1 / 5

NAME

NAME. The Unit Organizer. 4. BIGGER PICTURE. DATE. NEXT UNIT. /Experience. LAST UNIT. /Experience. 2. 3. CURRENT UNIT. CURRENT UNIT. 1. is about. 8. UNIT SCHEDULE. UNIT MAP. 5. 6. UNIT SELF-TEST QUESTIONS. RELATIONSHIPS. UNIT. 7. {Type Here}. Such as. Such as the.

lbeebe
Download Presentation

NAME

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. NAME The Unit Organizer 4 BIGGER PICTURE DATE NEXT UNIT /Experience LAST UNIT /Experience 2 3 CURRENT UNIT CURRENT UNIT 1 is about... 8 UNIT SCHEDULE UNIT MAP 5 6 UNIT SELF-TEST QUESTIONS RELATIONSHIPS UNIT 7 {Type Here} Such as Such as the Such as Such as the Such as the

  2. NAME The Unit Organizer 4 BIGGER PICTURE DATE NEXT UNIT /Experience LAST UNIT /Experience 2 3 CURRENT UNIT CURRENT UNIT 1 8 Vocab UNIT MAP 5 is about... Essential QUESTIONS 7 Global Interactions in Ancient History 1st Day of School Prehistory and Human Development River Valley Civilizations How humans developed advanced tools and how farming allowed for humans to settle in one place. Hunter-gatherer Nomad Paleolithic Era Neolithic Era Neolithic Revolution Paleolithic Era Technology Agriculture Archaeology Development of Agriculture Hunter-gatherer society Neolithic Era • How did physical geography influence the lives of early humans? • 2. What were the characteristics of hunter-gatherer societies? • 3. How did the beginning of agriculture and the domestication of animals promote the rise of settled communities? • 4. How does archaeology provide knowledge of early human life and its changes?

  3. 1 CONVEY TARGETED CONCEPT CONCEPT DIAGRAM 3 Key Words 2 OFFER OVERALL CONCEPT 2 1 3 NOTE KEY WORDS CLASSIFY CHARACTERISTICS 4 Always Present Sometimes Present Never Present 5 EXPLORE EXAMPLES Examples: Non-examples: 6 PRACTICE WITH NEW EXAMPLE 7 TIE DOWNA DEFINITION Imperialism Powerful countries expansion Mother country Overseas colonies Peace and harmony Overseas colonies Powerful navy Exportation of raw materials Equality for all Competition Forced rule Britain Mother country States Britain (India/Africa/Canada) Colonization of America Germany (parts of E. & W. Africa) Provinces Strong navy France (N. & W. Africa) Rival countries Imperialism is the competition of countries to force rule over weaker countries so that they can export raw materials for economic gain for the mother country

  4. LINCS Tables Monarchs are undivided when they migrate to a single place in which thousands of other are located. The big brother made his little brother a final proposition: don’t tell mom or your done for! Undivided rule by a single person Actions used by one nation to exercise economic or political control over a weaker nation 1 1 1 1 Term Term Term Term 5 5 5 5 LINCing Picture LINCing Picture LINCing Picture LINCing Picture 2 2 2 2 4 4 4 4 Definition Definition Definition Definition LINCing Story LINCing Story LINCing Story LINCing Story 3 3 3 3 Reminding Word Reminding Word Reminding Word Reminding Word emperor monarch Listthe parts Identifya reminding word Note a LINCing story Create a LINCing picture Self-test Imperialism The emperor told his colonies that they had to obey him so he could become rich. diplomacy the art and practice of conducting negotiations between nations In ancient China you must dip to your knee in order to negotiate with the emperor. dip ultimatum A final proposition, condition or demand made monarchy

  5. Key Topic WWI is about… The conflict that arose between the countries of the world pulling them into a global war. Glorification of The military Grew partly out of Social Darwinism Militarism Overseas colonies also resulted in building up of the navy Arms race; mainly Britain and Germany Proud of military power Europe’s industrial leader Germany Nationalism Wanted revenge & Recovery of Alsace & Lorraine Bitter about defeat of the Franco-Prussian War France So What? (What’s important to understand about this?) The cause of WWI can be attributed to many causes rather than just one single cause.

More Related