nations are characterized by different levels of economic development, population characteristics, and social conditions. Economic development and the rapid growth of population are having an impact on the environment. Sound economic conditions contribute to a stable democracy, and political freedom helps foster economic development. Time Allowed: (Weeks) Traditional: 2 weeks Block: 1 week Teachers will complete 4 DBQs within a full year course. 2014-2015 Curriculum Blueprint Grade: 9-12 Course: World History Topic/Idea: 12. Cultural, Economic and Social Conditions in the Contemporary World Time Allowed: (Weeks) Traditional: 2 weeks Block: 1 week Economic interdependence • Role of rapid transportation, communication, and computer networks • Rise and influence of multinational corporations • Changing role of international boundaries • Regional integration (European Union) • Trade agreements—North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), World Trade Organization (WTO) • International organizations— United Nations (UN), International Monetary Fund (IMF) Essential Understandings The countries of the world are increasingly dependent on each other for raw materials, markets, and financial resources, although there is still a difference between the developed and developing nations. Geography and Humanities Reoccurring Standards SS.912.G.1.1: Design maps using a variety of technologies based on descriptive data to explain physical and cultural attributes of major world regions. SS.912.G.2.1: Identify the physical characteristics and the human characteristics that define and differentiate regions. SS.912.G.4.1: Interpret population growth and other demographic data for any given place. SS.912.G.1.2: Use spatial perspective and appropriate geographic terms and tools, including the Six Essential Elements, as organizational schema to describe any given place. SS.912.G.2.2: Describe the factors and processes that contribute to the differences between developing and developed regions of the world. SS.912.G.4.2: Use geographic terms and tools to analyze the push/pull factors contributing to human migration within and among places. SS.912.G.1.3: Employ applicable units of measurement and scale to solve simple locational problems using maps and globes. SS.912.G.2.3: Use geographic terms and tools to analyze case studies of regional issues in different parts of the world that have critical economic, physical, or political ramifications. SS.912.G.4.3: Use geographic terms and tools to analyze the effects of migration both on the place of origin and destination, including border areas. SS.912.G.4.7: Use geographic terms and tools to explain cultural diffusion throughout places, regions, and the world. SS.912.G.4.9: Use political maps to describe the change in boundaries and governments within continents over time. SS.912.H.3.1: Analyze the effects of transportation, trade, communication, science, and technology on the preservation and diffusion of culture. SS.912.H.1.3: Relate works in the arts to various cultures. Supporting LAFS and MAFS Standards LAFS.910.WHST.1.1a: Introduce precise claim(s), distinguish the claim(s) from alternate or opposing claims, and create an organization that establishes clear relationships among the claim(s), counterclaims, reasons, and evidence. LAFS.910.WHST.1.1b: Develop claim(s) and counterclaims fairly, supplying data and evidence for each while pointing out the strengths and limitations of both claim(s) and counterclaims in a discipline-appropriate form and in a manner that anticipates the audience’s knowledge level and concerns. LAFS.910.WHST.1.1c: Use words, phrases, and clauses to link the major sections of the text, create cohesion, and clarify the relationships between claim(s) and reasons, between reasons and evidence, and between claim(s) and counterclaims. LAFS.910.WHST.1.1d: Establish and maintain a formal style and objective tone while attending to the norms and conventions of the discipline in which they are writing. LAFS.910.WHST.1.1e: Provide a concluding statement or section that follows from or supports the argument presented. LAFS.910.WHST.1.2a: Introduce a topic and organize ideas, concepts, and information to make important connections and distinctions; include formatting (e.g., headings), graphics (e.g., figures, tables), and multimedia when useful to aiding comprehension. LAFS.910.WHST.1.2b: Develop the topic with well-chosen, relevant, and sufficient facts, extended definitions, concrete details, quotations, or other information and examples appropriate to the audience’s knowledge of the topic. LAFS.910.WHST.1.2c: Use varied transitions and sentence structures to link the major sections of the text, create cohesion, and clarify the relationships among ideas and concepts. LAFS.910.WHST.1.2d: Use precise language and domain-specific vocabulary to manage the complexity of the topic and convey a style appropriate to the discipline and context as well as to the expertise of likely readers. LAFS.910.WHST.1.2e: Establish and maintain a formal style and objective tone while attending to the norms and conventions of the discipline in which they are writing. LAFS.910.WHST.1.2f: Provide a concluding statement or section that follows from and supports the information or explanation presented (e.g., articulating implications or the significance of the topic). MAFS.K12.MP.1.1: Make sense of problems and persevere in solving them. Mathematically proficient students start by explaining to themselves the meaning of a problem and looking for entry points to its solution. They analyze givens, constraints, relationships, and goals. They make conjectures about the form and meaning of the solution and plan a solution pathway rather than simply jumping into a solution attempt. They consider analogous problems, and try special cases and simpler forms of the original problem in order to gain insight into its solution. They monitor and evaluate their progress and change course if necessary. Older students might, depending on the context of the problem, transform algebraic expressions or change the viewing window on their graphing calculator to get the information they need. Mathematically proficient students can explain correspondences between equations, verbal descriptions, tables, and graphs or draw diagrams of important features and relationships, graph data, and search for regularity or trends. Younger students might rely on using concrete objects or pictures to help conceptualize and solve a problem. Mathematically proficient students check their answers to problems using a different method, and they continually ask themselves, “Does this make sense?” They can understand the approaches of others to solving complex problems and identify correspondences between different approaches. MAFS.K12.MP.3.1: Construct viable arguments and critique the reasoning of others. Mathematically proficient students understand and use stated assumptions, definitions, and previously established results in constructing arguments. They make conjectures and build a logical progression of statements to explore the truth of their conjectures. They are able to analyze situations by breaking them into cases, and can recognize and use counterexamples. They justify their conclusions, communicate them to others, and respond to the arguments of others. They reason inductively about data, making plausible arguments that take into account the context from which the data arose. Mathematically proficient students are also able to compare the effectiveness of two plausible arguments, distinguish correct logic or reasoning from that which is flawed, and—if there is a flaw in an argument—explain what it is. Elementary students can construct Supporting LAFS and MAFS Standards arguments using concrete referents such as objects, drawings, diagrams, and actions. Such arguments can make sense and be correct, even though they are not generalized or made formal until later grades. Later, students learn to determine domains to which an argument applies. Students at all grades can listen or read the arguments of others, decide whether they make sense, and ask useful questions to clarify or improve the arguments. MAFS.K12.MP.5.1: Use appropriate tools strategically. Mathematically proficient students consider the available tools when solving a mathematical problem. These tools might include pencil and paper, concrete models, a ruler, a protractor, a calculator, a spreadsheet, a computer algebra system, a statistical package, or dynamic geometry software. Proficient students are sufficiently familiar with tools appropriate for their grade or course to make sound decisions about when each of these tools might be helpful, recognizing both the insight to be gained and their limitations. For example, mathematically proficient high school students analyze graphs of functions and solutions generated using a graphing calculator. They detect possible errors by strategically using estimation and other mathematical knowledge. When making mathematical models, they know that technology can enable them to visualize the results of varying assumptions, explore consequences, and compare predictions with data. Mathematically proficient students at various grade levels are able to identify relevant external mathematical resources, such as digital content located on a website, and use them to pose or solve problems. They are able to use technological tools to explore and deepen their understanding of concepts. MAFS.K12.MP.6.1: Attend to precision. Mathematically proficient students try to communicate precisely to others. They try to use clear definitions in discussion with others and in their own reasoning. They state the meaning of the symbols they choose, including using the equal sign consistently and appropriately. They are careful about specifying units of measure, and labeling axes to clarify the correspondence with quantities in a problem. They calculate accurately and efficiently, express numerical answers with a degree of precision appropriate for the problem context. In the elementary grades, students give carefully formulated explanations to each other. By the time they reach high school they have learned to examine claims and make explicit use of definitions. LAFS.910.RH.1.1: Cite specific textual evidence to support analysis of primary and secondary sources, attending to such features as the date and origin of the information. LAFS.910.RH.1.2: Determine the central ideas or information of a primary or secondary source; provide an accurate summary of how key events or ideas develop over the course of the text. LAFS.910.RH.1.3: Analyze in detail a series of events described in a text; determine whether earlier events caused later ones or simply preceded them. LAFS.910.RH.2.4: Determine the meaning of words and phrases as they are used in a text, including vocabulary describing political, social, or economic aspects of history/social science. LAFS.910.RH.2.5: Analyze how a text uses structure to emphasize key points or advance an explanation or analysis. LAFS.910.RH.2.6: Compare the point of view of two or more authors for how they treat the same or similar topics, including which details they include and emphasize in their respective accounts. LAFS.910.RH.3.7: Integrate quantitative or technical analysis (e.g., charts, research data) with qualitative analysis in print or digital text. LAFS.910.RH.3.8: Assess the extent to which the reasoning and evidence in a text support the author’s claims. LAFS.910.RH.3.9: Compare and contrast treatments of the same topic in several primary and secondary sources. LAFS.910.RH.4.10: By the end of grade 10, read and comprehend history/social studies texts in the grades 9–10 text complexity band independently and proficiently. Supporting LAFS and MAFS Standards LAFS.910.WHST.1.1: Write arguments focused on discipline-specific content. a. Introduce precise claim(s), distinguish the claim(s) from alternate or opposing claims, and create an organization that establishes clear relationships among the claim(s), counterclaims, reasons, and evidence. b. Develop claim(s) and counterclaims fairly, supplying data and evidence for each while pointing out the strengths and limitations of both claim(s) and counterclaims in a discipline-appropriate form and in a manner that anticipates the audience’s knowledge level and concerns. c. Use words, phrases, and clauses to link the major sections of the text, create cohesion, and clarify the relationships between claim(s) and reasons, between reasons and evidence, and between claim(s) and counterclaims. d. Establish and maintain a formal style and objective tone while attending to the norms and conventions of the discipline in which they are writing. e. Provide a concluding statement or section that follows from or supports the argument presented. LAFS.910.WHST.1.2: Write informative/explanatory texts, including the narration of historical events, scientific procedures/experiments, or technical processes. a. Introduce a topic and organize ideas, concepts, and information to make important connections and distinctions; include formatting (e.g., headings), graphics (e.g., figures, tables), and multimedia when useful to aiding comprehension. b. Develop the topic with well-chosen, relevant, and sufficient facts, extended definitions, concrete details, quotations, or other information and examples appropriate to the audience’s knowledge of the topic. c. Use varied transitions and sentence structures to link the major sections of the text, create cohesion, and clarify the relationships among ideas and concepts. d. Use precise language and domain-specific vocabulary to manage the complexity of the topic and convey a style appropriate to the discipline and context as well as to the expertise of likely readers. e. Establish and maintain a formal style and objective tone while attending to the norms and conventions of the discipline in which they are writing. f. Provide a concluding statement or section that follows from and supports the information or explanation presented (e.g., articulating implications or the significance of the topic). LAFS.910.WHST.2.4: Produce clear and coherent writing in which the development, organization, and style are appropriate to task, purpose, and audience. LAFS.910.WHST.2.5: Develop and strengthen writing as needed by planning, revising, editing, rewriting, or trying a new approach, focusing on addressing what is most significant for a specific purpose and audience. LAFS.910.WHST.2.6: Use technology, including the Internet, to produce, publish, and update individual or shared writing products, taking advantage of technology’s capacity to link to other information and to display information flexibly and dynamically. LAFS.910.WHST.3.7: Conduct short as well as more sustained research projects to answer a question (including a self-generated question) or solve a problem; narrow or broaden the inquiry when appropriate; synthesize multiple sources on the subject, demonstrating understanding of the subject under investigation. LAFS.910.WHST.3.8: Gather relevant information from multiple authoritative print and digital sources, using advanced searches effectively; assess the usefulness of each source in answering the research question; integrate information into the text selectively to maintain the flow of ideas, avoiding plagiarism and following a standard format for citation. LAFS.910.WHST.3.9: Draw evidence from informational texts to support analysis, reflection, and research. LAFS.910.WHST.4.10: Write routinely over extended time frames (time for reflection and revision) and shorter time frames (a single sitting or a day or two) for a range of discipline-specific tasks, purposes, and audiences.