Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Advanced Placement World History Syllabus, 2013-2014 Duke Ellington School of the Arts Ms. Natalie Bruford Course Outline and Expectations Our study of World History includes brief review of the geography of the continents and then examines our earth’s history from 8000 B.C.E. to 2005 C.E. In AP World History, you will develop a greater understanding of the evolution of global processes and contacts, including interactions over time. The course highlights the nature of changes in international frameworks and their causes and consequences, as well as comparison among major societies. By May, you will have mastered these tenets of any rigorous history class: 1) Crafting Historical Arguments from Historical Evidence 2) Chronological Reasoning 3) Comparison and Contextualization 4) Historical Interpretation and Synthesis The following tenets will be addressed specifically in this world history class: 1) Seeing global patterns and processes over time and space while connecting local developments to global ones 2) Comparing within and among societies, including comparing societies’ reactions to global processes 3) Considering human commonalities and differences 4) Exploring claims of universal standards in relation to culturally diverse ideas 5) Exploring the persistent relevance of world history to contemporary developments All of these concepts will be practiced throughout the course and tested in the essay portion of the AP Exam in May. Mastery of these skills is both the challenge and reward of this course! Required Materials (Yes EVERYDAY!!!) 1. One three ring binder - minimum of 1 inch 2. Pen & Pencil 3. Highlighter 4. Colored Pencils - red, blue, green, purple, orange and yellow 5. Loose leaf paper 6. Barron’s APWH- 5th edition (on occasion) Resources: a. Textbook: Bulliet, Richard, et al., The Earth and Its People: A Global History, 2nd edition, Houghton Mifflin Company, 2001 b. Supplement Reading Source: World of History, a Comparative Reader by Kevin Reilly Course Requirements - Actively participate in class discussions and complete all assignments thoroughly and promptly - Keep a well-organized and complete binder - Form study groups of 3-4 for tests and other large assignments - Regularly watch/read a reliable news source, viewing selected television programs and films. - Come for help with necessary (before school or during lunch) - Attend mandatory sessions (at lunch/ or after school) for practice AP examinations or study sessions - Students will be required to purchase the study guide: Barron’s AP World History- 5th Edition - Complete the AP World History Examination in May Engrade Each student will have an engrade account, allowing them to have access to their grade. Parent(s)/Guardians should create their own account using their student’s access code as soon as possible so that they are continually aware of the their students progress. Aside from parent teacher conferences, engrade is the best way to communicate with Ms. Bruford. Homework and Examinations All assignments are designed to enhance students’ mastery of the skills needed to succeed on the AP test May. Students will receive homework most class days and may be subsequently assessed on that homework; they will often be in the form of essays and reflections. Homework must be handed in at the very beginning of class, unless otherwise noted. Expect the unexpected, problems with your computer, flash drive and printer will occur, remember that none of these are a valid excuses for not completing an assignments. Additional assessment will be given in the form of weekly/biweekly quizzes and exams, some in class some online. Exams and quizzes will take place on a scheduled basis and will be timed. Exams are designed to facilitate students’ success on the AP Exam in May and will, therefore, include multiple-choice questions, Change-Over-Time essays, Comparison essays and Document Based Question (DBQs) Knowledge in an AP class is cumulative in nature; therefore, review questions will be incorporated at every opportunity. A student’s performance on exams and quizzes will determine the need for assistance before school at lunch or after school. Added practice exams, and increased parental involvement are greatly valued. Late work: Students must be on time to class in order for their homework to be considered on time. All assignments are to be complete by the beginning of class unless otherwise noted. Late work is only accepted due to an official EXCUSED absence or tardy. Students must attach their official excused slip from the attendance counselor upon submission of the assignment. A student will have the same number to days as the absence to make up missed homework. Quizzes and exam must be made up within the week of the absence. Plagiarism Plagiarism is copying or imitating the language, ideas or thoughts of another person and passing them off as one’s original work. Plagiarism is a serious offense of intellectual dishonesty and will not be tolerated. Students who plagiarize and students who allow others to plagiarize their work will receive a failing grade for that assignment, and may possibly fail the advisory period. In addition, Father Payne and the student’s parent(s)/guardian will be contacted. Absences and Tardiness A student with inconsistent attendance cannot succeed in this class. In accordance with Duke Ellington standards 3 unexcused absences in an advisory will result in a Saturday Intervention Day. Being tardy to class 3 times is equal to 1 unexcused absence. (careful periods 1 & 2) Each unexcused absence will result in 1% deduction from a student’s overall grade. Each tardy will result in .5% deduction from a student’s overall grade. This class is demanding and fast-paced, students are expected to be present and attentive every day. Emergencies and school-sanctioned events will occur, however students are still held responsible for completing every assignments. Students should seek reliable classmates for any missed notes. Grading Scale: A 93-100% A- 90-92.9% B+ 87-89.9% B 83-86.9% B- 80-82.9% C+ 77-79.9% C 73-76.9 C- 70-72.9% D+ 67-69.9% D 63-66.9% F 0-62.9 Grade Components Class Work/ Homework/ Projects….… 45% Tests/Quizzes………..……………….. 35% Participation/Attendance …..…….…... 20% Advanced Placement Grading Scale: AP Grade & Qualification* 5 Extremely Well Qualified 4 Well Qualified 3 Qualified 2 Possibly Qualified 1 No Recommendation * Earning College Credit and/or Placement The college or university - NOT the AP Program - award credit, advanced placement, or both. The best source of specific and up-to-date information about an individual institution’s policy is its catalog or Web site. These specifications may change year by year. _____________________________________________________________________________________ Course Schedule The Five Themes of AP World History Theme 1 - Interaction between humans and the environment Theme 2 - Development and Interaction of Cultures Theme 3 - State-building, expansion and conflict Theme 4 - Creation, expansion and interactions of Economic Systems Theme 5 - Development and transformation of social structures Subject Area and Time Chart for the AP Exam Period I Period II Period III Period IV Period V Period VI Technology and Environmental Transformation to 600 B.C.E. Organization and Reorganization of Human Societies, c. 600 B.C.E. to c. 600 C.E. Regional and Transregional Interaction, c. 600 C.E. to c. 1450 Global Interactions c 1450 to c. 1750 Industrialization and Global Integration c. 1750 to c. 1900 Accelerating Global Change and Realignments 5% 15% 20% 20% 20% 20% Period 1: Technology and Environmental Transformation to 600 B.C.E. Key Concepts 1.1 Big Geography and the Peopling of the Earth Key Concepts 1.2 The Neolithic Revolution and Early Agricultural Societies Key Concepts 1.3 The Development and Interactions of Early Agricultural, Pastoral and Urban Societies Topics for Discussion a. Neolithic Revolution b. Basic features of early civilization: Mesopotamia, Egypt, Kush, Indus, Shang, Mesoamerica and Andean Supplemental Sources (such as but not limited to): Excerpts from Guns, Germs and Steel by Jared Diamond Women and the Agricultural Revolution by Elise Boulding (Reilly) Neolithic Petroglyph from the Sahara; Neolithic stone from the Aegean Islands (Slideshow of cross-cultural artifacts) Selected Activities/ Assessments Writing Workshop (essay development) Chart each of the river civilizations utilizing the “PERSIA” method Comparative analysis (periodization) of Neolithic artifacts as presented in slideshow Predictive/ evaluative matching term test Historical causation: Compare the development of any two of the following ancient civilizations: Mesopotamia, Egypt, Kush-Meroe, Indus Valley, Shang China, Mesoamerica (Olmec, Mayan) Andean South America Historical argumentation: (maps) River Valley Civilizations, 3500-1500 B.C.E., Ancient Nubia Period II: Organization and reorganization of Human Societies, c. 600 B.C.E. to c. 600 C.E. Key Concept 2.1 The Development and Codification of Religious and Cultural Traditions Key Concept 2.2 The Development of Status and Empires Key Concept 2.3 Emergence of Transregional Networks of Communication and Exchange Topics for Discussion a. Classical civilizations: Greece, Rome, China and India including migrations of the Huns, Germanic tribes b. Interregional networks by 600 C.E. and spread of belief systems c. Silk Road trade networks, models of social and urban organizations d. Slavery in the ancient world e. Gender roles in Asia f. Merchants and the Indian Ocean Trade network Supplemental Sources (such as but not limited to): China and Rome Compared by S.A.M. Adshead (Reilly) Greek and Indian Civilizations by William H. McNeil (Reilly) Pliny Consults the Emperor Trajan (Reilly) Women in the Classical Era by Sarah Shaver Hughes and Brady Hughes (Reilly) Selected Activities/Assessments China and Rome compared via “PERSIA” chart and “ARTS” thesis statements DBQ preparation: assessing data from essay development Analysis of the trade networks (including Silk Road, Indian Ocean) Predictive/ evaluative matching term test Historical argumentation : Han China (map p. 158), The Roman Empire (map p. 144), Southeast Asia (map p. 191), The Spread of Christianity (map p. 257) Period III: Regional and Transregional Interactions, c. 600 C.E. to c. 1450 Key Concept 3.1 Expansion and Intensification of Communication and Exchange Networks Key Concept 3.2 Continuity and Innovation of State Forms and Their Interactions Key Concept 3.3 Increased Economic Productive Capacity and Its Consequences Topics for Discussion a. The Islamic World, the Crusades and Schism in Christianity b. European and Japanese feudalism c. Mongols across Eurasia and urban destruction in SW Asia, d. Black Death and its global impact e. Bantu and Polynesian migrations f. Empire models (Great Zimbabwe, Mayan, Aztec, Hans, and Inca) g. Ming Treasure Ships and Indian Ocean trade Supplemental Sources (such as but not limited to): “Were the Barbarians a Negative or a Positive Factor in Ancient and Medieval History?” by Gregory Guzman (Reilly) Section 45: From the Magna Carta (Reilly) Introduction and Section 45: Feudalism An Oath of Homage and Fealty (Reilly) Letter from a Jewish Pilgrim in Egypt (Reilly) Chronicle of Solomon bar Simpson (Reilly) Selected Activities/Assessments Predictive/ evaluative matching term test Trial AP examination : Periods I, II and III Continuity and Change-Over-Time essay preparation: contextualize data within the essay framework as provided by the College Board Debate: Positive and negative effects of the Mongols Greeting cards from medieval civilizations Historical argumentation: Africa, 1200-1500 (map p. 379), The Mongol Domains in 1300 (map p. 345), Exploration and Settlement in the Indian and Pacific Oceans before 1500 (map p. 430), Climate and Population to 1500 (charts pp. 454-455) Period IV: Global Interactions, c. 1450 to c. 1750 Key Concepts 4.1 Globalizing Networks of Communication and Exchange Key Concept 4.2 New Forms of Social Organization and Modes of Production Key Concept 4.3 State Consolidation and Imperial Expansion Topics for Discussion a. Intellectual awakenings in Europe: Renaissance to Scientific Revolution b. Encounters and Exchange: diffusion and resistance (Africa, the Americas, East Asia, Southern and Southwest Asia) c. Labor systems in the Atlantic World d. The Columbian Exchange in Atlantic and Pacific context e. Absolutism (and its alternatives); Muslims, Tokugawa, Romanov empires f. Atlantic Slave Trade and its effects Supplemental Sources (such as but not limited to): Selections from Things Fall Apart by Chinua Achebe Chocolate: From China to Commodity 3.1 Broken Spear: Aztec Account of the Conquest of Mexico (Reilly) Dutch Anatomy in Japan by Sugita Gempaku (Reilly) English Bill of Rights 95 Theses by Martin Luther Mayflower Compact Letter on Turkish Smallpox inoculation by Lady Mary Wortley Montague (Reilly) Selection from Women and Marriage in Europe and China by Mary Jo Maynes and Ann Waltner (Reilly) Selected Activities/Assessments Comparative Essay preparation: Impacts of new trade patterns on old trade routes Predictive/ evaluative matching term test Historical argumentation: European Exploration, 1420-1542 (map p. 436), Colonial Latin America in the 18th Century ( map p. 494), The African Slave Trade, 1500-1800 (map p. 533), Muslim Empires in the 16th and 17th Centuries (map p. 550), A Silver Refinery at Potosi, Bolivia, 1700 (chart p. 497) Market Place Project: Examining commodities of exchange, new and old Renaissance Gallery: Artistic, musical and cultural feast Age of Exploration project Period V: Industrialization and Global Integration, c. 1750 to c. 1900 Key Concept 5.1 Industrialization and Global Capitalism Key Concept 5.2 Imperialism and Nation-State Formation Key Concept 5.3 Nationalism, Revolution, and Reform Key Concept 5.4 Global Migration Topics for Discussion a. European Enlightenment b. American, French, Haitian and Latin American Revolutions c. Napoleonic Wars/ Congress of Vienna/ Conservatism vs. Liberalism d. Industrial Revolution: European, American and Japanese models e. Imperialism and Modernism f. Social revolutions: anti-slavery, suffrage, labor, nationalist g. Reaction to industrialism, modernism and imperislism h. Artistic movements: Romanticism Supplemental Sources (such as but not limited to): The United States Bill of Rights Selections of Communist Manifesto by Karl Marx (Reilly) Selections of The Wealth of Nations by Adam Smith (Reilly) Jamaican Letter by Simon Bolivar Letter to the Directory by Tousssaint L’Overture (Reilly) The White Man’s Burden by Rudyard Kipling (Reilly) Asia and the Industrial Revolution by Arnold Pacey (Reilly) Economic Trajectories in Latin America by John H. Coatsworth (Reilly) Selected Activities/Assessments Predictive/ evaluative matching terms test Historical argumentation: The Industrial Revolution in Britain, ca. 1850 (map p. 632), Latin America by 1830 (map p. 658) The Great Powers and Their Colonial Possessions in 1913 (mpa p. 792), Slave Occupations on a Jamaican Sugar Plantation, 1788 (chart p. 526), Birth and Death on a Jamaican Sugar Plantation (chart p. 526) Student-generated letters: conservatism vs. liberalism Berlin Conference simulation and individual reactions to its policies Document Based Question practice: College Board released essays Classical music/ art comparative analysis: Baroque, Classical and Romantic Industrial Revolution simulation: from village to city Trial AP Examination, including peer review of free response essays Period VI: Accelerating Global Change and Realignment, c. 1900 to the Present Key Concept 6.1 Science and the Environment Key Concept 6.2 Global Conflicts and Their Consequences Key Concept 6.3 New Conceptualization of Global Economy, Society, and Culture Topics for Discussion a. World War I, Total War, the Fourteen Points and the reaction to Versailles b. Economic comparisons: Soviet Communism vs. United States Consumerism c. The Great Depression: challenges, world reactions and long-term impacts d. World War II e. Post War challenges: international responses, decolonization, the “three” worlds f. Cold War: Rise and Decline g. Social Revolutions: Civil Rights, women, liberation, technology h. 21st century challenges Supplemental Sources (such as but not limited to): Fourteen Points by Woodrow Wilson Thinking about Genocide, (AP World History Special Focus) by Mahnood Mandani Why Bother with Africa and Latin America (AP World History Special Focus) by John McNeil Cultural Globalization is Not Americanization by Philippe Legrain (Reilly) The Marriage Law of the Peoples Republic of China (Reilly) Selection of the Feminine Mystique by Betty Freidan (Reilly) Hind Swaraj by Mohandas K. Ghandi (Reilly) Selected Activities/Assessments Predictive / evaluative matching test term Historical argumentation: Territorial Changes in Europe After World War I (map p. 810), Territorial Changes in the Middle East After World War I (map p. 818), Cold War Confrontation (map p, 894), Decolonization, 1947-1990 (map p. 898), World Religions (map and chart p. 960), Global Distribution of Wealth (map and chart p. 950), Population for World and Major Areas, 1750-2050 (chart p. 929) Political Cartoon creation and analysis Comparison of WWI and WWII posters Student-generated poems and songs of liberation (post WWII) Trial AP Examination