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Lesson Plan: Format and Components Dr. Barbara Slater Stern Teacher’s name: __Dan Hausman__ Date of Lesson/Class/Period N/A Subject: _World History 1 Topic: ____Fertile Crescent Migration_ Concepts: This lesson covers migration and the Fertile Crescent. General Objective[s]: THEME THREE -- People, Places, and Environment: Social Studies teachers should possess the knowledge, capabilities, and dispositions to organize and provide instruction at the appropriate school level for the study of People, NCSS.1.3 Places, and Environment. Teachers of social studies at all school levels should provide developmentally appropriate experiences as they guide learners in the study of people, places and environments. NCSS.1.3.g ...challenge learners to examine, interpret, and analyze the interactions of human beings and their physical environments; VA SOL WHI 1 – The student will improve skills in historical research and geographical analysis by e) analyzing trends in human migration and cultural interaction from prehistory to 15000 A.D. WHI 3. – The student will demonstrate knowledge of ancient river civilizations, including Mesopatamia, by a) locating these civilizations in time and place. Learning Outcomes: In the study of the fertile crescent students will be able to create a story that shows their understanding of migration and the Fertile Crescent. (Application) Content Outline: Mesopotamia, "the land between the rivers," was the ancient Greek name for the triangular area between the Tigris and Euphrates rivers that stretched northward from a point a little above modern Baghdad to the mountains of Armenia. In modern usage, however, in reference to antiquity, the term Mesopotamia refers to most of what is now Iraq. This broader definition--the one used here--adds to the original territory the land east of the Tigris (ancient ASSYRIA) and the lower Tigris-Euphrates Valley from Baghdad to the Persian Gulf (ancient BABYLONIA). Some parts of Mesopotamia were sparsely inhabited--and others not at all--until after about 8000 BC, when the domestication of plants and animals brought about an agricultural revolution. This key step in the development of human civilization made possible an increased food supply and an accompanying growth of population and allowed nomads and cave dwellers to become farmers and herders. People began to move down from the mountains to the grassy uplands and well-watered plains of northern Mesopotamia. By 6000 BC primitive villages stretched from Assyria along a fertile strip just below the Armenian hills to the Euphrates River and beyond. Later, about 5000 BC, the occupation of the lower valley (Babylonia) was begun by people who started at the Persian Gulf and gradually moved upriver. Because of inadequate rainfall the inhabitants of the lower valley had to resort to irrigation in order to farm the land. Irrigation required a highly organized governmental structure to mobilize and direct the efforts of the workers. At the same time, a lack of stone, wood, metals, and other commodities led the people of the southern valley to develop industry in order to produce goods that could be traded for the materials needed and to develop an extensive trade with the outside world. The southern valley's more complex economy, coupled with its more productive agriculture, induced a more sizable increase in population and brought the rise of large villages, even cities. Thus by 3100 BC civilization may be said to have begun in southern Mesopotamia, the area called SUMER. Terms: Fertile Crescent: A semicircle of fertile land stretching from the southeast coast of the Mediterranean around the Syrian desert north of Arabia to the Persian Gulf. Migration: To move from one country, place, or locality to another. Civilization: A society in an advanced state of social development. Student and Teacher Activities with Estimated Time Blocks: Time 1- (5 min.) Teacher 1. The teacher begins the lesson by asking the students what is migration? What are reasons that people migrate? The teacher writes reactions on the board. 2.-4. (20 min.) 2. The teacher passes out a copy of the map and the reading (included below) and tells the students to read over them. The students must also look at their textbook to get more information. 3. The teacher asks where the Fertile Crescent is located? Why did people migrate there? What was life like Student 1. The students call out answers to the teacher’s questions. 2. The students look at the map and reading materials. 3. The students answer the teacher’s guided questions. there? What was life like on the journey to migrate there? How did the people established communities there? The teacher writes responses on the board 4. The teacher will tell the students that they must trace a path settlers would have taken from Africa to the Fertile Crescent on their maps. 5. The students are told that they must 5. (20 min.) write one story in which they are a nomad migrating to the fertile crescent. They must detail their migration to the crescent and what they do once they arrive. 4. Students complete the map exercise. 5. The students write their stories. They share with a neighbor as they finish. Materials Needed for the Lesson: Each student will need a copy of “Fertile Crescent Civilizations” Retrieved from: http://killeenroos.com/1/mesodata.htm. Each student will need a map of The Fertile Crescent, 9000- 4500 BCE Retrieved Nov. 20, 2005 from, http://www.fsmitha.com/h1/map00-fc.html Spielvogel, J. (Ed.). (2003). World history. New York: Glencoe- McGraw-Hill. The students will need a piece of paper and writing utensils. Chalkboard and chalk. Methods of Evaluating Student Progress/Performance: Students will be assessed informally as they answer the teacher’s guided questions. The teacher will be looking for appropriate participation and answers that show knowledge of the Fertile Crescent. The written work will be evaluated informally for completion and knowledge of the basic concepts. Subject Matter Integration/Extension: This lesson introduces the ideas of migration and civilization to the students. It is one of the first lessons in a world history course. Many of the ideas will be built upon to create a working framework of historical knowledge for the students. Reflections/PPT’s in Lesson: The students use this lesson to begin to learn about important historical concepts. They will have some previous knowledge as this lesson contains information that they should be familiar with due to spiraling subject matter. The lesson allows students to creatively respond and apply knowledge. Fertile Crescent Civilizations Mesopotamia, "the land between the rivers," was the ancient Greek name for the triangular area between the Tigris and Euphrates rivers that stretched northward from a point a little above modern Baghdad to the mountains of Armenia. In modern usage, however, in reference to antiquity, the term Mesopotamia refers to most of what is now Iraq. This broader definition--the one used here--adds to the original territory the land east of the Tigris (ancient ASSYRIA) and the lower Tigris-Euphrates Valley from Baghdad to the Persian Gulf (ancient BABYLONIA). Some parts of Mesopotamia were sparsely inhabited--and others not at all--until after about 8000 BC, when the domestication of plants and animals brought about an agricultural revolution. This key step in the development of human civilization made possible an increased food supply and an accompanying growth of population and allowed nomads and cave dwellers to become farmers and herders. People began to move down from the mountains to the grassy uplands and well-watered plains of northern Mesopotamia. By 6000 BC primitive villages stretched from Assyria along a fertile strip just below the Armenian hills to the Euphrates River and beyond. Later, about 5000 BC, the occupation of the lower valley (Babylonia) was begun by people who started at the Persian Gulf and gradually moved upriver. Because of inadequate rainfall the inhabitants of the lower valley had to resort to irrigation in order to farm the land. Irrigation required a highly organized governmental structure to mobilize and direct the efforts of the workers. At the same time, a lack of stone, wood, metals, and other commodities led the people of the southern valley to develop industry in order to produce goods that could be traded for the materials needed and to develop an extensive trade with the outside world. The southern valley's more complex economy, coupled with its more productive agriculture, induced a more sizable increase in population and brought the rise of large villages, even cities. Thus by 3100 BC civilization may be said to have begun in southern Mesopotamia, the area called SUMER. During the Sumerian period, which lasted until about 2000 BC, the Sumerians organized a system of flood control and a pattern of irrigation and created an enduring writing system (cuneiform), religious literature, architectural form, and economic organization. In the centuries after 3100 BC, Sumerian civilization was borrowed and adapted by the people of northern Mesopotamia as well as by those in the region now called Iran and by countries west of the Euphrates bordering on the Mediterranean Sea. Mesopotamia, unlike Egypt, was a land open to invasion, and therefore as time passed the country came under the political domination of a succession of conquerors. These people often enriched Mesopotamian culture as they introduced their traditional beliefs, practices, and customs. However, because of environmental conditions peculiar to Mesopotamia and the existence of an already complex civilization there, these later peoples adopted Sumerian culture as the basis for their cultural innovations. During the Sumerian period Semitic-speaking tribes from the west occupied the northern part of the lower valley (AKKAD) around Babylon and set up the so-called Sargonid dynasty (c.2350-2100 BC) that briefly controlled the Sumerians in the south. More important, however, were the AMORITES, a larger Semitic group that came shortly after 2000 BC. These people, with their capital at BABYLON, established the Old Babylonian Kingdom that unified the whole valley. The Amorites were numerous enough to make their language the prevailing speech in Babylonia and to merge their culture with that of the Sumerians to create a new literature, a different political organization, advances in sculpture, and a reorganization of commercial procedures. In addition, they gave an impressive maturity to the elementary mathematics and astronomy developed by the Sumerians. About the same time that the Amorites came to Babylonia, another, related Semitic group, the Assyrians, took over the eastern part (Assyria) of northern Mesopotamia. Although they, too, borrowed from the culture of the Sumerians, they proceeded more slowly than the Amorites, and Assyrian civilization flowered at a later time. Both the Babylonians and Assyrians were in political eclipse between 1550 and 1100 BC as invaders from the north dominated their respective territories: Mitannians (see MITANNI) in Assyria and KASSITES in Babylonia. By about 1100, the Mitannian and the Kassite regimes had crumbled and disappeared without having materially affected Mesopotamian culture, and the Babylonians and Assyrians rose to new political and cultural heights. Between 745 and 612 BC the Assyrians built up and then lost a great empire that encompassed Mesopotamia, Syria, Palestine, and Egypt, with tributary nations in western Iran as well. Assyrian civilization, an elaboration of the basic Mesopotamian, was the wonder of the age. After the fall of Assyria, Babylonia under the Neo-Babylonian (or Chaldean) kings--Nabopolassar (r. c.630-605), NEBUCHADNEZZAR II (r. 605-561), and others--flourished until the Persian conquest of 539 BC. Henceforth Mesopotamia was incorporated in foreign empires: the Persian, Seleucid, Parthian, Sassanian, Arab, and Ottoman. In 1921, following World War I, Mesopotamia was constituted as the new state of Iraq under British mandate. It became independent in 1932. Retrieved from: http://killeenroos.com/1/mesodata.htm __ Retrieved Nov. 20, 2005 from, http://www.fsmitha.com/h1/map00-fc.html