COURSE SYLLABUS
WORLD HISTORY & GEOGRAPHY
Teacher: Mr. Craig Emmert phone # (989) 415-8787
Course Description: Students will study the rise of the nation state in Europe, the French Revolution, and the economic and political roots of the modern world. They will examine the origins and consequences of the Industrial Revolution, nineteenth century political reform in Western Europe, and imperialism in Africa, Asia, and South America. They will explain the causes and consequences of the great military and economic events of the past century, including the World Wars, the Great Depression, the Cold War, and the Russian and Chinese Revolutions. Finally, students will study the rise of nationalism and the continuing persistence of political, ethnic, and religious conflict in many parts of the world. Relevant Tennessee connections will be part of the curriculum, as well as appropriate primary source documents. Students will explore geographic influences on history, with attention given to political boundaries that developed with the evolution of nations from 1750 to the present and the subsequent human geographic issues that dominate the global community. Additionally, students will study aspects of technical geography such as GPS and GIS, and how these innovations continuously impact geopolitics in the contemporary world.
Text: Holt McDougal World History: Patterns of Interaction
The following is a tentative course schedule of events. NOTE: This is subject to change.
Ch. 2 Early River Valley Civilizations (3500BC-450BC)
Ch. 3 People & Ideas on the Move (2000BC-250BC)
Ch. 5 Classical Greece (2000BC-300BC)
Ch. 6 Ancient Rome & Early Christianity (500BC-AD 500)
Ch. 10 The Muslim World (600-1250)
Ch. 13 European Middle Ages (500-1200)
Ch. 14 The Formation of Western Europe (800-1500)
Ch. 17 European Renaissance & Reformation (1300-1600)
Ch. 22 Enlightenment & Revolution (1550-1789)
Ch. 23 The French Revolution & Napoleon (1789-1815)
Ch. 25 The Industrial Revolution (1700-1900)
Ch. 29 The Great War (1914-1918)
Ch. 31-32 World War II (1939-1945)