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World I Unit III Age of Revolutions: (1750-1917) (9 Weeks) Established Goals: The student understands and applies knowledge of historical thinking, chronology, turning points, major ideas, and individuals during the Age of Revolutions from 1750—1917 in order to evaluate how history shapes the present and the future. EALRs and GLEs: History 4.1.2, 4.2.1, 4.2.2 Economics 2.1.1 Students will understand… How the costs and benefits of economic choices have shaped events around the world in the past or present. How individuals and movements have shaped world history How cultures and cultural groups have shaped world history How technology and ideas have shaped world history Essential Questions: Students will know: Key vocabulary How the ideas of the Enlightenment and Scientific Revolution shaped world history. Explains how revolutions and nationalism have helped to shape world history from 1750 to 1917 as an age of revolutions. Scientific American French Agricultural/Industrial Latin American Russian Mexican What are the causes and consequences of political revolutions? What are the economic, technological, political, social, and geographic causes of change in human society? How are societies altered by the change from a rural/agrarian to an urban/industrial society? What are the effects of new political and economic ideas? What were the causes and consequences of the agricultural/industrial revolutions (1700-1890)? Students will be able to… Evaluate multiple reasons or factors to develop a position paper or presentation. Create strategies to avoid plagiarism and respect intellectual property when developing a paper or presentation. CBA Skills: Research teacher provided topic Create an outline Use/make in text citations according to correct state enforced format within an organized position paper Works cited page Stage 2 – Assessment Evidence Performance Tasks (Formative): entry tasks white boards vocabulary review group discussions journaling Socratic seminars DBQ’s FRQ’s Periodic check for understanding (quizzes/tests etc.) Other Evidence (Summative): Objective CBA – Causes of Conflict (2 Weeks?) S-drive Stage 3 – Learning Plan Learning Activities: Resources and Materials Needed: World History Ch. 13 (Sect. 5), Ch 16, Ch. 17, Ch 18, Ch 19, and Ch 20 Terms and Names Vocabulary: revolution, Enlightenment, absolutism, Old Regime, three estates, bourgeoisie, feudalism, scientific method, rationalism, separation of powers, philosophy, liberalism, conservatism, laissez faire, salons, enlightened despots, philosophers, monarch, absolute monarch, constitutional monarch, communism, factions, coup d’etat, industrialization, anarchy, socialism, utopia, proletariat, Entrepreneur, assembly line, mass production, factory, Congress of Vienna, Napoleonic Code, People: John Locke, Jean Jacques Rousseau, Thomas Hobbes, Montesquieu, Mary Wollstonecraft, Galileo, Rene Descartes, Voltaire, Francis Bacon, Benedict de Spinoza, Nicolas Copernicus, Adam Smith, Sir Isaac Newton, Johannes Kepler, Tyco Brahe, Thomas Edison, Benjamin Franklin, Napoleon, Frederick the Great, George Washington, Catherine the Great, Peter the Great, Karl Marx, Fredrich Engles, Louis XIV, Louis XVI, Jacobins, Maximilien Robespierre, Thomas Aquinas, James Watt, Robert Fulton, Otto von Bismarck, Robert Owen, Charles Darwin, Documents: Declaration of the Rights of Man and the Citizen, Social Contract, Declaration of Independence, Constitution, Communist Manifesto Concepts: Industrial Revolution, French Revolution, Reign of Terror, communism