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World History Civics-Government Standard 1: The student uses a working knowledge and understanding of governmental systems of the United States and other nations with an emphasis on the U.S. Constitution, the necessity for the rule of law, the civic values of the American republican government, and the rights, privileges, and responsibilities to become active participants in the democratic process. Benchmark 1: The student understands the rule of law as it applies individuals, family; school; local, state and national governments. Indicators: 1. Explains the purpose of rules and laws and why they are important in families, school, community, state and nation. (▲OTL 1:5:1) 2. Applies criteria useful in evaluating rules and laws (i.e. common good vs. individual rights). 3. Explains how juveniles and adults are treated differently under the law (e.g. due process, trial, age restrictions, punishment, rehabilitation, diversion). (▲7 1:1:2) 4. Analyzes how the rule of law can be used to protect the rights of individuals and to promote the common good (i.e., eminent domain, martial law during disasters, health and safety issues. (▲OTL 1:1:2) 5. Explains the recurring problems and solutions involving minority rights (e.g., Title IX, job discrimination, affirmative action). 6. Distinguishes between state and federal law as it applies to individual citizens. 7. Distinguishes between criminal and civil law as it applies to individual citizens. 8. Evaluates the importance of the rule of law in protecting individual rights and promoting the common good. 9. Evaluates the purpose and function of law. 10. Defines the difference between criminal and civil law as it applies to individual citizens (e.g., criminal: felony, misdemeanor, crimes against people, crimes against property, white-collar crimes, victimless crimes; civil: contracts, property settlements, child custody). Benchmark 2: The student understands the shared ideals and the diversity of American society and political culture. Indicators: 1. Knows how various symbols are used to depict Americans’ shared values, principles, and beliefs (i.e., eagle, flag, seals, and pledge). 2. Describes the similarities and unique qualities of cultures in the United States. 3. Identifies important founding fathers and their contributions (e.g., George Mason, Thomas Jefferson, James Madison, George Washington, Benjamin Franklin, Thomas Paine, Samuel Adams, John Adams). (▲5 1:2:4) 4. Describes the principles embodied in the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution of the U.S. including the Bill of Rights. 5. Understands core civic values inherent in the United States Constitution 6. Explains the principles and ideals of the American republican system (i.e., liberty, justice, equality of opportunity, human dignity). 7. Understands that the United States Constitution is written by and for the people and it defines the authority and power given to the government as well as recognizes the rights retained by the state governments and the people (e.g., separation of power, limited government, state’s rights, the concept “by and for the people”) 8. Recognize contributions of world culture to U.S. government (Magna Carta, Ten Commandments, Athenian Democracy, Roman Republic). 9. Defines the rights guaranteed, granted, and protected by Kansas Constitution and its amendments. (▲7 1:2:1) 10. Explains the recurring issues and solutions involving the rights and responsibilities of the individual (i.e., affirmative action, gender equity). 11. Comprehends the importance of respect for the law, education, work ethic, equal opportunity for all, and volunteerism. 12. Recognizes that a nation’s values are embodied in its constitution, statutes, and important court cases (i.e., Dred Scott v. Sandford, Plessy v. Ferguson, Brown v. Topeka Board of Education). 13. Identify historical examples of how legislative, executive, and judicial powers have been challenged at the national level (e.g., secession, appointment of officials, Marbury v Madison). 14. Bill of Rights, and Declaration of Independence that have been the foundation for unity in American society (e.g., right to free speech, religion, press, assembly; equality; human dignity; civic responsibility, sovereignty of the people). (▲OTL 1:2:2) Benchmark 3: The student understands how the U.S. Constitution allocates and restricts power and responsibility in the government. Indicators: 1. Recognizes that the United States Constitution is a written plan for the rules of government (e.g., knows the Constitution lists rules of the government compared to the rules for the family, classroom, or school). (▲2 1:3:1) 2. Explains the functions of the three branches of government. (▲5 1:3:4) 3. Explains how powers are distributed among the legislative, executive, and judicial branches at the state and national levels (i.e., checks and balances, separation of powers). 4. Compares the steps of how a bill becomes a law at state and national levels. 5. Defines federalism. 6. Defines democracy and republic. 7. Explains how the United States Constitution can be changed through amendments. (▲8 1:3:3) 8. Identifies the key ideas of the Preamble. 9. Analyzes the Declaration of Independence and the United States Constitution to identify essential ideas of American constitutional government. (▲8 1:3:4) 10. Describes how the United States Constitution supports the principle of majority rule but also protects the rights of the minority. 11. Compares the U.S. and Kansas Constitutions to identify the major responsibilities of federal, state, and local governments. 12. Compares the popular vote with the Electoral College as a means to elect government officials. 13. Explains Constitutional powers (i.e., expressed/enumerated, concurrent, implied, inherent, and reserved). (▲OTL 1:3:2) 14. Explains how authority and responsibility are balanced and divided between national and state governments in a federal system (e.g., federal: postage regulation, coinage of money, federal highways, national defense; state: state highways, state parks, education). 15. Describes how citizens, legislators, and interest groups are involved in a bill becoming a law at the state level. 16. Explains why separation of powers and a system of checks and balances are important to limit government. 17. Describes the purposes, organization, and function of the three branches of government and independent regulatory agencies in relation to the U.S. Constitution. 18. Knows the federal budgeting procedure and major areas of government spending (i.e., defense, social security, social programs). 19. Explains the role the U.S. government plays in formulating economic and foreign policy. 20. Recognizes and explains a current issue involving rights from an historical perspective (e.g., civil rights, native Americans, organized labor). Benchmark 4:The student identifies and examines the rights, privileges, and responsibilities in becoming an active civic participant. Indicators: 1. Understands the responsibilities and rights of the individual in groups; such as, family, peer group, class, school, and local, state, and national governments. 2. Knows that effective informed citizenship is a duty of each citizen (i.e., jury service, voting, running for office, and community service). (▲ 4 1:4:1) 3. Identifies the privileges of U.S. citizenship (i.e., right to vote, hold public office, serve on a jury). 4. Examines the steps necessary to become an informed voter (i.e., recognize issues and candidates, stands taken by candidates on issues, personal choice, voting). 5. Compares the methods by which we elect government officials (i.e., Electoral College, popular vote). 6. Identified criteria and processes to attain naturalized citizenship (i.e., residence requirements, proof of moral character, required knowledge and skills). 7. Understand how to elect officials. 8. Compares and contrasts the rights of people living in Ancient Greece (Sparta and Athens) and Classical Rome with the Modern United States (▲6 1:4:1) 9. Acquires and records relevant information about issues involving rights, privileges, and responsibilities. 10. Defines issues regarding civic responsibilities of citizens (e.g. obeying the law, paying taxes, voting, jury duty, serving our country, involved in the political process). 11. Examines the role of political parties in channeling public opinion, allowing people to act jointly, nominating candidates, conducting campaigns, and training future leaders. (▲OTL 1:4:1) 12. Illustrates issues regarding economic rights within the United States (i.e., free enterprise, rights of choice, government regulation). 13. Explains how public policy is formed and carried out at local, state, and national levels. Benchmark 5:The student understands various systems of governments and how nations and international organizations interact. Indicators: 1. Identifies and demonstrates leadership at home, classroom, and school. (▲2 1:5:1) (▲K 1:5:1) 2. Identifies the goods and services provided by local government in the community (e.g. education, health agency, fire department, police, care for local community property, parks and recreation). (▲7 1:5:3) 3. Identifies the basic features of systems of government (e.g. republic, democracy, monarchy, dictatorship, oligarchy, theocracy). (▲6 1:5:1) 4. Defines capital as the location of state and national government. (▲4 1:5:2) 5. Understands that the type of government and its functions influence the treatment of its citizens (i.e., republic, democracy, monarchy, dictatorship). 6. Compares the structure and function of local, Kansas, and federal governments (i.e., make laws, carry out laws, enforce laws, manage conflicts, provide for the defense of the nation). 7. Examines the basic features of state and national political system and describes the ways each system meets or fails to meet the needs and wants of its citizens (i.e., republic, democracy, monarchy, dictatorship). 8. Describes the ways political systems meet or fail to meet the needs and wants of their citizens (e.g., republic, democracy, monarchy, dictatorship oligarchy, theocracy). 9. Defines the characteristics of nations (e.g., territory, population, government, sovereignty). 10. Compares various political systems/economic systems with that of the republican government of the U.S. in terms of ideology, structure, function, institutions, decision-making processes, citizenship roles and political culture (i.e., constitutional monarchy, parliamentary democracy, dictatorships, capitalism, fascism, socialism, communism, tribal government). 11. Discuss the purpose of international relations both regional and worldwide (trade, defense, economic, and defense alliances, regional security). 12. Identifies the types of local government (e.g., cities, townships, counties), and; the roles of people who make up local government. (e.g., police, mayor/city manager, county commissioner, city council members, school board members) 13. Examines the purpose and functions of multi-national organizations (e.g. NATO, International Red Cross, United Nations). (▲OTL 1:5:3) 14. Examines the use of various tools in carrying out U.S. foreign policy (e.g., trade sanctions, extension of “most favored nation” status, military interventions). 15. Examines government responses to international affairs from an historical perspective (e.g., immigration, Spanish-American war,). Economics Standard 2: The student uses a working knowledge and understanding of major economic concepts, issues, and systems of the United States and other nations; and applies decision-making skills as a consumer, producer, saver, investor, and citizen in an interdependent world. Benchmark 1: The student understands how limited resources require choices. Indicators: 1. Understands the concept of exchange and the use of money to purchase goods and services (e.g., trade with barter or money). (▲2 2:2:1) 2. Determines how unlimited wants and limited resources lead to choices that involve opportunity cost. (▲3 2:1:1) (▲2 2:1:3) (▲1 2:1:1) (▲K 2:1:1) 3. Identifies an example of a producer and consumer 4. Traces the production, distribution, and consumption of a particular good in the state or region. (▲4 2:1:3) 5. Knows the difference between goods and services, and provides examples how each satisfies people’s wants and needs. (▲2 2:1:1) 6. Knows that economic specialization occurs when people produce a narrower range of goods and services than they consume. 7. Gives examples of economic interdependence of at least two of the following levels: local, state, regional, national and international. 8. Examine the effect of scarcity on the price, production, consumption and distribution of goods and services (e.g. price goes up and production goes down and distribution is limited). (▲8 2:1:1) 9. Determine how inventions led to innovations that have economic value. 10. Identifies substitutes and complements for selected goods and services. 11. Understand how scarcity of resources has caused Americans to adapt and make choices. 12. Explains that how people choose to use resources has both present and future consequences. 13. ($) Explains the factors that cause unemployment (e.g., seasonal demand for jobs, changes in skills needed by employers, other economic influences, downsizing, outsourcing). 14. Explains how economic choices made by societies have intended and unintended consequences. (e.g., mercantilism, “planned economy” under Soviet Union, Adam Smith-Invisible hand/Laissez Faire). (▲OTL 2:1:2) Benchmark 2: The student understands how the market economy works in the United States. Indicators: 1. Identifies factors that change supply or demand for a product (e.g., supply: technology changes; demand: invention of new and substitute goods; supply or demand: climate and weather). (▲5 2:2:2) 2. Identifies the entrepreneur as the one who organizes other economic resources to produce goods and services. 3. ($) Explains how positive and negative incentives affect the way employees respond (e.g., wage levels, benefits, work hours, working conditions). (▲8 2:2:4) 4. ($) Describes the four basic types of earned income (i.e., wages and salaries, rent, interest, and profit). (▲8.2.2.2) 5. ($) Explains the factors that cause unemployment (i.e., down sizing, outsourcing, seasonal demand for jobs, changes in skills needed by employers, other economic influences). (▲8 2.2.3) 6. Uses a diagram to explain the importance of the circular flow to a market economy (illustration: firms make products, sell the products, households earn income and buy the products, the money goes to the firms who use the money to pay for the resources they use or hire (workers), who take the money back to the households, and so on). 7. Visualize the impact of inflation and deflation on the value of money and purchasing power. 8. Explain how economic decisions of people can influence the market system. 9. Explains the importance of economic growth to an economy and how GDP is used to measure it. 10. Explains the factors that could change the supply or demand for a product (e.g., societal values: prohibition of alcohol; scarcity of resources: war; technology: assembly line production). (▲OTL 2:2:4) 11. ($) Illustrate the impact of inflation or deflation on the value of money and people’s purchasing power (e.g., cattle towns, mining towns, time of “boom”, time of depression). (▲7 2.1.2) 12. Distinguish the role of money, banking, and the Federal Reserve System in the economy (e.g., interest rates, monetary policy). Benchmark 3: The student analyzes how different economic systems, institutions, and incentives affect people. Indicators: 1. Explains the advantage of choosing to save or spend money that is earned or received. (▲2 2:3:1) (▲1 2:3:1) (▲K 2:3:1) 2. Defines a budget as a plan for spending and saving income (▲2 2:3:2) 3. Defines imports and exports and gives examples of each. 4. Explains how positive and negative incentives affect the way people behave (i.e., taking a driver’s education class to reduce insurance costs; seeking a job with higher wages; paying a fine for library books returned late; losing pay on the job for an unexcused absence). 5. Defines market economy as an economic system in which buyers and sellers make major decisions about production and distribution, based on supply and demand. (▲4 2:3:1) 6. Gives examples of changes that might influence international trade (i.e., U.S. sanctions, weather, exchange rate, war, boycotts, embargoes). (▲7 2:3:1) 7. Explains the costs and benefits of trade between people across nations (e.g., job loss vs. cheaper prices, environmental costs vs. wider selection of goods and services). 8. Describes the types of specialized economic institutions found in market economies (i.e., corporations, partnerships, labor unions, banks, nonprofit organizations). 9. Recognizes the economic conditions under which trade takes place among nations (e.g., students recognize that trade takes place when nations have wants or needs they cannot fulfill on their own). 10. Individuals and nations have a comparative advantage in the production of goods for services if they can produce a product at a lower opportunity cost than other individuals or nations. 11. Compares characteristics of traditional command, market, and mixed economies on the basis of property rights, factors of production and locus of economic decision-making (e.g., what, how for whom). (▲OTL 2:3:2) 12. Gives examples of factors that might influence international trade (e.g., United States economic sanctions, weather, exchange rate, war, boycotts, embargos). Benchmark 4: The student analyzes the role of the government in the economy. Indicators: 1. Identifies goods and services provided by two different levels of government (i.e., firefighters, highways, NASA, museums). 2. Describes revenue sources for different levels of government (i.e., personal income taxes, property taxes, sales tax, interest, borrowing). 3. Gives examples of choices the government must make with limited resources (i.e., highways, welfare, defense, education, social security). 4. Compares and contrasts government revenues and expenditures. 5. Explains why certain goods and services are provided by the government (e.g., infrastructure, schools, waste management, national defense). 6. Describe the impact of government regulation, or lack thereof, with in a market economy. 7. Evaluates the relationship between Federal budget and the national debt (e.g., deficits, surpluses) and the national debt. 8. Identifies goods and services provided by local, state, and national governments (e.g., transportation, education, defense). 9. Explains the advantages and disadvantages when fiscal policy is used by the Federal Government to influence the U.S. economy (e.g., change in taxes, spending). 10. Analyzes how trade agreements affect international trade and economic and social conditions (i.e., GATT, NAFTA, Most Favored Nation Status). 11. Evaluates the costs and benefits of governmental economic and social policies on society (e.g., minimum wage laws, anti-trust laws, EPA Regulations, Social Security, farm subsidies, international sanctions on agriculture, Medicare, unemployment insurance, corporate tax credits, public work projects). (▲OTL 2:4:4) 12. Gives examples of how monopolies affect consumers, the prices of goods, laborers, and their wages (e.g., monopolistic employers and development of labor unions; oil, steel, and railroad monopolies; antitrust laws). Benchmark 5: The student makes effective decisions as a consumer, producer, saver, investor, and citizen. Indicators: 1. Determines the costs and benefits of a spending, saving, or borrowing decision based on information about products and services. (▲7 2:5:1) (▲5 2:5:1) (▲3 2:5:1) (▲2 2:5:2) 2. Identifies consequences of borrowing and lending. (▲3 2:5:2) 3. ($) Gives an example of income and how the money was spent or saved. (▲3 2:5:3) 4. Compares the opportunity cost of consumer spending decisions. 5. Uses product information to identify costs and benefits to make informed choices among alternatives. (▲4 2:5:2) 6. ($) Explains how the demand and supply of labor are influenced by productivity, education, skills, and retraining wage rates (e.g., spinning mills and the beginning of the modern factory system, the increased use of machinery throughout the Industrial Revolution, assembly lines). (▲OTL 2:5:3) (▲4 2:5:1) 7. Uses the concept of trade-offs to make a decision 8. Understands basic concepts of interest and how it is calculated. 9. Explains that budgeting requires trade-offs in managing income and spending. 10. ($) Identifies the opportunity cost that results from a spending decision. (8 2.5.2) 11. Interpret how supply of and demand for workers in various careers affect income. 12. ($) Explains how an individual’s income will differ in the labor market depending on supply and demand for his/her skills, abilities, and/or education level. (OTL 2.5.2) 13. ($) Illustrate the costs and benefits of investment alternatives (e.g., stock market, bonds, real estate). (ΔOTL 2:5:6) 14. Explains how an individual’s income will differ in the labor market depending on supply of and demand for his/her human capital (e.g., skills, abilities, and/or education level). 15. ($) Determines the opportunity cost of decisions related to a personal finance plan or budget. Geography Standard 3: The student uses a working knowledge and understanding of the spatial organization of Earth’s surface and relationships among people, places, and physical and human environments in order to explain the interactions that occur in our interconnected world. Benchmark 1: Maps and Location: The student uses maps, graphic representations, tools, and technologies to locate, use, and present information about people, places, and environments. Indicators: 1. Locates major physical and political features of Earth from memory and compares the relative locations of those features. (See Appendix). (ΔOTL 3:1:1 also see pg. 289 in KSDE document) 2. Explains and uses map titles, symbols, cardinal and intermediate and directions, legends, latitude and longitude. (Δ6 3:1:1) (Δ2 3:1:2) (Δ1 3:1:1) (ΔK 3:1:1) 3. Uses and makes maps of classroom, school, neighborhood, cities, and states to locate familiar places and explain why particular locations are used for certain human activities. (Δ3 3:1:6) (Δ2 3:1:1) (Δ1 3:2:1) 4. Locates major physical and political features of Earth from memory (5 3:1:2) (4 3:1:5) (3 3:1:7) (2 3:1:3) (1 3:1:4) (K 3:1:2) 5. Applies geographic tools, including grid systems, symbols, legends, scales, and a compass rose to construct and interpret maps. (Δ4 3:1:1) (Δ3 3:1:1) 6. Identifies major landforms and bodies of water in regions of the United States (e.g., mountains, plains, islands, peninsulas, rivers, oceans). (Δ4 3:1:4) (Δ3 3:1:4) 7. Identifies and give examples of the difference between political and physical features within a region. (Δ4 3:1:3) (Δ3 3:1:3) 8. Explains the past and present spatial patterns and densities of places and features on Earth’s surface (i.e., mountain ranges, river systems, agricultural land, urban areas, transportation routes). 9. Locates major political and physical features of Earth from memory and compare the relative locations of those features (see Appendix 2 for assessment items). 10. Develops and used different kinds of maps, globes, and graphs, charts and models, geographic tools, and technology to understand the world around them. 11. Identifies major patterns of world populations, physical features, ecosystems, and cultures using historic and contemporary geographic tools (e.g., maps, illustrations, photographs, documents, data). 12. Uses mental maps of Kansas to answer questions about the location of physical and human features (e.g., drier in the West; major rivers; population centers; major cities: Topeka, Wichita, Hays, Dodge City, Kansas City; major interstates and highways: I-70, US 56). 13. Selects and explains reasons for using different geographic tools, graphic representation, and/or technologies to analyze selected geographic problems (e.g., map projections, aerial photographs, satellite images, geographic information systems). 14. Develops and uses different kinds of maps, globes, graphs, charts, databases, and models. Benchmark 2: Places and Regions: The student analyzes the human and physical features that give places and regions their distinctive character. Indicators: 1. Identifies and compares the physical characteristics of Kansas and regions of the United States (i.e. location, land and water features, climate, vegetation, resources; Southeast, Northeast, Great Plains, Rocky Mountains, Southwest, Pacific Northwest, Alaska, Hawaii). 2. Identifies and compares the major physical characteristics of state, region, country, and world from a historical perspective. (Δ3 3:2:1) 3. Analyzes the factors that contribute to human changes in regions. (e.g., technology alters use of place, migration, changes in cultural characteristics, political factors). (ΔOTL 3:2:2) (Δ2 3:2:1) 4. Identifies and describes the location, landscape, climate, and resources of early world civilization (e.g. Mesopotamia, Egypt, India, China, Greece, Rome, Middle/South America, Western Europe, West Africa, Japan) (Δ6 3:2:3) 5. Explains the diffusion of people and ideas from the early center of civilization to other regions of the world (i.e., trade, conquest, migration; government, religion, language, food, technology, customs, arts). 6. Explains how U.S. and world regions are interdependent (i.e., through trade, diffusion of ideas, human migration, economic networks, international conflicts, participation in international organizations). 7. Explains the effects of a label on the image of a region (i.e., Rust Belt, Tornado Alley, Sun Belt, “The Great American Desert”). 8. Describe how places and regions may be identified by cultural symbols (i.e. Acropolis in Athens, Great Wall of China, Great Pyramid at Giza) 9. Describe the types of regions (e.g., climatic, economic, cultural). 10. Describes how places and regions may be identified by cultural symbols (e.g., Acropolis in Athens, Muslim minaret, Indian sari). 11. Compares and contrasts early world civilizations in terms of human characteristics (e.g., people, religion, language, customs, government, agriculture, industry, architecture, arts, education). 12. Identifies and compares the physical characteristics of world regions (e.g., locations, landscape, climate, vegetation, resources). 13. Identifies and compares the human characteristics of world regions (e.g., people, religion, language, customs, government, agriculture, industry, architecture, arts, education). 14. Identifies how Kansas, United States, and world regions are interdependent (e.g., through trade, diffusion of ideas, human migration, international conflicts and cooperation). 15. Explains the effects of a label on the image of a region (e.g., Tornado Alley, Sun Belt, The Great “American” Desert). 16. Explain why labels are put on regions to create an identity (e.g., Coal/Iron/Rust Belt, North-Yankee/ South-Dixie). 17. Identifies the various physical and human criteria that can be used to define a region (e.g., physical: mountain, coastal, climate; human: religion, ethnicity, language, economic, government). (Δ7 3:2:4) Benchmark 3: Physical Systems: The student understands Earth’s physical systems and how physical processes shape Earth’s surface. Indicators: 1. Explains the distribution patterns of ecosystems within the community and hemispheres (i.e., desert, mountain, prairie, forest, wetland, tundra). (Δ3 3:3:1) 2. Identifies renewable and nonrenewable resources and their patterns of distribution (i.e., fossil fuels, minerals, fertile soil, waterpower, forests). 3. Describes which physical processes affect different regions of the world (i.e., desertification in the Sahel, earthquakes in Pacific Rim, drought and dust storms in the Plains, soil degradation in the tropics, floods, hurricanes). 4. Explains how Earth-Sun relationships affect Earth’s physical processes and create physical patterns (i.e., latitude regions, climate regions, distribution of solar energy, ocean currents). 5. Explains patterns in the physical environment in terms of physical processes (i.e., plate tectonics, glaciations, erosion and deposition, hydrologic cycle, ocean and atmospheric circulation). 6. Explains the distribution patterns of ecosystems within hemispheres to define climatic regions. Benchmark 4: Human Systems: The student understands how economic, political, cultural, and social processes interact to shape patterns of human populations, interdependence, cooperation, and conflict. Indicators: 1. Identifies the past and present settlement or development patterns of his/her community or local area. (Δ2 3:4:1) 2. Examines how people in their community interact with people in other communities in Kansas. (Δ3 3:4:1) 3. Compare the causes and effects of human migration on places and population (i.e., war, famine, oppression, opportunity, population shifts, conflict, acculturation, diffusion of ideas, diseases, crops, culture). 4. First row 5. Second row 6. Describes the types and characteristics of political units (e.g., city, county, state, country). (Δ4 3:5:1) 7. Evaluates demographic data to analyze population characteristics in the United States over time (e.g., birth/death rate, population growth rates, migration patterns: rural, urban). (Δ8 3:4:1) 8. Describes the forces and processes of conflict and cooperation that divide or unite people (i.e., uneven distribution of resources, water use in ancient Mesopotamia, building projects in ancient Egypt, and Middle/South America, the Greek city-states, empire building, movements for independence or rights.) (Δ6 3:4:2) 9. Identifies the geographic factors that influence world trade and interdependence (i.e., location advantage, resource distribution, labor cost, technology, trade networks and organizations). (7 3:4:3) 10. Describe the consequences, both positive and negative, of industrialization and urbanization to our society. 11. Explains how cultural cooperation and conflict are involved in shaping the distributions of and connections between cultural, political, and economic spaces on Earth. (e.g., cultural: Hindu vs. Muslims in India; political: International Court of Justice and Hong Kong: economic: World Trade Organization).(Δ11 3:4:5) 12. Examines reasons for variation in population distribution (e.g., environment, migration, government policies, birth and death rates). 13. Explain how migration contributed to the “melting pot” or “salad bowl” concept of American culture. 14. Describes and analyzes population characteristics through the use of demographic concepts (e.g., population pyramids, birth/death rates, population growth rates, migration patterns). 15. Explains how the spread of cultural elements results in distinctive cultural landscapes (e.g., religion, language, customs, ethnic neighborhoods, foods). 16. Interpret push-pull factors including economic, political, and social factors that contribute to human migration and settlement in United States (e.g., economic: availability of natural resources, job opportunities created by technology; political: Jim Crow laws, freestaters; social factors: religious, ethnic discrimination). (Δ8 3:4:2) 17. Compares cultural elements that created the distinctive cultural landscapes during the Civil War (e.g., technology, crops, housing types, agricultural methods, settlement patterns). Benchmark 5: Human-Environment Interactions: The student understands the effects of interactions between human and physical systems. Indicators: 1. Identifies ways in which people depend on the physical environment (i.e., water, food, fuel, natural resources). 2. Describe how physical systems influence people and their activities. (Δ2 3:5:1) 3. Identifies ways in which human activities are impacted by the physical environment (e.g., types of housing, agricultural activities, fuel consumption, clothing, recreation, jobs, resource availability). (Δ3 3:5:2) 4. Explains how humans modify the environment and describes some of the possible consequences of those modifications (e.g., Greeks clearing the vegetation of the hillsides, dikes on the Nile and in the Mesopotamia raising the level of the river, terracing in Middle America and Asia). (e.g., flood control, mining, farming, chemical uses, community development, transportation). (Δ3 3:5:1) 5. Examines natural resource challenges and ways people have developed solutions as they use renewable and nonrenewable resources (e.g., lack of water, eroding soil, lack of land, limitations of fossil fuels). (Δ4 3:5:1) 6. Examines the impact that in which technologies have modified the physical environment of various world cultures (e.g., dams, levees, aqueducts, irrigation, roads, bridges, plow). (Δ7 3:5:1) 7. Identifies the relationship between the advances in technology and the acquisition and use of resources 8. Compare different viewpoints regarding resource use (i.e., transportation, water use, mining, timber, agriculture, labor, capital). 9. Describe the consequences of the use or misuse of resources, both in our nation’s past and today. 10. Explains how the spread of cultural elements results in distinctive cultural landscapes (e.g., religion, language, customs, ethnic neighborhoods, foods). 11. Explains the relationship between resources and the exploration, colonization, and settlement patterns of different regions of the world (i.e., mercantilism, imperialism, colonialism, Gold Rush, Alaskan pipeline). 12. Describes how human beings removed barriers to settlement by moving needed resources across the United States 13. Examines alternative strategies to respond to constraints placed on human systems by the physical environment (e.g., irrigation, terracing, sustainable agriculture, water diversion, natural disaster-resistant construction). (ΔOTL 3:5:2) 14. Examines the impact that technology has on human modification of the physical environment (e.g., over-fishing, logging and mining, construction on floodplains, internal combustion engine, toxic waste). (ΔOTL 3:5:1) History Standard 4: The student uses a working knowledge and understanding of significant individuals, groups, ideas, events, eras, and developments in the history of Kansas, the United States, and the world, utilizing essential analytical and research skills. United States and Kansas History (KS - indicates Kansas History indicator) Benchmark 1: The student uses a working knowledge and understanding of individual, group ideas, developments, and turning points in the early years of the United States up to 1840. Indicators: 1. Uses and creates a historical timelines. (4 4:4:1) (5 4:4:1) (Δ 3 4:4:1) (Δ 3 4:4:1) (Δ 2 4:4:1) (Δ1 4:2:6) 2. Describes the causes of the American Revolution (e.g., Proclamation of 1763, Intolerable Acts, Stamp Act, taxation without representation). (5 4:3:1) 3. Describes how the Constitutional Convention led to the creation of the United States Constitution (e.g., Great Compromise, Three-Fifths Compromise). 4. Researches the contributions made by notable Kansans in history (e.g., Dwight David Eisenhower, Alf Landon, Amelia Earhart, George Washington Carver, Robert Dole, William Allen White, Langston Hughes, Carry A. Nation, Black Bear Bosin, Gordon Parks, Clyde Cessna, Charles Curtis, Walter Chrysler, Wyatt Earp). (4 4:1:1) 5. Describes the observations of the explorers who came to what was to become Kansas (e.g., Francisco Coronado, Meriwether Lewis and William Clark, Zebulon Pike, Stephen H. Long). (4 4:1:3) 6. Compares the various reasons several immigrant groups settled in Kansas (e.g., English, German, German-Russian, French, Swedish, Czechoslovakian, Croatian, Serbian, Mexican, African American, Vietnamese, Cambodian, Laotian). (4 4:2:1) 7. Explains the economic and cultural contributions made by immigrant groups in Kansas (e.g., jobs, agriculture, mining, arts, customs, celebrations). (4 4:2:2) 8. Explains how various American Indians adapted to their environment in relationship to shelter and food (e.g., Plains, Woodland, Northwest Coast, Southeast and Pueblo cultures in the period from 1700-1820). (5 4:1:1) 9. Compares the motives and technology that encouraged European exploration of the Americas (e.g., motives: trade, expansion, wealth, discovery; technology: improved ship building, sextant, cartography.) (5 4:1:3) 10. Explains the major compromises made to create the Constitution (e.g., Three-Fifth’s Compromise, Great Compromise, Bill of Rights). 11. Describes the impact of the War of 1812 (e.g., nationalism, political parties, foreign relations). 12. Defines and gives examples of issues during Andrew Jackson’s presidency (e.g., expansion of suffrage, appeal to the common man, justification of spoils system, opposition to elitism, opposition to Bank of the U.S., Indian Removal of 1830). 13. Describe how territorial expansion of the United States affected relations with external powers and American Indians (i.e., Louisiana purchase, concept of Manifest Destiny, previous land policiesNorthwest Ordinance, Mexican-American War, Gold Rush). (Δ8 4:1:5) KS 14. Describes political and economic structures in the New England, Middle, and Southern Colonies (e.g., political: House of Burgesses, town meetings, colonial forms of representation; economics: agriculture, trade). (5 4:2:3) 15. Summarize the impact of the Indian Removal Act of 1830 on the way of life for emigrant Indian tribes relocated to Kansas (e.g., loss of land and customary resources, disease and starvation, assimilation, intertribal conflict).(Δ7 4:1:4) KS 16. Illustrate the reasons for tension between the American Indians and the United States government over land in Kansas (e.g. encroachment of Indian lands, depletion of the buffalo and other natural resources, the Sand Creek massacre, broken promises). (Δ7 4:3:1) KS 17. Compares and contrasts nomadic and sedentary tribes in Kansas (e.g., food, housing, art, customs). KS 18. Explains the impact of constitutional interpretations during the era (e.g., Alien and Sedition Act, Louisiana Purchase, Marshall Court Marbury vs. Madison, McCullough vs. Maryland (1819). (Δ8 4:1:4) 19. Explains the issues of nationalism and sectionalism (e.g., expansion of slavery, tariffs, westward expansion, internal improvements, nullification). 20. Explains how Stephen H. Long’s classification of Kansas as the “Great American Desert” influenced later United States government policy on American Indian relocation. KS Benchmark 2: The student uses a working knowledge and understanding of individual, group ideas, developments, and turning points pre Civil War (1840-1880). Indicators: 1. Describes how the dispute over slavery shaped life in Kansas Territory (e.g., border ruffians, bushwhackers, jayhawkers, the Underground Railroad, free-staters, abolitionists). (Δ7 4:2:2) KS 2. Interpret the reason for the Exoduster movement out of the South to Kansas (e.g., relatively free land, symbol of Kansas as a free state, the rise of Jim Crow laws in the South, promotions of Benjamin “Pap” Singleton). (Δ7 4:3:5) KS 3. Explain the turning points of the Civil War (e.g., Antietam, Gettysburg, Emancipation Proclamation, and Sherman’s March to the Sea). (Δ8 4:2:5) 4. Summarizes events that led to sectionalism and eventually secession prior to the Civil War (i.e., Missouri Compromise, Compromise of 1850, Kansas-Nebraska Act Popular Sovereignty, Uncle Tom’s Cabin). (Δ8 4:2:3) KS 5. Illustrate the impact of the end of slavery on African Americans (i.e., Black Codes, sharecropping, Jim Crow, Amendments 13,14, and 15, Fredrick Douglass; Ku Klux Klan; Exodusters). (Δ8 4:2:9) KS 6. Discusses the impact of constitutional interpretation during the era (e.g., Dred Scott vs. Sanford, Plessy vs. Ferguson, Lincoln’s suspension of Habeas Corpus). 7. Explains the issues that led to the Civil War (e.g., slavery, economics, and state’s rights). 8. Compares and contrasts various points of views during the Civil War era (e.g., abolitionists vs. slaveholders, Robert E. Lee vs. Ulysses S. Grant, Abraham Lincoln vs. Jefferson Davis, and Harriett Beecher Stowe vs. Mary Chestnut). 9. Compares and contrasts different plans for Reconstruction (e.g., plans advocated by President Lincoln, congressional leaders, President Johnson). 10. Discusses the impeachment and trial of President Andrew Johnson (e.g., constitutional powers and Edmund G. Ross). 11. Describes the concept of popular sovereignty under the KansasNebraska Act and its impact on developing a state constitution. KS 12. Explain the importance of “Bleeding Kansas” to the rest of the United States in the years leading up to the Civil War (e.g., national media attention, caning of Senator Charles Sumner, Emigrant Aid Societies, Beecher Bible and Rifle Colony, poems of John Greenleaf Whittier, John Brown). KS 13. Summarizes the role of important individuals during the territorial period (e.g., Charles Robinson, James Lane, and John Brown). KS 14. Describes important events in Kansas during the Civil War (e.g., Quantrill’s Raid on Lawrence, the Battle of Mine Creek, recruitment of volunteer regiments). KS 15. State the purpose of the United States government in establishing frontier military forts in Kansas (e.g., protection of people, land, resources). KS 16. Determines the significance of the cattle drives in post-Civil War Kansas and their impact on the American identity (e.g., Chisholm Trail, cowboys, cattle towns). KS 17. Traces the migration patterns of at least one European ethnic group to Kansas (e.g., English, French, Germans, German-Russians, Swedes). KS 18. Explains the impact of government policies and the expansion of the railroad on settlement and town development (e.g., preemption, Homestead Act, Timber Claim Act, railroad lands). KS 19. Discusses the impact of constitutional interpretation during the era (e.g., Dred Scott vs. Sanford, Plessy vs. Ferguson, Lincoln’s suspension of Habeas Corpus). Benchmark 3: The student uses a working knowledge and understanding of individual, group ideas, developments, and turning points during the Gilded Age (1880-1914). Indicators: 1. Compares various forms of transportation in Kansas past and present (e.g., the horse, steamboat, trains, airplanes, cars). (Δ2 4:1:1) 2. Compares and contrasts the ways people communicate with each other past and present. (Δ2 4:1:2) 3. Identifies important innovations made in the past that influence today (e.g., Wright Brothers – airplane; Henry Ford – automobile; Ancient China – irrigation, paper; Inca – highways to connect cities). (Δ2 4:1:3) 4. Recognizes the impact of contributions made by leaders past and present. (Δ2 4:1:4) 5. Describes the development of Populism in Kansas (i.e., disillusionment with big Eastern business, railroads, government corruption, high debts and low prices for farmers). (Δ7 4:4:2) KS 6. Explains how the Industrial Revolution and technological developments impacted different parts of American society. (e.g., interchangeable parts, canals, cotton gin, railroads, steamboats). (Δ8 4:1:6) 7. Explains the impact of the railroad on the settlement and development of the West (e.g., Transcontinental railroad, cattle towns, Fred Harvey, town speculation, railroad land, immigrant agents). (Δ8 4:3:2) KS 8. Explains American Indians’ reactions to encroachment on their lands and the government response (e.g., Chief Joseph, Helen Hunt Jackson, Crazy Horse, Sitting Bull, Geronimo, Sand Creek, Washita, Little Big Horn, and Wounded Knee). 9. Explains how the rise of big business, heavy industry, and mechanized farming transformed American society. 10. Interprets data from primary sources to describe the experiences of immigrants and native-born Americans of the late 19th century. 11. Compares and contrasts the experiences of immigrants in urban versus rural settings. 12. Uses primary source documents to determine the challenges faced by settlers and their means of adaptations (e.g., drought, depression, grasshoppers, lack of some natural resources, isolation). 13. Describes the movement for women’s suffrage and its effect on Kansas politics (e.g., the fight for universal suffrage, impact of women on local elections). KS Benchmark 4: The student uses a working knowledge and understanding of individual, group ideas, developments, and turning points in the beginning of Modern America (1915-1929). Indicators: 1. Explains the challenges German Americans faced in Kansas during World War I (e.g., discrimination, movement against German languages). KS 2. Explains the influence of Kansas writers and artists on the Harlem Renaissance (e.g., Langston Hughes, Frank Marshall Davis, Aaron Douglas, Coleman Hawkins). KS 3. Identifies factors that contributed to changes in work, production and the rise of a consumer culture during the 1920’s (e.g., leisure time, technology, communication, travel, assembly line, credit buying). 4. States various social conflicts in the early 1920’s (e.g., rural vs. urban, fundamentalism vs. modernism, prohibition, nativism, flapper vs. traditional woman’s role). 5. Analyzes significant developments in race relations (e.g., rise of Ku Klux Klan, the Great Migration, race riots, NAACP, Tuskegee). 6. Interprets how the arts, music, and literature reflected social change during the Jazz Age (e.g., Harlem Renaissance, F. Scott Fitzgerald, development of blues and jazz culture). Benchmark 5: The student uses a working knowledge and understanding of individual, group ideas, developments, and turning points during World War II and the Great Depression (1930-1945). Indicators: 1. Compares agricultural practices before and after the dust storms of the 1930s (i.e., rotation of crops, shelter belts, irrigation, terracing, stubble mulch). (Δ7 4:5:1) KS 2. Analyzes the causes and impact of the Great Depression (e.g., overproduction, consumer debt, banking regulation, unequal distribution of wealth). 3. Uses primary source materials to explore individual experiences in the Dust Bowl in Kansas (e.g., diaries, oral histories, letters). (▲OTL 4:2:1) KS 4. Analyzes the costs and benefits of New Deal programs. (e.g., budget deficits vs. creating employment, expanding government: CCC, WPA, Social Security, TVA, community infrastructure improved, dependence on subsidies (▲11 4:2:2) 5. Identify the debate over expansion of federal government programs during the Depression (e.g., Herbert Hoover, Franklin Delano Roosevelt, Alf Landon, Huey Long, Father Charles Coughlin). 6. Recall the debate over and reasons for United States entry into World War II (e.g., growth of totalitarianism, America First Committee, neutrality, isolationism, Pearl Harbor). 7. Discusses how WWII influenced the Home Front (e.g., women in the workplace, rationing, role of the radio in communicating news from the warfront, victory gardens, conscientious objectors) (▲11 4: 2: 6) 8. Understands the role of Kansas aviation companies in World War II . KS 9. Describes the complexity of race and ethnic relations (e.g., Zoot Suit Riots, Japanese internment camps, American reaction to atrocities of Holocaust and unwillingness to accept Jewish refugees). 10. Examines the entry of the United States into the nuclear age (e.g., Manhattan Project, Truman’s decision to use the atomic bombs, opposition to nuclear weapons). Benchmark 6: The student uses a working knowledge and understanding of individual, group ideas, developments, and turning points in the era of Post War America (19451990). Benchmark 7: The student uses a working knowledge and understanding of individual, group ideas, developments, and turning points in the era of Contemporary United States History. Benchmark 8: The student understands the importance of the experiences of groups of people who have contributed to the richness of our heritage. Indicators: 1. Compares and contrasts daily life of an historic Plains Indian family, a pioneer family, and a modern family in Kansas. (Δ 2 4:2:1) (Δ 14:2:1,4,5) (ΔK 4:2:2) 2. Defines immigration and gives past and present examples from Kansas. (Δ 2 4:2:2) 3. Defines history as the story of the past. (Δ 2 4:2:3) 4. Compares life in his/her community with another community. (e.g., population/location, jobs, customs, history, natural resources, ethnic groups, local government). (Δ 3 4:2:1) 5. Retells the history of the community using local documents or artifacts. (Δ 3 4:2:2) Benchmark 9: the student engages in historical thinking skills. Indicators: 1. Puts events in chronological order. (Δ 1 4:4:1) (Δ K 4:4:1) 2. 3. 4. 5. Uses information to understand cause and effect. (Δ 2 4:4:3) Observes and draws conclusions in his/her own words. (Δ 3 4:4:4) Develops a thesis statement around a historical question. (Δ 4 4:4:2) Understands the difference between inferred information and observed information. (Δ 4 4:4:3) 6. Identifies and compares information from primary and secondary sources (e.g., photographs, diaries/journals, newspapers, historical maps). (Δ 4 4:4:4) 7. Uses research skills to interpret an historical person or event in history and notes the source(s) of information (e.g., discusses ideas; formulates broad and specific questions; determines a variety of sources; locates, evaluates, organizes, records and shares relevant information in both oral and written form). (Δ 4 4:4:5) 8. Examines different types of primary and secondary sources in Kansas history and analyzes them in terms of credibility, purpose, and point of view (e.g., census records, diaries, photographs, letters, government documents). (Δ7 4:7:2) KS 9. Compares contrasting descriptions of the same event in the United States history to understand how people differ in their interpretation of historical events. (Δ8 1:4:4) 10. Uses primary and secondary sources about and event in U.S. History to develop a credible interpretation of the event, evaluating on its meaning (e.g., uses provided primary and secondary sources to interpret a historical based conclusion) (▲11 4: 5: 3) World History Benchmark 1: The student uses a working knowledge and understanding of individual, group ideas, developments, and turning points of pre 500BC. Indicators: 1. Explains the importance of the Neolithic Agricultural Revolution in moving people from Nomadic to settled village life (e.g., food production, changing technology, domestication of animals). (6 4:1:1) Benchmark 2: The student uses a working knowledge and understanding of individual, group ideas, developments, and turning points in the emergence of civilization. Indicators: 1. Compares the origin and accomplishments of early river valley civilizations (e.g. Tigris and Euphrates (Mesopotamia): city-states, Hammurabi’s code; Nile Valley (Egypt): Pharaoh, centralized government; Indus Valley (India): Mohenjo Daro; Huang He (China): Shang Dynasty) (Δ6 4:1:2) 2. Describes key accomplishments of ancient China (e.g. Great Wall of China, Shi Huangdi, dynastic cycle, Mandate of Heaven, Taoism, Confucianism, civil service, Silk Road). (Δ6 4:2:9) 3. Examines the central beliefs of Christianity, Hinduism, Buddhism, Judaism, and Islam. (Δ6 4:2:6) Benchmark 3: The student uses a working knowledge and understanding of individual, group ideas, developments, and turning points of Classical European Culture. Indicators: 1. Compares and contrast characteristics of classic Greece government (e.g. city-states, slavery, rule by aristocrats and tyrants, Athens: development of democracy, Sparta: city’s needs come first; Oligarchy) (Δ6 4:2:1) 2. Describes key characteristics of classical Roman government (e.g. Roman Republic: senate, consuls, veto, written law; Roman Empire: emperors, expansion.) (Δ6 4:2:4) 3. Describes the significant contributions of ancient Greece to western culture (e.g., philosophy: Socrates, Plato, Aristotle; literature/drama: Homer, Greek plays, architecture, sculpture) 4. Identify the reasons for the decline and fall of the Roman Empire 5. Traces the development and spread of Christianity. Benchmark 4: The student uses a working knowledge and understanding of individual, group ideas, developments, and turning points of the Middle Ages. Indicators: 1. Describes the political and economic institutions of medieval Europe (e.g., manorialism, feudalism, Magna Carta, Christendom, rise of cities and trade). (6 4.3.3) 2. Discusses how the Crusades allowed interaction between the Islamic world and medieval Europe (e.g., science, education, architecture, mathematics, medicine, the arts, literature). (6 4.3.2) 3. Examines a topic in World history to analyze changes over time and makes logical inferences concerning cause and effect (e.g., spread of ideas and innovation, rise and fall of empires). (6 4:4:1) Benchmark 5: The student uses a working knowledge and understanding of individual, group ideas, developments, and turning points of the Renaissance. Indicators: 1. Analyzes the changes in European thought and culture resulting from the Renaissance (e.g., more secular world view, Machiavelli, Shakespeare; humanism, innovations in art: Michelangelo, Da Vinci; architecture: St. Peters Dome) (▲11 4:1:1) 2. Investigates the changes in European thought and culture resulting from the Reformation (e.g., establishment of Protestant faiths, Counter reformation, Gutenberg Press, Catholic vs. Protestant wars of religion). Benchmark 6: The student uses a working knowledge and understanding of individual, group ideas, developments, and turning points of the Global Age of Exploration (1400 to 1750). Indicators: 1. Examines the economic and social consequences of European exploration and expansion (e.g., rise of European power, mercantilism, Columbian Exchange, impact on indigenous people in North and South America, trans-Atlantic slave trade). 2. Compares and contrasts the rise of constitutionalism in Britain with political structures in France. (e.g., changes resulting from the English Civil War and Glorious Revolution: English Bill of Rights, establishment of Parliament, French Absolutism). 3. Explores the growth of Russian Absolutism (e.g., Ivan the Terrible, Peter the Great, Catherine the Great 4. Explains the significance of the Ottoman, Safavid, and Mogul Empires (e.g., the Fall of Constantinople and the establishment of Ottoman dominance in the Balkans and Southwest Asia; The spread of Shi’ism in Persia, the establishment of Islamic rule in India). 5. Describes why East Asia withdrew into isolationalism during a time of European expansion (e.g., Tokugawa Shogunate, end of Great Ming Naval Expeditions) (▲11 4: 1:7) Benchmark 7: The student uses a working knowledge and understanding of individual, group ideas, developments, and turning points Age of Revolutions (1650 –1920). Indicators: 1. Explains essential concepts from the Scientific Revolution (e.g., the Heliocentric Theory; Natural Law; scientific method). 2. Explains essential concepts from the Enlightenment that represented a turning point in intellectual history (e.g., ideas of Thomas Hobbes, John Locke, Voltaire, Montesquieu, Mary Wollstonecraft, Jean Jacques Rousseau, Enlightened despotism, salons). (▲11 4: 2:2) 3. Analyzes the outcomes of the American and French Revolutions (e.g., the establishment of republican government grounded in Enlightenment thought, the deterioration of the French Republic into the reign of terror; the spread of revolutionary ideas and nationalism with the growth of Napoleonic France). 4. Explores industrialization and its consequences in Britain (e.g., the rise of laissez-faire economics in Britain, Adam Smith, Chartists, development of the middle class). 5. Compares and contrasts German unification with the Meiji Restoration (e.g., nationalism, militarism, modernization, industrialization). (▲11 4:2:5) 6. Describes the motives and impact of imperialism (e.g., motives: economic-natural resources and expansion of trade, the competition for colonies in Africa and Asia and the Berlin Conference; humanitarian- missionaries and the ideology of Social Darwinism, political- naval bases and expansion of political control; restriction of human rights in King Leopold’s Congo; development of infrastructure; roads, schools, hospitals, railroads; assimilation and loss of indigenous culture). 7. Interprets the causes and impact of the Russian Revolution (e.g., the idea of communism as an economic alternative to capitalism; Vladimir Lenin, Karl Marx, Communist Manifesto, failure of tsarist regime, economic instability; beginnings of totalitarianism). 8. Examines causes of anti-colonial movements in Latin America, Asia, and Africa (e.g., ▲Haitian Revolution; Bolivar; San Martin; Hidalgo and Morelos; Taiping Rebellion; ▲Boxer Rebellion; ▲Sepoy Rebellion; ▲Zulu Wars). (▲11 4: 2:8) 9. Describes the impact of cross-cultural exchange on artistic developments of the late 19th century (e.g., romanticism; impressionism, impact of Asian culture on western culture). Benchmark 8: The student uses a working knowledge and understanding of individual, group ideas, developments, and turning points the era of World War (1914-1945). Indicators: 1. Analyzes the causes and immediate consequences of WWI (e.g., imperialism rivalries: Triple Entente, Triple Alliance, nationalism, arms race in England, France, and Germany; Treaty of Versailles, reparations, War Guilt Clause). 2. Describes the emergence of contemporary Middle East (e.g., petroleum society, Zionism, Arab nationalism, Balfour Declaration, dissolution of the Ottoman Empire, Armenian Genocide, Ataturk’s modernization of Turkey). 3. Examines the nature of totalitarianism in fascist Germany and communist Soviet Union (e.g., one party rule; systematic violation of human rights, secret police, state supremacy over individual rights, role of private property, class structure). (▲11 4:3:3) 4. Analyzes the causes and immediate consequences of WWII (e.g., German, Italian, and Japanese aggression; failure of the League of Nations; appeasement; development of American, British-Soviet alliance; Holocaust; Nanjing; introduction of nuclear weapons; war crime trials). 5. Recognizes the independence movement in India (e.g., Gandhi, nonviolence, Salt March, boycotts, creation of Pakistan). Benchmark 9: The student uses a working knowledge and understanding of individual, group ideas, developments, and turning points of the World since 1945. Indicators: 1. Discusses the Cold War as the competition between two competing ideologies or worldviews and its impact on various regions of the world. (e.g., roots in WWII, Mao’s China; the Cold War in Europe; NATO, Warsaw Pact, and the competition for non-aligned nations; collapse of Communism in Europe). 2. Describes the emergence of the Middle East as an influential region in world politics (e.g., creation of the state of Israel, emerging Middle Eastern post WWII nationalism: Suez Crisis, petroleum-based interdependence). (▲11 4:4:3) 3. Interpret the impact of international organizations on global interaction (e.g., the United Nations; Organization of American States, NATO, non-governmental organizations such as the International Red Cross, European Union). 4. Examines the trade-offs made by societies between economic growth and environmental protection in a world of limited resources. (e.g., the Green Revolution, population pressure, water, pollution, natural resource degradation). 5. Describes major intellectual, social and artistic developments (e.g., decoding DNA, space technology, consumerism, postmodernism, responses to globalization, feminism, fundamentalism, telecommunications).