Prentice Hall World Civilizations The Global Experience 2007

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Transcription:

Grades 9-12 Prentice Hall World Civilizations The Global Experience 2007 C O R R E L A T E D T O Grades 9-12

FOUNDATIONS: C.8000 B.C.E. TO 600 C.E. What students are expected to know: 1. Locating World History in the environment and time ST: xvi-xxi Environment ST: 12-14 Time ST: 4-5 Diverse Interpretations ST: xxix 2. Developing agriculture and technology ST: 2-31 Emergence of agriculture and technology ST: 10-31 Nature of village settlements ST: 10-31 Impact of agriculture ST: 10-31 Introduction of key stages of metal use ST: 10-31 3. Basic features of early civilizations in different environments: Culture, state, and social structure ST: 15-31 Mesopotamia ST: 18-20 Egypt ST: 20, 22 Indus Valley Civilization ST: 22 Shang dynasty ST: 23 Mesoamerican and Andean South America ST: 104-105 4. Classical civilizations ST: 32-119 Major political developments in China, ST: 32-119 India, and the Mediterranean Social and gender structures ST: 32-119 Major trading patterns within and among Classical civilizations; contacts, with adjacent regions ST: 54 Arts, sciences, and technology ST: 45-52, 68-70, 87-90 1

5. Major belief systems ST: 111 Polytheism ST: 2-31 Hinduism ST: 56-75 Judaism ST: 25-29 Confucianism ST: 38-59 Daoism ST: 38-59 Buddhism ST: 56-75, 98, 117 Christianity ST: 98-117, 210-233 6. Late Classical period (200-600 C.E.) ST: 98-125 Collapse of empires: (Han China, loss of ST: 100 western portion of the Roman Empire, Western Roman Empire, Gupta) Movements of peoples (Huns, Germans) ST: 100 Interregional networks by 600 C.E.: Trade and religious diffusion ST: 119 600-1450 1. Questions of periodization ST: 120-125 Nature and causes of changes in the world ST: 120-125 history framework leading up to 600-1450 as a period Emergence of new empires and political systems Continuities and breaks within the period (e.g. the impact of the Mongols on international contacts and on specific societies) ST: 120-125 ST: 126-171 2. The Islamic world ST: 126-149 The rise and role of Dar al-islam as a unifying ST: 113-114, 120-145 cultural and economic force in Eurasia and Africa Islamic political structures, notably the caliphate ST: 126-149 Arts, sciences and technologies ST: 126-129 2

3. Interregional networks and contacts ST: 125 Development and shifts in interregional ST: 150-171 trade, technology, and cultural exchange Trans-Sahara trade ST: 172-193 Indian Ocean trade ST: 150-171 Silk routes ST: 150-171 Missionary outreach of major religions ST: 123 Contacts between major religions, e.g., ST: 111-117 Islam and Buddhism, Christianity and Islam Impact of the Mongol empires ST: 302-323 4. China s internal and external expansion ST: 256-277 The importance of the Tang & Song ST: 256-277 economic revolutions and the initiatives of the early Ming dynasty Chinese influence on surrounding areas and its limits ST: 278-301 5. Developments in Europe ST: 194-233 Restructuring of economic, social and ST: 154-233 political institutions The division of Christendom into eastern and western Christian cultures ST: 154-209 6. Social, cultural, economic and political patterns ST: 234-255 in the Amerindian world Maya ST: 236 Aztec ST: 237-238 Inca ST: 244-246 7. Demographic and environmental changes ST: 302-323 Impact of the nomadic migrations on Afro- ST: 318 Eurasia and the Americas (e.g., Aztecs, Mongols, Turks, Vikings, and Arabs) Consequences of plague pandemics in the fourteenth century ST: 302-323, 340-341 3

Growth and role of cities ST: 329 1450-1750 1. Questions of periodization ST: 342-347 Continuities and breaks, causes of ST: 342-347 changes from the previous period and within this period 2. Changes in technology, and global interactions ST: 348-367 3. Knowledge of major empires and other political ST: 456-481 units and social systems Ottoman ST: 482-503 China ST: 482-503 Portugal ST: 348-367 Spain ST: 348-367 Russia ST: 388-403 France ST: 348-387 England ST: 348-387 Tokugawa ST: 482-503 Mughal ST: 456-481 Benin ST: 432-455 Songhay ST: 432-455 Gender and empire (including women in ST: 348-367 households and politics) 4. Slave systems and slave trade ST: 432-455 IR: 294-307 5. Demographic and environmental changes: diseases, animals, new crops, and comparative population trends ST: 504-505 6. Cultural and intellectual developments ST: 368-387 Scientific Revolution and The ST: 368-387 Enlightenment Changes and continuities in Confucianism ST: 482-503 Major developments and exchanges in the arts (e.g., Mughal) ST: 368-387 4

1750-1914 1. Questions of periodization ST: 506-511 Continuities and breaks, causes of changes from the previous period and within this period 2. Changes in global commerce, communications, and technology ST: 506-511 ST: 506-511, 634-635 Changes in patterns of world trade ST: 538-561 Industrial Revolution (transformative effects on and differential timing in different societies; mutual relation of industrial and scientific developments; commonalities) 3. Demographic and environmental changes (migrations, end of the Atlantic slave trade, new birthrate patterns; food supply) ST: 506-537, 614-633 ST: 506-511, 634-637 4. Changes in social and gender structure (Industrial Revolution; commercial and demographic developments; emancipation of serfs/slaves; and tension between work patterns and ideas about gender) 5. Political revolutions and independence movements; new political ideas ST: 512-538 ST: 513-515 Latin American independence movements ST: 562-589 IR: 383-398 Revolutions (United States, France, Haiti, Mexico, China) Rise of nationalism, nation-states, and movements of political reform ST: 513-520 ST: 521-523, 564-568 Overlaps between nations and empires ST: 590 Rise of democracy and its limitations: reform; women; racism ST: 513-533 Impact of changing European ideologies on colonial administrations ST: 634-635 1914-Present 1. Questions of periodization ST: 636-643 Continuities and breaks, causes of ST: 644-668, 706-731 changes from the previous period within this period 5

2. The World Wars, the Holocaust, the Cold War, nuclear weaponry, international organizations, and their impact on the global framework (globalization of diplomacy and conflict; global balance of power; reduction of European influence; the League of Nations, the United Nations, the Non-Aligned Nations, etc.) International organizations and their impact ST: 720 ST: 644-668, 706-731 3. New patterns of nationalism, (the interwar years; decolonization; racism, genocide; new nationalisms, including the breakup of the Soviet Union) 4. Impact of major global economic developments (the Great Depression; technology; Pacific Rim; multinational corporations) 5. New forces of revolution and other sources of political innovations ST: 735 ST: 690-693 ST: 679-891 6. Social reform and social revolution (changing gender roles; family structures; rise of feminism; peasant protest; international Marxism) ST: 810-820, 830-834 7. Globalization of science, technology, and culture ST: 560-579 Developments in global cultures and regional reactions including science and consumer culture Interactions between elite and popular culture and art ST: 560-579 ST: 560-579 Patterns of resistance including religious responses 8. Demographic and environmental changes (migrations; changes in birthrates and death rates; new forms of urbanization; deforestation; green/environmental movements) ST: 560-579 ST: 871-873 6