HPISD CURRICULUM (SOCIAL STUDIES, WORLD HISTORY)

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HPISD CURRICULUM (SOCIAL STUDIES, WORLD HISTORY) EST. NUMBER OF DAYS:15 DAYS UNIT NAME Unit Overview Generalizations/Enduring Understandings Concepts Guiding/Essential Questions UNIT 1: DEVELOPMENT OF EARLY RIVER VALLEY CIVILIZATIONS 8000BC-500BC This unit examines human development and the rise of civilizations in Africa and Asia. Using artifacts and written evidence, archaeologists and historians help us to understand the ancient past. People gradually evolved from nomads to farmers and as civilizations developed people traded, built largescale projects, and used math and astronomy to better understand their world. Early people depended on their physical surroundings for food, shelter, and tools for survival. In time, people in the river valleys of Egypt, the Middle East, India, and China developed complex civilizations where the development of writing preserved some of the world s oldest literature. Archaeologists, historians, and other scholars learn about our ancient human past through careful research, and when the evidence they find is gathered, pieced together, and interpreted, the story of the emergence of civilization is told. Geography determines the location of civilizations and the societies within them. Cultures of the past continue to affect the present day through life styles, values and beliefs that continue. Powerful and successful civilizations influence other civilizations. Impact of initial human migrations, development of early civilization, and role of geography in its formation 1. How do anthropologists and archaeologists find out about early peoples? 2. How do historians reconstruct the past? 3. What advances were made during the Paleolithic Age? 4. Why was the Neolithic agricultural revolution a turning point in history? 5. How did the first cities emerge? 6. What are the basic features of civilization? 7. What were the main achievements and features of Egypt s 3 kingdoms? 8. How was Egyptian society organized? 9. How did religious beliefs shape the lives of Egyptians? 10. What were the main features of Sumerian civilization? 11. What advances in learning did Sumerians make? 12. How did ideas and technology spread? 13. How did the Jews view their relationship with God? 14. Where did India s first civilization emerge? 15. What were the main characteristics of Aryan civilization? 16. What were the cultural achievements in early China?

17. How did Chinese culture take shape under the Shang and the Zhou? Learning Targets Formative Assessments Summative Assessments TEKS (Grade Level) / Specifications RED = Readiness Standards GREEN = Supporting Standards BLUE = Process Standards Italics = Standards Not Tested TEKS (1) History. The student understands traditional historical points of reference in world history. The student is expected to: (A) identify major causes and describe the major effects of the following events from 8000 BC to 500 BC : the development of agriculture and the development of the river valley civilizations; (2) History. The student understands how early civilizations developed from 8000 BC to 500 BC. The student is expected to: (A) summarize the impact of the development of farming (Neolithic Revolution) on the creation of river valley civilizations; (B) identify the characteristics of civilization; and (15) Geography. The student uses geographic skills and tools to collect, analyze, and interpret data. The student is expected to: (A) create and interpret thematic maps, graphs, and charts to demonstrate the relationship between geography and the historical development of a region or nation; and (B) analyze and compare geographic distributions and patterns in world history shown on maps, graphs, charts, and models. (16) Geography. The student understands the impact of geographic factors on major historic events and processes. The student is expected Specifications Including Paleolithic Age, Neolithic Age Including Tigris and Euphrates, Nile, Indus, and Huang He (Yellow), Egyptian Old, Middle and New Kingdoms Including Amon-Re, Akhenaton, Isis and Osiris, Tutankhamen

to: (A) locate places and regions of historical significance directly related to major eras and turning points in world history; (C) interpret maps, charts, and graphs to explain how geography has influenced people and events in the past. (17) Economics. The student understands the impact of the Neolithic and Industrial revolutions and globalization on humanity. The student is expected to: (A) identify important changes in human life caused by the Neolithic Revolution and the Industrial Revolution; (B) summarize the role of economics in driving political changes as related to the Neolithic Revolution and the Industrial Revolution; and (19) Government. The student understands the characteristics of major political systems throughout history. The student is expected to: (A) identify the characteristics of monarchies and theocracies as forms of government in early civilizations; and Including Hammurabi, Hammurabi s Code, Assyria, Babylon (B)identify the characteristics of the following political systems: theocracy, absolute monarchy,democracy, republic, oligarchy, limited monarchy, and totalitarianism (20) Government. The student understands how contemporary political systems have developed from earlier systems of government. The student is expected to: (B) identify the impact of political and legal ideas contained in the following documents: Hammurabi's Code, the Jewish Ten Commandments, Justinian s Code of Laws,

Magna Carta, the English Bill of Rights, the Declaration of Independence, the U.S. Constitution, and the Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen; (25) Culture. The student understands how the development of ideas has influenced institutions and societies. The student is expected to: (A) summarize the fundamental ideas and institutions of Eastern civilizations that originated in China and India; (26) Culture. The student understands the relationship between the arts and the times during which they were created. The student is expected to: (A) identify significant examples of art and architecture that demonstrate an artistic ideal or visual principle from selected cultures; (B) analyze examples of how art, architecture, literature, music, and drama reflect the history of the cultures in which they are produced; and Processes and Skills (29) Social studies skills. The student applies critical-thinking skills to organize and use information acquired from a variety of valid sources, including electronic technology. The student is expected to: (A) identify methods used by archaeologists, anthropologists, historians, and geographers to analyze evidence; (B) explain how historians, when examining sources, analyze frame of reference, historical context, and point of view to interpret historical events; (C) explain the differences between primary and secondary sources and examine those sources to

analyze frame of reference, historical context, and point of view; (D) evaluate the validity of a source based on language, corroboration with other sources, and information about the author; (E) identify bias in written, oral, and visual material; (F) analyze information by sequencing, categorizing, identifying cause-and-effect relationships, comparing, contrasting, finding the main idea, summarizing, making generalizations and predictions, drawing inferences and conclusions, and developing connections between historical events over time; (G) construct a thesis on a social studies issue or event supported by evidence; and (H) use appropriate reading and mathematical skills to interpret social studies information such as maps and graphs. Topics Facts Language of Instruction Understanding Our Past, The Dawn of History, Beginnings of Civilization, Ancient Kingdoms of the Nile, Egyptian Civilization, City-States of Ancient Sumer, Invaders, Traders, and Empire Builders, The Roots of Judaism Hunting and gathering Neolithic Neolithic Revolution Pastoralism Social differentiation Hammurabi s Law Code State Assessment Connections National Assessment Connections Resources Prentice Hall, World History, Chapter 1 Pictures of archaeological dig sites, migration maps, pictures of cave paintings,