
None None Study Guide Due Study Guide DueĬh 2- Classical China 1000 BCE-500 CE DATEĬh 3- Classical India 1000 BCE-500 CE Thu Sep 15 Ch 3 #1 P. There will be other Primary and Secondary Source Material Assigned!!!ġst Quarter Monday, Aug– Thursday, NovemPart I Unit 1 Ch 1-5 Human Prehistory -the Classical Era (500/600 CE) Ch 1- Human Prehistory to the Early Civilizations 2.5 Million – 1000 BCE DATEįirst Day of Class Introduction to Part I Ch 1 #1 P. To know and understand history you must read it. The most important assignment in this class is the reading- you will get the most out of lectures, discussions and various activities if you stay on top of the reading. We have 36 chapters to study in addition to various outside readings I will assign so it is imperative that you keep up with this textbook reading, on your own, so as not to fall behind. 8-18 ON Wednesday September 1st - have it read BEFORE that class. The pages indicate what material we will be discussing in class that day. World History Change and Continuity Over Time (CCOT) Essay Rubric-World History Compare and Contrast (CC) Essay Rubric-Leader Analysis Sheet-Peoples Analysis Sheet-Conflict Analysis Sheet-Change Analysis Sheet-Societal Comparison Sheet-Document Analysis Sheet-The Dialectical Journal-Inner / Outer Circle-Additional Questions Divided by Eras-Timeline-ĪP World History Textbook Reading Schedule ~ 2011-2012 The Global Experience 5th Edition Please read each section BEFORE class. Writing for the AP Exam-Developing a Thesis and Planning an Essay-Analyzing a Map-World History Generic Document Based Question (DBQ) Scoring Rubric-Ĥ1. Latin America: Revolution and Reaction into the 21st Century -Africa, the Middle East, and Asia in the Era of Independence -Rebirth and Revolution: Nation-building in East Asia and the Pacific Rim -The End of the Cold War and the Shape of a New Era: World History 1990 – 2006 -Globalization and Resistance -Appendix The Emergence of Industrial Society in the West, 1750 – 1914 -Industrialization and Imperialism: The Making of the European Global order -The Consolidation of Latin America, 1830 – 1920 -Civilization in Crisis: The Ottoman Empire, the Islamic Heartlands, and Qing China -Russia and Japan: Industrialization Outside the West -Descent into the Abyss: World War I and the Crisis of the European Global Order -The World Between the Wars: Revolutions, Depression, and Authoritarian Response -A Second Global Conflict and the End of the European World Order -Western Society and Eastern Europe in the Decades of the Cold War -Quarter 4 The Americas on the Eve of Invasion -Reunification and Renaissance in Chinese Civilization: The Era of the Tang and Song Dynasties -The Spread of Chinese Civilization: Japan, Korea, and Vietnam -The Last Great Nomadic Challenges: From Chinggis Khan to Timur -The West and the Changing Balance of World Power -The World Economy -The Transformation of the West, 1450 – 1750 -The Rise of Russia -Early Latin America - Africa and the Africans in the Age of the Atlantic Slave Trade -The Muslim Empires - Asian Transitions in an Age of Global Change -Quarter 3 A New Civilization Emerges in Western Europe -Quarter 2 11. Civilization in Eastern Europe: Byzantium and Orthodox Europe -10. African Civilizations and the Spread of Islam -9. Abbasid Decline and the Spread of Islamic Civilization to South and Southeast Asia -8.

The First Global Civilization: The Rise and Spread of Islam -7.

The Classical Period: Directions, Diversities, and Declines by 500 C.E. Classical Civilization in the Mediterranean: Greece and Rome -5.

From Human Prehistory to the Early Civilizations -2. Table of Contents Quarter 1 Table of Contents -Textbook Reading Schedule-Disclosure Statement -Why is History worth Studying -1.
