NJDOE MODEL CURRICULUM PROJECT

Similar documents
NJDOE MODEL CURRICULUM PROJECT

NJDOE MODEL CURRICULUM PROJECT

NJDOE MODEL CURRICULUM PROJECT

NJDOE MODEL CURRICULUM PROJECT

) This Curriculum Map is a model for content, skills, and pacing. Teachers will adapt the map in light of students prior knowledge.

West Windsor-Plainsboro Regional School District AP European History Grades 9-12

HONORS INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS & DIPLOMACY

World History Chapter 6.4 Vocabulary Student Materials

Dublin City Schools Social Studies Graded Course of Study Modern World History

1. Students access, synthesize, and evaluate information to communicate and apply Social Studies knowledge to Time, Continuity, and Change

ERA: Three Worlds Meet (Beginnings to 1620) Content Statement Strand CPI Cumulative Progress Indicator

World History Unit 7 Vocabulary Era of Imperialism ( C.E.)

West Windsor-Plainsboro Regional School District World History ESL Curriculum

LEARNING GOALS World History

Period V ( ): Industrialization and Global Integration

1. Base your answer to question on the partial outline below and on your knowledge of social studies.

Grade 8 Pre AP United States History Learner Objectives BOE approved

Imperial China Collapses Close Read

TOMS RIVER REGIONAL SCHOOL DISTRICT Unit Overview Content Area: Social Studies Unit Title: History of World Governments Target Course/Grade Level:

Curriculum Scope & Sequence

Somerville Schools 2017 CURRICULUM MAP WITH SCOPE AND SEQUENCE. Course: American History Subject Area: Social Studies Grade Level: 8

PLANNED COURSE 10th Grade Social Studies Wilkes-Barre Area School District

resulted in World War II.

NJDOE MODEL CURRICULUM PROJECT

Social Studies. Course Text Offering: The American Nation, We the People: The Citizen & the Constitution, The Nystrom Atlas of United States History

China Resists Outside Influence Close Read

Individuals, Bartolomé de Las Casas, Robespierre, Gandhi 2014 August Political Leaders Armed Conflict, Diseases, Child Labor

PERIOD 5: Industrialization and Global Integration c to c. 1900

Compare historical periods in terms of differing political, social, religious, and economic issues

Zanesville City Schools Social Studies Focus of Work

UNIT V HW QUESTIONS Any grade less than 50% will be credited as a ZERO

Content Area: Social Studies Grade Era: Postwar United States: Civil Rights and Social Change Learning Targets Standards

Social Studies: World History Pacing Guide Quarter 4

SOCIAL STUDIES GRADE 10 AMERICAN HISTORY. Curriculum Map and Standards Office of Teaching and Learning Curriculum Division

PURPOSE AND FRAMEWORK FOR D39 SOCIAL STUDIES CURRICULUM

GTPS Curriculum Social Studies Grade 8 US History to the Industrialization

America: History of Our Nation, Civil War to Present 2009 Correlated to: Illinois Learning Standards for Social Science (Middle/Junior/High School)

Vocabulary Match the term to the definition. To create a better review sheet, write the term instead of the letter.

Global History Regents Review Imperialism review questions

7.1.3.a.1: Identify that trade facilitates the exchange of culture and resources.

Period 5 Industrialization and Global Integration c to c. 1900

Period 5: industrialization and Global integration

ACADEMIC & HONORS WORLD HISTORY: PERSPECTIVES ON THE PAST

AUTHORS: FLHS Social Studies Dept. UNIT TITLE/FOCUS: Changing Ideas of People and Government UNIT LENGTH: 3 4 weeks

Teachers Name: Nathan Clayton Course: World History Academic Year/Semester: Fall 2012-Spring 2013

Period 5 Industrialization and Global Integration, , Bulliet, chapters & STRAYER (online), chapters 16-19, (6 weeks, 20% of AP Exam)

World History Unit Curriculum Document

Grade 5 Through Grade 8 NJCCCS for Social Studies

Bemidji Area Schools Academic Standards in. Social Studies

American Government /Civics

OnTRACK Lesson Checklist

AP US Government and Politics

Boonton School District

History and Social Science Standards of Learning. Grades World History and Geography: 1500 A.D. to the Present

12 th Grade U.S. Government Curriculum Map FL Literacy Standards (See final pages)

Era 5: Industrialization & Global Integration, c to c. 1900

Unit Overview. Unit Title: Revolutionary War Unit: 2

SNAPSHOT ~1750 Key Concept 5.1 Key Concept 5.2 Key Concept 5.3 Key Concept 5.4

Jackson County Schools Curriculum Pacing Guide High School Social Science - Civics Fall / Spring Semester Unit 1 Unit 2 Unit 3 Unit 4 Unit 5 Unit 6

Social Studies The Cold War Unit 1: Origins of the Cold War

Bentley Chapter 28 Study Guide: Revolutions and National States in the Atlantic World

GRADE 9 WORLD HISTORY

Period 5: Industrialization and Global Integration, c to c. 1900

Social Studies World History Classical Civilizations and Empires 1000 B.C. to 1450 A.D.

Period 5: Industrialization and Global Integration, c to c. 1900

HIGH SCHOOL: WORLD HISTORY

MISSISSIPPI SOCIAL STUDIES FRAMEWORKS, UNITED STATES HISTORY TO 1877 EIGHTH GRADE

Higley Unified School District World History Grade 10 Revised Aug Third Nine Weeks

HISTORY. History A.A. for Transfer Degree

Manhattan Center for Science and Math High School Social Studies Department Curriculum

SOCIAL STUDIES CURRICULUM GRADE 5

Magruder s American Government 2008 (McClenaghan) Correlated to: Ohio Benchmarks and Grade Level Indicators for Social Studies (Grades 9 and 10)

ILLINOIS LICENSURE TESTING SYSTEM

Unit 5 Packet. c c NAME : Note: Keep this packet until the end of the year so you can study it!

A Correlation of. Pearson myworld Geography Survey Edition, To the New Jersey Core Curriculum Content Standards for Social Studies

GRADE 8 United States History Growth and Development (to 1877)

THEMATIC ESSENTIAL QUESTIONS BY UNIT

Imperialism by the US

Oklahoma C 3 Standards for the Social Studies THE FOUNDATION, FORMATION, AND TRANSFORMATION OF THE AMERICAN SYSTEM OKLAHOMA STATE BOARD OF EDUCATION

PASSAIC COUNTY TECHNICAL INSTITUTE NEW JERSEY HISTORY CURRICULUM 2012

PAGE TITLE TEKS 2 LONG AGO (c)(2)(A), (c)(2)(B), (c)(17)(A), (c)(17)(B), (c)(29)(A), (c)(30)(A), 113.

Portsmouth City School District Lesson Plan Checklist

World History Unit 3 Benchmark Study Guide

Unit 7: America Comes of Age FRQ Outlines

Instructional Unit Name of Unit/Big Idea: Physical Characteristics of Places Brief Description: Length of Course (Days/Weeks):

Key Concept 5.1 Industrialization and Global Capitalism

Course Syllabus World History and Geography 1500 A.D. (C.E.) to the Present

Instructional Activities/Strategies Common Core Standards

Week. European Society- War and Revolution, Age of Anxiety European Society Dictatorship and WWII

Title of Unit: Colonial Foundations of the American Nation. Content Area: US HISTORY I. Grade Level: 10, 11

Common Core Standards Standards Content Skills/Competency Suggested Assessment

Leveled Readers. Primary Source Readers: George Washington and. Primary Source Readers: American Indians of the

Period 5: Industrialization and Global Integration, c to c. 1900

History 4. Course Overview 5/12/15. Course Overview Course Outline Number of Lessons and Scheduling Materials

9 th Grade World Studies from 1750 to the Present ESC Suggested Pacing Guide

Dilemma and Solution. By: Jessie Smith, Victoria Haglund, Jayden Schoeps, Nick Czapiga, and Mack Toomey

MIDDLE GRADES SOCIAL SCIENCE

Modern World History - Honors Course Study Guide

Prentice Hall. Out of Many North Carolina Course of Study for Advanced Placement to United States History

Essential Question: & Latin America? Clicker Review. What role did the United States play as an imperial power in Asia. CPWH Agenda for Unit 10.

Transcription:

Code # CCSS and/or NJCCCS 3. Age of Revolutions: Political and Industrial Revolutions, Imperialism, Reform, and Global Impact Discontent with prevailing economic, political, and social conditions was the impetus for change, which resulted in revolution or reform. The Industrial Revolution was a consequence of technological innovation and expanding economic activity and markets, resulting in massive population movement, urbanization, and the development of complex economic systems. Industrialized nations embarked on a competitive race for global resources and markets, resulting in the establishment of political and economic control over large regions of the world that had a lasting impact. RH.9-10.2 RH.9-10.3 WHST.9-10.2 a-f WHST.9-10.4 WHST.9-10.6 WHST.9-10.7 WHST.9-10.8 Determine the central ideas or information of a primary or secondary source; provide an accurate summary of how key events or ideas develop over the course of the text. Analyze in detail a series of events described in a text; determine whether earlier events caused later ones or simply preceded them. Write informative/explanatory texts, including the narration of historical events, scientific procedures/ experiments, or technical processes. Produce clear and coherent writing in which the development, organization, and style are appropriate to task, purpose, and audience. Use technology, including the Internet, to produce, publish, and update individual or shared writing products, taking advantage of technology s capacity to link to other information and to display information flexibly and dynamically. Conduct short as well as more sustained research projects to answer a question (including a self-generated question) or solve a problem; narrow or broaden the inquiry when appropriate; synthesize multiple sources on the subject demonstrating understanding of the subject under investigation. Gather relevant information from multiple authoritative print and digital sources, using advanced searches effectively; assess the usefulness of each source in answering the research question; integrate information into the text selectively to maintain the flow of ideas, avoiding plagiarism and following a standard format for citation.

6.2.12.A.3.a 6.2.12.A.3.b 6.2.12.A.3.c 6.2.12.A.3.d 6.2.12.A.3.e 6.2.12.A.3.f 6.2.12.A.3.g Explain how and why various ideals (e.g., liberty, popular sovereignty, natural rights, democracy, and nationalism) became driving forces for reforms and revolutions. Determine the extent to which the American, French, and Haitian revolutions influenced independence movements in Latin America. Relate the responses of various governments to pressure for self-government or self-determination to subsequent reform or revolution. Assess the extent to which revolutions during this time period resulted in the expansion of political, social, and economic rights and opportunities. Analyze the relationship between industrialization and the rise of democratic and social reforms, including the expansion of parliamentary government. Compare and contrast the struggles for women s suffrage and workers rights in Europe and North America, and evaluate the degree to which each movement achieved its goals. Analyze the motives for and methods by which European nations, Japan, and the United States expanded their imperialistic practices in Africa and Asia during this era, and evaluate the impact of these actions on their relations. 6.2.12.B.3.a Assess the impact of imperialism by comparing and contrasting the political boundaries of the world in 1815 and 1914. 6.2.12.B.3.b 6.2.12.B.3.c 6.2.12.C.3.a 6.2.12.C.3.b 6.2.12.C.3.c Relate the Industrial Revolution to population growth, new migration patterns, urbanization, and the environment. Relate the role of geography to the spread of independence movements in Latin America. Analyze interrelationships among the agricultural revolution, population growth, industrialization, specialization of labor, and patterns of land-holding. Analyze interrelationships among the Industrial Revolution, nationalism, competition for global markets, imperialism, and natural resources. Compare the characteristics of capitalism, communism, and socialism to determine why each system emerged in different world

regions. 6.2.12.C.3.d 6.2.12.C.3.e 6.2.12.C.3.f 6.2.12.D.3.a 6.2.12.D.3.b 6.2.12.D.3.c 6.2.12.D.3.d 6.2.12.D.3.e Determine how, and the extent to which, scientific and technological changes, transportation, and new forms of energy brought about massive social, economic, and cultural changes. Assess the impact of imperialism on economic development in Africa and Asia. Determine the extent to which Latin American political independence also brought about economic independence in the region. Explain how individuals and groups promoted revolutionary actions and brought about change during this time period. Explain how industrialization and urbanization affected class structure, family life, and the daily lives of men, women, and children. Compare and contrast China s and Japan s views of and responses to imperialism, and determine the effects of imperialism on the development and prosperity of each country in the 20th century. Analyze the extent to which racism was both a cause and consequence of imperialism, and evaluate the impact of imperialism from multiple perspectives. Analyze the impact of the policies of different European colonizers on indigenous societies, and explain the responses of these societies to imperialistic rule. # STUDENT LEARNING OBJECTIVES CORRESPONDING CCSS/NJCCCS 1 2 Determine how the central ideas (i.e., liberty, natural rights, and spirit of nationalism) found in the English Bill of Rights; Declaration of Independence and the Declaration of the Rights of Man and Citizen caused political changes during this time period. Write a narrative account explaining how the revolutionary ideas of this time period spread rapidly in Europe and the Americas. RH.9-10.2 6.2.12.A.3.a WHST.9-10.2 6.2.12.A.3.b

3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 Explain how the existing governments in England, France, and Spain responded to the demand for self-government in the Americas. Conduct short research to determine to what extent the goals of the revolutionaries were realized in the American, French, and Latin American revolutions. Explain the relationship of geographic location to the timing and success of political revolutions in Latin America and Haiti. Evaluate the success of Latin American revolutions (e.g., Mexico, Argentina) in achieving economic independence during this time period. Use technology to produce/publish an explanation of the role of individuals and groups in promoting revolutionary change (e.g., Simon Bolivar, Ben Franklin, Thomas Jefferson, Samuel Adams, Abbe Sieyes, Robespierre, Jose de San Martin, Oliver Cromwell, the Third Estate, Bolsheviks). Determine the central ideas or information of a primary or secondary source (e.g., the Sadler Report, Oliver Twist, David Copperfield) to understand how the British government responded to the problems of industrialization and urbanization during the time period. Trace the struggles for women s suffrage in Europe (e.g., Emmeline Pankhurst) and North America (e.g., Seneca Falls) and explain their different experiences. Analyze the motives and methods of imperialism (e.g., industrialization, population growth, expanding markets, nationalism) and their impact on people and events (e.g., Opium War, Boxer Rebellion, Sepoy Rebellion, Spanish War, Boer War) during this time period. Use historical maps from different time periods in the 19 th and 20 th century to determine which European country had the greatest geographic and economic advantage in the world. 6.2.12.A.3.c WHST.9-10.7 6.2.12.A.3.d 6.2.12.B.3.c 6.2.12.C.3.f WHST.9-10.6 6.2.12.D.3.a RH.9-10.2 6.2.12.A.3.e 6.2.12.A.3.f RH.9-10.3 6.2.12.A.3.g 6.2.12.B.3.a 12 Explain the impact of industrialization on population growth, urbanization, and the environment by 6.2.12.B.3.b

evaluating the quality of life in this time period. 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 Describe how industrialization and urbanization affected class structure (e.g., rise of the middle class), family life, and the daily lives of men, women, and children in England. Explain the cause and effect of the agricultural revolution in England to the mechanization of production with population growth and land-holding during this time period. Analyze how the Industrial Revolution led to the expanding global markets in the 18 th and 19 th centuries (e.g., importance of natural resources, cheap labor, transportation, Suez and Panama canals, communication). Produce clear and coherent writing that compares the competing economic and political philosophies (e.g., amount of government influence or regulation) of capitalism in the United States, socialism in Western Europe, and communism in the Soviet Union. Determine the advantages and disadvantages of the scientific and technological changes (e.g., steam engine, telegraph, coal, oil) and explain how they influenced social, economic, and cultural changes in Europe, Africa, and Asia during this time period. Evaluate the effect of economic development (e.g., telegraph, railroad, schools, bureaucracy) in Africa (e.g., Ghana, Egypt, South Africa) and Asia (e.g., India, China). Compare and contrast China s and Japan s views of and responses to imperialism (i.e., Japan imperialistic interests in Korea, Manchuria; China: rejection of imperialist powers). Determine the effects of imperialism on the development and change to livelihood and economic growth of each country in the 20th century (e.g., Japan: industrialization / westernization, China: civil war Chiang Kai-shek / Mao Zedong). 6.2.12.D.3.b 6.2.12.C.3.a 6.2.12.C.3.b WHST.9-10.4 6.2.12.C.3.c 6.2.12.C.3.d 6.2.12.C.3.e 6.2.12.D.3.c 6.2.12.D.3.c 21 Write a narrative regarding the consequences of imperialism (e.g., Boxer Rebellion, Opium Wars, Sepoy Rebellion, Philippine Rebellion) from the perspectives of native populations and European WHST.9-10.2 6.2.12.D.3.d

colonizers. 22 Explain the effect of Social Darwinism as a motive for imperialism (i.e., White Man s Burden, religious conflicts between Buddhism and Christianity). 6.2.12.D.3.e