Monday, 17 August 2015

Syllabus

World History

Overview: 

World History is survey course structured around the investigation of five themes woven into 19 key concepts covering six distinct chronological periods.  Furthermore it will investigate the history of World Regions – The Americas, Europe, Africa, Asia, and Oceania – each individually and how they interconnect with each other and the world as a whole.  The course emphasis is on balancing global coverage, with no more than 20% devoted to European History. 

This course includes texts, a wide variety of primary sources, and interpretations presented in historical scholarship.  These resources are designed to develop the skills required to analyze point of view and to interpret evidence to use in creating plausible historical arguments.  These tools will also be used to assess issues of change and continuity over time, identifying global processes, comparing within and among societies, and understanding diverse interpretations. 

The difference between the AP class and the regular World History class is that the regular class will not be required to do additional readings or essays.  Also they will have less homework for each unit and the unit tests will be multiple choice and short answer with no essay questions.  Here is the break down of grades:

Class Assignments – 20%
Projects – 20%
Tests – 20%
Quizzes – 10%
Blogs – 10%
Essays – 20%

Scale:

100- 93 = A
92.49- 90 = A-
89.49- 87 = B+
86.49-83.00 = B
82.49- 80.00 = B-
79.49-77.00 = C+
76.49- 73 = C
72.49-70.00 = C-
69.49-67.00 = D+
66.49- 63.00 = D
62.49- 60 = D-
Below 60 = F

Late Work: Mark down 10% per day.  You are expected to turn in work on the deadlines due. 

Students should expect homework 3-4 nights a week.


World History THEMES and CONCEPTS:

The five AP World History Themes that connect the key concepts throughout the course and serve as the foundation for student reading, writing, and presentation requirements are as follows:

THEME 1: Interaction Between Humans and the Environment: Demography and disease, Migration, Patterns of settlement, Technology

THEME 2: Development and Interaction of Cultures: Religions, Belief systems, philosophies and ideologies, Science and technology, The arts and architecture.

THEME 3: State-building, Expansion, and Conflict: Political structures and forms of governance, Empires, Nations and nationalism, Revolts and revolutions, Regional, trans-regional, and global structures and organizations.

THEME 4: Creation, Expansion, and interaction of Economic Systems: Agricultural and pastoral production, Trade and commerce, Labor systems, Industrialization, Capitalism and Socialism

THEME 5: Development and Transformation of Social Structures: Gender roles and relations, Family and kinship, Racial and ethnic constructions, Social and economic classes


TEXTBOOK:

Strayer, Robert W. Ways of the World: A Global History.  Boston: Bedford/St. Martins, 2009.

Secondary Sources:

The Human Web: A Bird’s-Eye View of World History by J.R. McNeill and William McNeill (2003)

The World that Trade Created by Kenneth Pomeranz, M.E. Sharpe (2000).

Guns, Germs, and Steel by Jared Diamond (1997).

Primary Sources:

Textual: World History, A Collection of Primary Sources by Dr. Richard Cruz, Dr. Chris Guthrie, and Dr. Janet Schmelzer

Visual: Most of the images for analysis will originate from the textbook and/or internet.  Samples will include art, photos, political cartoons, as well other sources.

Quantitative: From textbook and the internet.


Writing Assignments:

This course will include thesis development workshops and writing assignments for every unit.  The writing assignments will include formatting and refining the following types of essays:

Document Based Question (DBQ): Students analyze evidence from a variety of sources in order to develop a coherent written argument that has a thesis supported by relevant historical evidence.  Students will apply multiple historical thinking stills as they examine a particular historical problem or questions.

Change and Continuity Over Time (CCOT): Students identify and analyze patterns of continuity and change over time and across geographic regions.  They will also connect these historical developments to specific circumstances of time and place, and to broader regional, national, or global processes. 

Comparative Essay: Students compare historical developments across or within societies in various chronological and/or geographical contexts.  Students will also synthesize information by connection insights from one historical context to another, including the present. 

Unit I: Technological and Environmental Transformations
Periodization: to 600 B.C.E
Reading: Ways of the World: A Global History chapters 1-3.  The Human Web: A Bird’s-Eye View of World History chapters 1-2.  Guns, Germs and Steel chapter 6.

Key Concepts:
1.1: Big Geography and the Peopling of the Earth

Archeological evidence indicated that during the Paleolithic era, hunting-foraging bands of humans gradually migrated from their origin in East Africa to Eurasia, Australia, and the Americas adapting their technology and cultures to new climate regions.

1.2: The Neolithic Revolution and Early Agricultural Societies

1.    Neolithic Revolution leads to new and more complex economic and social systems
2.    Agricultural and pastoralism begins to transform human society

1.3: The Development and Interactions of Early Agricultural, Pastoral, and Urban Societies

1.     Core and foundational civilizations developed in a variety of geographical and environmental settings where agriculture flourished.
2.     The first states emerged within core civilizations
3.     Culture played a significant role in unifying states through laws, language, literature, religion, myths, and monumental art.

Unit I Assignments:

1)   Practice outlining and synthesizing textbook reading (directed by teacher).
2)   Introduction to comparative essay.  Thesis workshop.  Comparative essay regarding foraging and early agricultural societies or analyzing the similarities and differences in culture between Mesopotamia and Egypt.
3)   Timeline – students will create a timeline for the period connecting events by relationships between the causes and consequences of the events.
4)   Reflective Blog – the students will write a reflective commentary discussing how the history of the era or a region of the era fits into the larger story of world history. 
5)   Primary Source Analysis – Using soapstone – Epic of Gilgamesh, Code of Hammurabi, creation stories in Rig Veda, Popul Vuh, and the Bible.  Visuals from Easter Island, cave paintings, pyramids, hieroglyphs, iron weapons and chariots. 
6)   Students will participate in a debate discussing whether or not Egyptian Civilization Originated in Africa.

UNIT ONE TEST – 20 multiple-choice questions, in-class compare/contrast essay.




UNIT TWO: Organization and Reorganization of Human Societies
Periodization: 600 B.C.E. to 600 C.E.
Length of Class Time: 4 weeks
Reading: Ways of the World chapters 4-7.  The Human Web: A Bird’s-Eye View of World History pages 60-108.  “The Other Third of the Globe” (essay on the development of Oceania) by Ben Finney.

KEY CONCEPTS

2.1  The Development and Codification of Religious and Cultural Traditions
1.    Codification and further developments of existing religious traditions provided a bond among the people and ethical code to live by.
2.    New belief systems and cultural traditions emerged and spread often asserting universal truths.
3.    Belief systems affected gender roles.  Buddhism and Christianity encouraged monastic life and Confucianism emphasized filial piety.
4.    Other religious and cultural traditions continued parallel to the codified, written belief systems in core civilizations.
5.    Artistic expressions, including literature and drama, architecture and sculpture, show distinctive cultural developments.

       2.2.  The Development of States and Empires

1.    The number and size of key states and empires grew dramatically by  
imposing political unity on areas where previously there had been competing states.
2.    Empires and states developed new techniques of imperial administration based, in part, on the success of earlier political forms.
3.    Unique social and economic dimensions developed in imperial societies in Afro-Eurasia and the Americas. 
4.    The Roman, Han, Persian, Mauryan, and Gupta empires political, cultural, and administrative difficulties that they could not manage, which eventually led to their decline, collapse, and transformation into successor empires or states.

2.3  Emergence of Transregional Networks of Communication and Exchange
1.    Land and water routes became the basis for transregional trade, communication, and exchange networks in the Eastern Hemisphere.
2.    New technologies facilitated long-distance communications and exchange.
3.    Alongside the trade in goods, the exchange of people, technology, religious and cultural beliefs, food crops, domesticated animals, and disease pathogens developed across far-flung networks of communication and exchange.

Topics for discussion: World Religions (Judaism, Christianity, Buddhism, Hinduism, Daoism, Confucianism and Animism in Australasia, Ancestor in East Asia); Classical Civilizations (Persia, Qin and Han, Maurya and Gupta Empires, Phoenicia, Greece, Rome, Teotihuacan, Maya, and Moche); Trade Networks (Silk Road, the Indian Ocean, Mediterranean, and Trans-Saharan).

Assignments:

1)   Writing – students will continue to work on comparative essay.  Possible prompts include: compare the basic features of two classical civilizations; or compare two the major religions or philosophic systems (Hinduism, Buddhism, Confucianism, Daoism, Judaism, Christianity, or Greco-Roman philosophy); compare the reasons for and the outcome of the fall of two classical civilizations (Rome, Han China, and the Gupta).  Students will also be introduced to the CCOT essay with a thesis development workshop. 
2)   Timeline – students will create a timeline for the period connecting events by relationships between the causes and consequences of the events.
3)   Reflective Blog – students will write a reflective commentary considering the trans-regional networks of communication and exchange and the consequences of long-distance trade during this era and its connection to the larger story of world history. 
4)   Primary Source Analysis: Using soapstone students will investigate the following primary sources: Journeys of Faxian, Leviticus, Bhagavad Gita, Aristotle’s Politics, plus visuals of coins from Rome, Han, Gupata and Yap.  Visuals of architecture in Mediterranean, Middle East, South Asian, East Asia, and Mesoamerica; and ancient maps.
5)   Debate (Point/Counterpoint) – Did Christianity liberate women? Or did the benefits of the First Emperor of China’s rule outweigh the human cost? 
6)   Create of notecards of key terms to be used for review.

Unit Two Test: 25 multiple-choice question, in-class essay CCOT.


UNIT THREE: Regional and Transregional Interactions
Periodization: 600 C.E. to 1450 C.E.
Length of Class Time: 5 weeks
Readings: Ways of the World chapters 8-13.  The Human Web: A Bird’s-Eye View of World History pages 108-153.

Topics for discussion: Byzantine Empire, the rise of Islam, Crusades; Sui, Tang, Song, and Ming empires; The Turkish Empires; Kingdoms in Africa, the expansion of trade and rise of trading cities in East Africa; Polynesian Migration; Empires in the Americas; The Mongols; The Caliphates; the black plague; new forms of labor organization.

Assignments:

1)   Writing – students will continue to develop the CCOT essay – comparing historical developments and assess the effects and changes over time.  Prompts could include questions from previous released AP exams; Compare Japanese and European feudalism; Compare the effects of Islam and Christianity on social on social systems and gender roles.  Students will also be introduced to the DBQ and practice using the DBQ on the spread of Buddhism to China.
2)   Timeline – students will create a timeline for the period connecting events by relationships between the causes and consequences of the events.
3)   Reflective Blog – students will write a reflective blog on the spread of disease along trade routes and military expansion.
4)   Primary Source Analysis – students will analysis using soapstone the following primary sources: excerpts for the books of Marco Polo, Ibn Battuta and the Secret History of the Mongols; excerpts from the Koran; Magna Carta; The Tale of Genji (excerpts); oral story from Micronesia; stick maps from the Marshall Islands (with discussion of canoe travel in Micronesia); photos of Nan Madol; Byzantine art; and others.
5)   Point/Counterpoint (debate): Were the Crusades an early example of western imperialism? Does the modern University have its roots in the Islamic World?
6)   Notecards – key terms for review

Unit Test – 30 multiple-choice question.  DBQ in-class essay. 


UNIT FOUR: GLOBAL INTERACTIONS
PERIODIZATION: 1450 to 1750
Class Time: 5 Weeks
Reading:  Ways of the World chapters 14-16; The Human Web chapter 6.

Key Concepts

4.1  Globalizing Networks of Communication and Exchange
1.    In the context of the new global circulation of goods, there was an intensification of all existing regional trade networks that brought prosperity and economic disruption to the merchants and governments in the trading regions of the Indian Ocean, Mediterranean, Sahara, and overland Eurasia. 
2.    European technological developments in cartography and navigation built on previous knowledge developed in the classical, Islamic, and Asian worlds, and included the production of new tools, innovation in ship designs, and an improved understanding of global wind and currents patterns – all of which made transoceanic travel and trade possible.
3.    New transoceanic maritime reconnaissance occurred in this period.
4.    Technological developments enabling trans-oceanic trade
5.    Environmental exchange and demographic trends: Columbian Exchange
6.    Spread and reform of religion
7.    Global and regional networks and development of new forms of art and expression

4.2  New Forms of Social Organization and Modes of Production
1.    Labor systems and their transformation
2.    As new social and political elites change, they also restructured new ethnic, racial, and gender hierarchies.

4.3  State Consolidation and Imperial Expansion
1.    Rulers used a variety of methods to legitimize and consolidate their power
2.    Imperial expansion relied on the increased use of gunpowder, cannons, and armed trade to establish large empires in both hemispheres.
3.    Competition over trade routes, state rivalries, and local resistance all provided significant challenges to state consolidation and expansion.

Topics for discussion: Ming and Qing Rule in China; Japanese Shogunates; The Trading Networks of the Indian Ocean; Islamic Empires (Ottoman, Safavid, and Mughal); the Columbian Exchange and Atlantic Slave Trade.

Assignments:

1)   Writing – students will continue to develop essay writing.  Possible prompts include questions from previous released AP exams: Compare coercive labor systems in the Americas; economic and social effects of the Columbian Exchange; DBQ on the Global flow of sliver.
2)   Timeline – students will create a timeline for the period connecting events by relationships between the causes and consequences of the events.
3)   Reflective Blog – students will write a reflective commentary considering the impact of the Columbian Exchange during this era and its connection to the larger story of world history.
4)   Primary Sources – students will analysis using soapstone the following primary sources: Journals of Christopher Columbus; Letters from King Kong; Martin Luther’s 95 Theses; Native American Account of Cortes’s Conquest of Mexico; visual sources: the Codex Mendoza, outrigger canoes; coins, cannons, weapons and maps of the period.
5)   Debate – Did Tokugawa policies strengthen Japan?  Should Columbus be considered a hero? 
6)   Student groups will research and be responsible for explaining the political and cultural developments in Europe, the Ottoman Empire, China, Japan, the Mughal Empire, Africa and the Americas. 
7)   Notecards on key terms for review.  

Unit Test – 25 multiple-choice questions and an in-class essay.

Unit 5
PERIODIZATION: 1750 to 1900
Class Time: 5 weeks
Reading: Ways of the World chapters 17-20; The Human Web chapter 7

Topics for Discussion:
The Age of Revolutions, Scientific Revolution and Enlightenment, American Revolution, French Revolution and its Fallout, Haitian and Latin American Revolution; Global Transformations: Demographic Changes, the End of the Atlantic Slave Trade, Industrial Revolution, Rise of Nationalism, Imperialism and Its Impact on the World; Decline of Imperial China and the Rise of Imperial Japan. 

Key Concepts

5.1  Industrialization and Global Capitalism
1.    Industrialization fundamentally changed how goods were produced
2.    New patterns of global trade and production
3.    Transformation of capital and finance
4.    Developments in transportation and communication
5.    Responses to the spread of global capitalism
6.    Social transformations in industrialized societies

5.2  Imperialism and the Nation-State Formation
1.    Industrializing powers established transoceanic empires
2.    Imperialism influenced state formation and contraction around the world
3.    New racial ideologies, especially Social Darwinism, facilitated and justified imperialism

5.3  Nationalism, Revolution, and Reform
1.    The rise and diffusion of Enlightenment thought
2.    18th century peoples develop a sense of commonality
3.    Increasing discontent with imperial rule propelled reformist and revolutionary movements
4.    Spread of European political and social thought spark new transnational ideologies and solidarities

5.4  Global Migration
1.    Changes in demography and urbanization
2.    Migrants relocated for a variety of reasons
3.    Consequences and reactions to migration

Assignments:

1)   Writing – Students will continue to work on how to write essays.  Prompts could include – DBQ on Indentured servitude; Development of Global trade patterns 1750-1914; Comparing the French and Haitian Revolutions; Compare nationalism – China and Japan, Cuba and the Philippines, Egypt and Nigeria, and possible others.
2)   Timeline – students will create a timeline for the period connecting events by relationships between the causes and consequences of the events.
3)   Reflective Blog – students will write a reflective commentary on their blogs considering the roots of the enlightenment and it influences throughout this era and connect it to the larger story of the world.
4)   Primary Sources:  Students will analysis the following primary sources identifying point of view, intended purpose, audience, and historical context: Declaration of the Rights of Man and Citizen, Jamaica Letter, Karl Marx; statistics about bonded labor migrations from Asia to the Americans and Africa.
5)   Debate – students will form sides and debate the following topics: Were Confucian values responsible for China’s failure to modernize?  Did the West define the modern world?
6)   Project: In groups students will research and create a presentation about the following topics: Seven Years’ War, Napoleonic Wars, Great Game in Central Asia, Berlin Conference, Opium Wars, Zulu, Formation of Hawaii, German and Italian Unification, Meiji restoration, Abolition, Marxism, Indian Nation Congress, Industrialization; or Migration Suffrage, Scientific Revolution, Indian Revolt of 1857, Taiping rebellion, Wahhabi Movement, Boxer Rebellion, Atlantic revolutions, Latin America Independence movements, Liberalism, Socialism, Communism, Anarchism.
7)   Notecards on key terminology.


Unit Test – 30 multiple choices questions and in-class essay.

UNIT SIX: Acceleration Global Change and Realignments
PERIODIZATION: 1900 to present
Class Time: 5 weeks
Reading: Ways of the World chapters 21-24

KEY CONCEPTS:

6.1  Science and the Environment
1.    Rapid advances in science spread assisted by new technology
2.    Humans change their relationships with the environment
3.    Diseases, scientific innovations, and conflict led to demographic shifts

6.2  Global Conflicts and Their Consequences
1.    Europe’s domination gives way to new forms of political organization
2.    Emerging ideologies of anti-imperialism contribute to dissolution of empires
3.    Political changes accompanied by demographic and social consequences
4.    Military conflicts escalate
5.    Individual and groups oppose, as well as, intensify conflicts

6.3  New Conceptualization of Global Economy, Society, and Culture
1.    States, communities and individuals become increasingly interdependent
2.    People conceptualize society and culture in new ways
3.    Popular and consumer culture become global

Topics for discussion: Crisis and Conflict in Early 20th Century: Anti-Imperial Movements, World War I, Russian, Chinese and Mexican Revolutions, Depression, Rise of Militaristic and Fascist Societies, World War II; Internationalization: Decolonization, the Cold War, International Organizations, the Post-Cold War, World Globalization

Assignments:

1)   Writing - Students will continue work on how to write essays. Possible prompts include questions from previous released AP exams: Compare the notion of the “East” and the “West” in Cold War ideology; DBQ- Muslim Nationalist Movements; Choose two revolutions (Russian, Chinese, Cuban, Iranian) and compare their effects on the roles of women; Compare the causes and effects of the World Wars on areas outside of Europe; Compare legacies of colonialism and patterns of economic development in two of the following regions: Asia, Latin America, Africa; Compare patterns and results of decolonization in Africa and India
2)   Timeline – students will create a timeline for the period connecting events by relationships between the causes and consequences of the events.
3)   Reflective Blog – on blogs students will write reflective commentary considering social movements during this era and its connection to the larger story of the world.
4)   Debate – taking sides students will look at the following topics: Did the Bolshevik Revolution improve the lives of Soviet women?  Does Islam revivalism challenge a secular world order?
5)   Primary Source Analysis – students will use soapstone to analysis the following primary sources: excerpts from Gandhi, Nkrumah, and Ho Chi Min; political cartoons from the era; data on the growth of outsourcing and business cycles of multinational corporations.
6)   Projects - Students will be making individual presentations this unit. Topics include: WWI, WWII, Cold War, International Organizations, Decolonization in Algeria, Decolonization in sub-Saharan Africa, economic developments in Argentina/ Brazil, Cuban Revolution, Great Depression, economic developments in the Pacific Rim, Communism in Russia and China, Feminist movements, globalization, Indian/ Pakistani Partition, Jewish settlement/Palestine, Irish partition, Great Depression, Gurkha soldiers, ANZAC troops, Nuclear weapons, Marshall Plan, NATO, Warsaw Pact, Bandung Conference, Genocides, Civil Rights Movements, Green movements, World Bank, NAFTA, European Union, Quantum Mechanics, Antibiotics, and HIV/AIDS.
7)   Notecards on key terms
Unit Test – 30 multiple choice questions and an in-class DBQ essay.   

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