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World History and Civilization: August 2016 How to Read and Use this Calendar: Each reading assignment is expected to be completed BEFORE the next class. When you read, you should be taking your own handwritten Cornell notes. This calendar may change as the semester progresses! I will inform you if there are any changes. Monday Tuesday Wednesday 8 Teacher In-Service Day No Students 15 Blue River Valley Civilizations: Ancient Middle East and Egypt HW: Read 3.2; Take Cornell Notes; Quiz 22 Gold 29 Blue Unit 1 Part 1 Test Single Document Analysis HW: Read 2.2 (32-34), 2.4 (4650), 3.4 (82-84); Take Cornell Notes; Quiz 9 Blue Unit 1: Foundations of Civilizations and Patterns of Social and Political Interaction How did early civilizations lay the foundation for the modern world? HW: Read 1.2 & 1.3; Take Cornell Notes; Quiz 16 Gold 23 Blue Monotheism: Judaism & Christianity Do nations build religions or do religions build nations? HW: Read 8.1 & 8.2 (263-265); Take Cornell Notes; Quiz 30 Gold Thursday Friday 10 Gold 11 Blue The Neolithic Revolution and Characterization of Civilizations What characteristics do we all share? HW: Regions Map; Map Quiz 12 Gold 17 Blue Religion and Philosophy: Hinduism & Buddhism What is the role of religion in civilizations? Introduce Single Document Analysis HW: Read 3.4 (84-88); Take Cornell Notes; Quiz 24 Gold Late Start 18 Gold 19 Blue Early Chinese Philosophies: Daoism, Confucianism, Legalism What is the purpose of philosophies in early government? HW: Read 2.3 & 6.4; Take Cornell Notes; Quiz 25 Blue Monotheism: Islam What is the role of religion in the state? Single Document Analysis Practice HW: Study for Unit 1 Part 1 Test 26 Gold 31 Blue Foundations of Government: Ancient Governments (citystates, Monarchy, Theocracy, Dynastic Cycle) How and why do governments gain and lose power? HW: Read 5.2 (131-136) & 5.4; Take Cornell Notes; Quiz World History and Civilization: September 2016 How to Read and Use this Calendar: Each reading assignment is expected to be completed BEFORE the next class. When you read, you should be taking your own handwritten Cornell notes. This calendar may change as the semester progresses! I will inform you if there are any changes. Monday Tuesday Wednesday 5 6 Gold 7 Blue Foundations of Government: Roman Republic What are the advantages to a republican style government? HW: 3.3 (75-78); 3.5 (89-94); 6.2 (163-168); Take Cornell Notes; Quiz 13 Blue 14 Gold Labor Day- No School 12 Gold 19 Blue Unit 2: Role of Culture, Trade, and Interaction What are the benefits and drawbacks to the collision of cultures? 26 Gold 27 Blue Spread of Islam & Muslim Trade: Umayyad /Abbasid Empires Friday 1 Gold Foundations of Government: Ancient Governments (citystates, Monarchy, Theocracy, Dynastic Cycle) How and why do governments gain and lose power? HW: Read 5.2 (131-136) & 5.4; Take Cornell Notes; Quiz 8 Gold 2 Blue Foundations of Government: Democracy in & Alexander the Great In what ways was Classical Greek Democracy both a success and failure? HW: Read 6.1; Take Cornell Notes; Quiz 9 Blue Foundations in Government: Empires and Authoritarian Rule (Maurya/Gupta, Qin/Han, Roman) Why were there so many empires in the classical world? HW: Read 6.2 (168-172); 7.1 (190-194); Take Cornell Notes; Quiz 16 Gold 15 Blue Late Start Collapse of Classical Empires: Fall of Rome and rise of Byzantines What went wrong? HW: Study for Unit 1 Part 2 Test 20 Gold Thursday Unit 1 Part 2 Test Single Document Analysis Intro to Cultural Contributions Project 21 Blue Cultural Contributions Project Worktime HW: Prepare for Presentations 22 Gold 23 Blue Present Cultural Contribution Projects HW: Read 8.2; Take Cornell Notes; Quiz 28 Gold 29 Blue Impact of the Spread of Islam Did trade spread Islam, or did Islam spread trade? 30 Green HOMECOMING! Late Start HW: Read 8.6 & 8.7; Take Cornell Notes; Quiz Introduce Multiple Document Analysis HW: Read 9.2 (316-320); 9.3; Take Cornell Notes; Quiz World History and Civilization: October 2016 How to Read and Use this Calendar: Each reading assignment is expected to be completed BEFORE the next class. When you read, you should be taking your own handwritten Cornell notes. This calendar may change as the semester progresses! I will inform you if there are any changes. Monday Tuesday Wednesday 3 Gold Impact of the Spread of Islam Did trade spread Islam, or did Islam spread trade? Introduce Multiple Document Analysis HW: Read 9.2 (316-320); 9.3; Take Cornell Notes; Quiz 10 Blue 4 Blue Forced Interactions: How the Mongols contributed to the fall of empires Were the Mongols savage barbarians or able administrators? HW: Read 7.2; 7.3; 7.4 (216220); Take Cornell Notes; Quiz 11 Gold Unit 2 Test Multiple Document Analysis HW: Read 7.4 (211-216); 7.7; Take Cornell Notes; Quiz 17 Fall Break- No School 24 Gold 18 Blue Renaissance in Europe: Intellectual & Artistic Movements How did new ideas in art and literature change Europe? HW: Read 10.3; Take Cornell Notes; Quiz 25 Blue The English Reformation & Counter Reformation How did the Reformation create a ripple effect in European society? 5 Gold Thursday Friday 6 Blue Forced Interactions: Intro to Middle Ages (Feudalism, Manorialism, Crusades) How did the challenges of Christendom and the Crusades create new avenues for trade? HW: Study for Unit 2 Test 7 Gold 12 Blue Unit 3: The Reemergence of Europe How did new ideas change the world? The Feudal System Ends: Economic Expansion, Trade, and Challenges After so much success, why did it fail? HW: Read 10.1 & 10.2; Take Cornell Notes; Quiz 19 PLAN TESTING 13 Gold 14 20 Gold 21 Blue The Protestant Reformation How did change in art fuel changes in religion? HW: Read 10.4; Take Cornell Notes; Quiz 26 Gold 27 Blue The Scientific Revolution In what ways did religious changes fuel discovery? Assign Argumentative Essay HW: Read 11.1; Take Cornell Notes; Quiz 28 Gold Late Start Late Start Fall Break- No School HW: Read 10.5; Take Cornell Notes; Quiz 31 Blue European Exploration Why was Europe so successful during the age of exploration? HW: Read 11.2 & pg. 328; Take Cornell Notes; Quiz World History and Civilization: November 2016 How to Read and Use this Calendar: Each reading assignment is expected to be completed BEFORE the next class. When you read, you should be taking your own handwritten Cornell notes. This calendar may change as the semester progresses! I will inform you if there are any changes. Monday Tuesday Wednesday 7 Gold 14 Blue Unit 4: Absolutism & Revolutions Absolutism: How does the “divine right” give rulers ultimate power? Is it effective in the long term? Is conflict necessary in order to ensure the rights of individuals? Introduce DBQ Essay HW: Read 12.3; Take Cornell Notes; Quiz 21 Gold 1 Gold European Exploration Why was Europe so successful during the age of exploration? HW: Read 11.2 & pg. 328; Take Cornell Notes; Quiz 2 Blue Isolation of China and Japan during the Age of Exploration How do the East and West differ during the Age of Exploration? HW: Read 11.3 & 11.4; Take Cornell Notes; Quiz; Finish Argumentative Essay Outline 3 Gold 8 Blue Consequences of Exploration: Columbian Exchange and Slave Trade HW: Study for Unit 3 Test; Finish Argumentative Essay 15 Gold 9 Gold 10 Blue 22 Blue In-Class DBQ Essay 23 Thanksgiving Break- No School HW: Read 12.6; Take Cornell Notes; Quiz Late Start 16 Blue Limits of Absolutism: English Civil War HW: Read 12.4 & 12.5; Take Cornell Notes; Quiz Thursday Unit 3 Test Argumentative Essay Due HW: Read 426-427, 431-434, 438-443; Take Cornell Notes; Quiz 17 Gold 24 Thanksgiving Break- No School Friday 4 Blue European Colonization How was Colonization in the Americas different from the Spanish, Portuguese, French, and English? Why wasn’t it all the same? HW: Read 11.5 & 11.6; Take Cornell Notes; Quiz; Finish Argumentative Essay Rough Draft 11 Gold 18 Blue The Enlightenment and its Impact How does “reason” change the way we see the world? In what ways did the Enlightenment help create America as we know it? HW: DBQ prep 25 Thanksgiving Break- No School 28 Gold 29 Blue French Revolution: Causes and Early Events Why were people so mad, and what did they do about it? HW: Read 12.7; Take Cornell Notes; Quiz 30 Gold Late Start World History and Civilization: December 2016 How to Read and Use this Calendar: Each reading assignment is expected to be completed BEFORE the next class. When you read, you should be taking your own handwritten Cornell notes. This calendar may change as the semester progresses! I will inform you if there are any changes. Monday Tuesday Wednesday 5 Blue The Rise and Fall of Napoleon What was Napoleon’s legacy? 6 Gold 12 Gold 13 Blue 7 Blue End of the French Revolution HW: Study for Unit 4 Test 14 Final Exams 19 20 Winter Break- No School 26 15 21 27 Winter Break- No School Final Exams 22 Winter Break- No School 28 Winter Break- No School 1 Blue French Revolution: Radical Phase and the Reign of Terror Did the Radical Phase and the Reign of Terror uphold or betray the ideals of the Revolution? HW: Read 12.8; Take Cornell Notes; Quiz 8 Gold Final Exams Winter Break- No School Thursday Winter Break- No School 29 Winter Break- No School Friday 2 Gold 9 Blue Unit 4 Test Final Exam Review Day HW: Study for Final Exam 16 Final Exams 23 Winter Break- No School 30 Winter Break- No School Winter Break- No School World History and Civilization: January 2017 How to Read and Use this Calendar: Each reading assignment is expected to be completed BEFORE the next class. When you read, you should be taking your own handwritten Cornell notes. This calendar may change as the semester progresses! I will inform you if there are any changes. Monday Tuesday Wednesday 2 No School- Teacher Work Day 9 Blue Nationalism Around the Globe (Case studies-Germany, Italy, Latin America) HW: Read 15.1 & 15.2 (601604); Take Cornell Notes; Quiz 16 3 Blue Unit 5: Industrialism & Imperialism The Industrial Revolution: How does technology change society? (Read 13.1 in class) HW: Read 13.2; Take Cornell Notes; Quiz 10 Gold 4 Gold 17 Gold MLK Day- No School 23 Gold 24 Blue Unit 5 Test HW: Read 16.1; Take Cornell Notes; Quiz 30 Blue WWI: Warfare & Weaponry What characteristics made WWI completely different from any war before? HW: TBD 31 Gold Thursday Friday 5 Blue Industrial Revolution: Social & Economic Impacts How did urbanization change the way people lived and interacted? HW: Nationalism Reading 6 Gold 11 Blue Imperialism in Africa Why did imperialism spread so quickly around the world? HW: Read 15.4; Take Cornell Notes; Quiz 12 Gold 18 Blue Imperialism in China & Japan Why did imperialism in China look so different in Japan? 19 Gold 13 Blue Imperialism in India How did British Rule lead to dissatisfaction among native groups? HW: Read 15.5& 15.6; Take Cornell Notes; Quiz 20 Blue European Imperialism Map Late Start Political Cartoon Assignment 25 Gold Late Start HW: Study for Unit 5 Test 26 Blue Unit 6 Part 1: WWI & Russian Revolution WWI: Causes and Early Events When is war justified? HW: Read 16.2; Take Cornell Notes; Quiz 27 Gold World History and Civilization: February 2017 How to Read and Use this Calendar: Each reading assignment is expected to be completed BEFORE the next class. When you read, you should be taking your own handwritten Cornell notes. This calendar may change as the semester progresses! I will inform you if there are any changes. Monday Tuesday Wednesday 1 Blue Thursday 2 Gold 3 Blue 9 Blue Russian Revolution Why were there multiple revolutions in Russia? What was the result? HW: Read 16.3; Take Cornell Notes; Quiz 10 Gold Watch War Horse HW: Read 16.4; Take Cornell Notes; Quiz 6 Gold 13 Blue Unit 6 Part 2: Interwar Years & WWII Interwar Years: Nationalism in Africa, India, & Middle East Why did nationalist feelings erupt into unrest immediately following WWI? HW: 17.5 (706-712); Take Cornell Notes; Quiz 20 Presidents Day- No School 27 Gold Friday 7 Blue WWI Ends: US entry into the war & Treaty of Versailles Why was peace so difficult to create after the Great War? HW: Study for Unit 6 Part 1 Test 14 Gold 8 Gold 15 Blue Interwar Years: The Great Depression How did economic depression create ideal conditions for political upheaval? HW: Read 17.4; Take Cornell Notes; Quiz 16 Gold 17 Blue Interwar Years: Nationalism in Japan & China HW: Read 17.6 & 17.8; Take Cornell Notes; Quiz 21 Gold 22 Blue Interwar Years: Rise of Fascism (Hitler & Mussolini) How did political and social unrest led to the rise of fascist dictators? HW: Read 17.7; Take Cornell Notes; Quiz 23 Gold 24 Blue Interwar Years: Rise of Communism (Stalin) What factors led to the rise of Communism and Stalin in the Soviet Union? HW: Read 18.1 & 18.2; Take Cornell Notes; Quiz 28 Blue WWII: Beginning & Axis Aggression Late Start Unit 6 Part 1 Test War Horse assignment DUE HW: Read 17.2 & 17.3; Take Cornell Notes; Quiz How did the policies of appeasement and isolationism contribute to the start of WWII? HW: Read 18.3; Take Cornell Notes; Quiz World History and Civilization: March 2017 How to Read and Use this Calendar: Each reading assignment is expected to be completed BEFORE the next class. When you read, you should be taking your own handwritten Cornell notes. This calendar may change as the semester progresses! I will inform you if there are any changes. Monday Tuesday Wednesday 6 Blue WWII: Allied Victory in Europe & Japan What allowed the Allies to gain strength against the Axis powers? HW: Study for Unit 6 Part 2 Test 7 Gold 13 Gold 14 Blue Cold War Foundations: US vs USSR How did former allies, the United States, and the Soviet Union, become enemies? How did it happen so quickly? HW: Guatemalan Coup Reading 21 Gold 20 Blue Cold War in East Asia: Communist China & the Korean War How did the relationship between the US, Soviet Union, and China change throughout the Cold War? Intro to Cold War Project HW: Read 19.4; Take Cornell Notes; Quiz 1 Gold (Late Start) WWII: Beginning & Axis Aggression How did the policies of appeasement and isolationism contribute to the start of WWII? HW: Read 18.3; Take Cornell Notes; Quiz 8 Blue Unit 6 Part 2 Test Opposing Viewpoint Analysis 15 Gold Late Start 22 Blue Cold War in Southeast Asia: Vietnam War How did the struggle in Vietnam reflect the larger Cold War conflict? Project Work Time in Class HW: Read 19.5; Take Cornell Notes; Quiz Thursday Friday 2 Blue WWII: The Holocaust What happened? Who is responsible? HW: Read 18.4 & 18.5; Take Cornell Notes; Quiz 3 Gold 9 Gold 10 Blue Unit 7: The Cold War What are the global implications of the Cold War? 16 Blue Cold War in Latin America: Cuba and Guatemala HW: Read 19.3; Take Cornell Notes; Quiz 23 Gold Watch Cold War Movie HW: Read 19.1; Take Cornell Notes; Quiz 17 Gold 24 Blue End of the Cold War & Collapse of the Soviet Union How did the collapse of the Soviet Union lead to the end of the Cold War? Project Work Time in Class HW: Study for Unit 7 Test; Finish Cold War Project 27 Gold 28 Blue Unit 7 Test Present Cold War Projects 29 Gold Late Start 30 Blue Finish Cold War Project Presentations HW: Read 20.1; Take Cornell Notes; Quiz 31 Spring Break- No School World History and Civilization: April 2017 How to Read and Use this Calendar: Each reading assignment is expected to be completed BEFORE the next class. When you read, you should be taking your own handwritten Cornell notes. This calendar may change as the semester progresses! I will inform you if there are any changes. Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday 3 4 5 6 7 Spring Break- No School 10 Gold Finish Cold War Project Presentations HW: Read 20.1; Take Cornell Notes; Quiz Spring Break- No School 11 Blue Unit 8: Decolonization & Globalization Did independence cause more problems than it solved? Independence Movements: (India, Pakistan, Bangladesh) HW: Read 20.2; Take Cornell Notes; Quiz 18 Gold Spring Break- No School 12 Gold Late Start Spring Break- No School 13 Blue Independence Movements: Decolonization of Africa (Algeria, Kenya, Democratic Republic of Congo, Ghana, Mozambique) HW: TBD Spring Break- No School 14 Gold 19 Blue Formation of the Modern Middle East (Israeli & Palestinian Conflict) How did nationalism lead to conflicts in the Middle East during the 20th century? HW: Read 20.3 (832-836) & 20.4 (841-842); Take Cornell Notes; Quiz 26 Gold Late Start 20 Gold 21 Blue Conflicts in the Middle East (Gulf War, Iraq War, Arab Spring) Why have conflicts in the Middle East been important to the rest of the world? HW: TBD 27 Blue Globalization and Trade How will globalization impact your future? Introduce Global Issues Fair Project HW: Read 21.2 & 21.3; Take Cornell Notes 28 Gold 17 Blue Watch Sometimes in April (Rwandan Genocide) HW: Read 20.3 (829-831) & 20.4 (837-840); Take Cornell Notes; Quiz 24 Gold 25 Blue Finish Sometimes in April HW: Read 21.1 & 21.6; Take Cornell Notes; Quiz World History and Civilization: May 2017 How to Read and Use this Calendar: Each reading assignment is expected to be completed BEFORE the next class. When you read, you should be taking your own handwritten Cornell notes. This calendar may change as the semester progresses! I will inform you if there are any changes. Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday 1 Blue Global Issues in Developing Countries: Urbanization HW: Read 21.7; Take Cornell Notes; Quiz 2 Gold 3 Blue Watch He Named Me Malala HW: Read 21.8; Take Cornell Notes; Quiz 4 Gold 8 Gold 9 Blue 10 Gold 11 Blue Global Issues Project Work Day HW: Finish Global Issues Projects 18 Gold Unit 8 Test Global Issues Project Work Day 15 Blue Global Issues Presentations 16 Gold 22 23 Final Exam Late Start 17 Blue Final Exam Review Day 24 Final Exam 5 Blue The Effects of Globalization: Terrorism What should the world do to combat international threats of terrorism? HW: Study for Unit 8 Test 12 Gold 19 Blue Final Exam 25 Final Exam Friday Teacher In-Service Day- No School