Period 4 Calendar: the Early Modern Period

Period 4 Calendar: the Early Modern Period

Name:______AP WORLD HISTORY Block:____

Period 4 Calendar: The Early Modern Period

Date

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Topics/Chapter

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Unit 4 Reading

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Project DUE dates

Day 1
Nov 28th / Unit 3 Introduction
DBQ Review Day
Renaissance /
  • Chapter 17 Notes
  • SPICE Chart

Day 2
Nov. 30th/ 3rd / Europe
Reformation
European Nation-states /
  • Taboo cards: Explorers DUE

Day 3
Dec. 4th/5th / Europe
Age of Exploration
Columbian Exchange
European expansion
  • CH 17 Quiz
/
  • Chapter 19 Notes
SPICE chart
Day 4
Dec.6th/7th / Latin America
Colonial Empires /
  • Chapter 20 Notes

Day 5
Dec. 10th/11th / Africa
  • CH 19 &20 Quiz
/
  • Chapter 21 Notes
  • Tri-GRAPES – Ottomans/ Safavids/Mughals
/
  • Taboo cards: Enlightenment, Reformation, Absolute Monarchs DUE

Day 6
12th/13th / Europe
Scientific Revolution Absolutism Enlightenment
Rise of Russia /
  • Chapter 21 Notes
  • Tri-GRAPES – Ottomans/ Safavids/Mughals

Day 7
Dec 14th/17th / Muslim Empires
  • CH 21 Quiz
/
  • Chapter 22 Notes
/
  • Taboo cards: Muslim Empires
DUE
Day 8
Dec 18th/19th / Asia /
  • Chapter 18 Notes
  • GRAPES – Russia

Day 9
Dec 20th/ 21st / Extra Day
  • CH 22 and 18 Quiz
/ /
  • SOL Review Packet DUE

Winter Break
Day 10 Jan. 2nd/ 3rd / SOL Role Play /
  • Map Packet
/
  • Role Play Due

Day 11
Jan 4th/ 7th / CCOT Essay
  • Map Quiz
/
  • SOL READING GUIDES
/
  • Comparison Outlines: Colonization and Muslim Empires Due

Day 12
Jan8/9th / Review For Midterm /
  • Study
/
Day 13th
Jan 10th/11th / Introduction to Period 5 /
  • Chapter 23
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Midterms /
  • Chapter 24
/
  • SOL READING GUIDES DUE
  • CCOT Essay due

Note: it is expected that SOL-related assignments will require you to go beyond our textbook.

Chapter Notes and Quizzes

Unit 4 consists of 7 chapters (#16-22) from World Civilizations: The Global Experience. You will read at least part of each chapter and take organized, useful notes from each assigned section. You will continue actually have to read the whole chapter, and take notes on it.

As a reminder, about reading and taking quality notes, each chapter will have a short quiz associated with it. The quiz will be multiple-choice based on the reading and sometimes classroom activities. It will be possible to answer the questions without attending class, but not without reading the textbook.

Some tips on taking effective textbook notes:

  1. Preview the reading. Scan through the major headings in the chapter before you read the rest. Think about what you already know and what you expect to learn. This will help prime your mind to be ready to pull out the important details.
  2. Review related assignments. Before reading a chapter, check out the other assignments that might go along with the chapter. This will make your homework more efficient, and will help you find the important information.
  3. Read actively. Active readers are engaging with the text, not just passing words through their heads. This means thinking about what you read – ask yourself questions. Do you agree with what you’ve read? Does it make sense? Can you think of another example, or a counter-example?
  4. Use the organization of the text. The headings and subheadings in the book are a useful way to organize your notes.
  5. Summarize subheadings as you go. If you can’t remember or summarize a section after you finish reading it, you weren’t actively reading! Go back to the text to review.
  1. After reading, summarize each major heading. Write a short summary (1-2 sentences) for each major heading. If you can recall what each major heading was about, you’ve done your job! Your summaries are excellent study guides!
  2. Include page numbers. Every once in a while, or every major heading, jot down the page number. This will help you refer back to the test when you have to do things like write essays and complete test corrections.
  3. Use your notes in class! Write down questions you have while reading so you make sure we clarify them in class. Add details to your reading notes in class – homework and class work should not be separate worlds.

Taboo Cards

The object of the game Taboo is to get your teammates to say a particular word or name by providing oral clues. However, there are certain words that are “taboo” – unmentionable. For example, a real card from the game might look like this:

The Reader leads his/her teammates to say “watch” without saying any of the words on the card. The reader also cannot point, act, draw, etc. The rest of the team tries to follow the Reader’s lead to guess the word.

For the card above, you might say that “this is a circular dial strapped around your arm, near your hand” or that “you would check this to see when class ends, without using your phone or the wall.”

To help us remember all the vocabulary and people in Unit 4 and on the World II SOL, we will create Taboo cards throughout this unit. Each student will work on each word, and then we will play the game as a review before the Midterm (and again before the big tests in May).

For each term/person, you will:

  • Define the term/describe the contributions of the person
  • Create a list of 5 Taboo words – don’t make it too easy, but leave room to be able to guess!
  • Suggest two ways to lead your teammates to the term/person without using the Taboo words

Comparison Outlines

There are several important topics for comparison in Unit 4, but not enough time to write multiple essays. Instead, you will outline the Comparative Essays that you could have written. An essay outline includes:

  1. At least three similarities
  2. At least three differences
  3. A thesis statement
  4. One example of a direct comparison WITH analysis

The list of essay prompts is below. Remember that “compare” means both compare and contrast!

Comparison Outlines: Colonization

  1. Compare the colonial systems in Spanish Latin America and Portuguese Latin America.
  2. Compare the colonial systems in the Caribbean Islands with ONE of the following: English North America, Spanish South America.
  3. Compare the methods of European colonization of TWO of the following regions: Latin America, Africa, Southeast Asia.

Comparison Outlines: Muslim Empires

  1. Compare the political systems of TWO of the following: Ottoman Empire, Safavid Empire, Mughal Empire.
  2. Compare the decline of the Mughal and Ottoman Empires.

SOL Reading Packet

The SOL Reading Packet will review all the major information you need to know for your WHII SOL. This reading Packet will also highlight the basic information you need for this unit.

Midterm

The Midterm Exam will consist of 40% content from Unit 4 and 20% each from Units 1, 2 and 3. There will be multiple choice questions and a Comparative Essay (from Unit 4). There may also be a map (because I love maps).

Role Play

We will study a significant number of people in this unit, and it may be difficult to remember what each of them did without the opportunity to meet them.

To help us reach that goal, each student will play the role of one historical character when we return from Winter Break. Groups of characters and their discussion topics are listed below.

  1. Which explorer made the most important contribution to European knowledge of the New World?
  2. Christopher Columbus
  3. Ferdinand Magellan
  4. Francis Drake
  5. Francisco Pizarro (1th only)
  6. Jacques Cartier
  7. Vasco de Gama
  1. Which scientist/inventor best represents the spirit of the Scientific Revolution?
  • Galileo Galilei
  • Isaac Newton
  • Johannes Kepler
  • Nicolaus Copernicus
  • William Harvey
  1. Which Reformation figure had the greatest impact on Christianity after 1500 CE?
  2. Ignatius of Loyola (1th only)
  3. Johann Gutenberg
  4. John Calvin
  5. Martin Luther
  6. Queen Elizabeth I
  7. Which European monarch is most deserving of the title “The Absolutist Monarch?”
  8. Frederick the Great
  9. Ivan the Terrible (1th only)
  10. King Henry VIII
  11. Louis XIV
  12. Peter the Great
  1. Which philosopher/writer best represents the spirit of the Enlightenment?
  2. Jean-Jacques Rousseau
  3. John Locke
  4. Montesquieu (1th only)
  5. Thomas Hobbes
  6. Voltaire

You will be responsible for playing the part of one character in one discussion from the lists above. As you can see, historical characters will be presented together, so each student will need to know their character as well as the others in their category.

On the day of the Role Play, you will arrive ready to assume your part in your discussion and convince the class to vote for you. You should be prepared with:

  1. A two minute statement about why YOU should win. Be sure to include:
  2. An introduction (where you are from, when you lived)
  3. A description of your greatest achievements
  4. A two sentence rebuttal for the name listed above yours (or, if you are first in the list, of the last person in the list)
  5. A costume or sign (optional, but worth bonus points)

Because of the large number of historical figures visiting us in one class period, speeches will be carefully timed and you will be cut off after your allotted time. You should also be prepared to answer questions from the moderator about your character.

During the discussions other than the one you are part of, you will take notes on what each historical figure has to say about themselves and the others. The class will vote after each discussion.

After the discussions, you will justify your vote in each discussion other than your own.

GRAPES

You know how to create GRAPES charts, and will make three of them during this unit.

  • Use Chapter 18 to create a GRAPES chart for Russia in the Early Modern Period.
  • Use Chapters 16 and 19 to create a split GRAPES chart for the Spanish and Portuguese colonial empires (focus on what was happening in the Americas and Southeast Asia, not on what’s going on in Europe).
  • Use Chapter 21 to create a Tri-GRAPES chart for the Ottoman, Safavid, and Mughal Empires.

For Russia and the Colonial Empires, use the standard GRAPES chart sheet. A Tri-GRAPES chart template will be provided for the Muslim Empires.

SOL Review Packet

To help you understand and review the essential knowledge of the Standards of Learning for World History II, you will complete Part 1 of the SOL Review Packet during this unit. There are two types of activities:

  1. Taboo Cards (in addition to those separately assigned on the Unit 4 Calendar) – see above
  2. Discussion Questions – these questions are to be answered as though they were short answer questions on a test. Answer in complete sentences, including as much relevant information as you can.

Period 4 AP WORLD HISTORY Calendar and Assignments