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Should not be in class: Bags Food Drinks, other than water. Thursday August 15, 2013. Do you have…? Required daily materials Signature form from the course expectations. Book in your locker? GO GET IT, NOW! Have something you shouldn’t? BRING IT BACK TO LOCKER NOW!
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Should not be in class: Bags Food Drinks, other than water Thursday August 15, 2013 Do you have…? Required daily materials Signature form from the course expectations • Book in your locker? GO GET IT, NOW! • Have something you shouldn’t? BRING IT BACK TO LOCKER NOW! • If you did not receive books in Home Room, you will be going to the bookstore • If you are new today, you will check the library first then go to the bookstore for your books
Should not be in class: Bags Food Drinks, other than water Friday August 16, 2013 • Book in your locker? GO GET IT, NOW! • Have something you shouldn’t? BRING IT BACK TO LOCKER NOW! • Turn in any signed parent forms you have today • Open your notebook (if no notebook, use loose paper for now – must have notebook for Monday!) • Open text book to page 9 • Get ready for learnin’! Do you have…? Required daily materials Signature form from the course expectations
Timelines • B.C.: “before Christ”; time below “zero”; similar to negative numbers on a number line, they count down to zero, also written as B.C.E. • A.D.: anno Domini (“Year of Our Lord” in Latin), time after “zero” (the mark of the birth of Jesus Christ), also written as C.E. • c. Or ca.: circa Latin for “around” or “about”; when we don’t know the exact year of an event; approximate • TIME LINE: the actual line representing a span of time, includes the “number markers” (intervals) • INTERVAL: the “number markers” on the time line itself; must be equal distance/time apart across the whole line • EVENT: the action added to the time line, always listed with the date and action
You are expected to be “in the swing of things” as of today. Tardies count. Behavior log is in effect. We can do it! First day? I will try to see you in class, otherwise see me at predismissal. Monday August 19, 2013 Absent Friday? Check back folder for work – read the posted procedure for Absent Work. • Turn in any signed parent forms you have today • Continue World Map from Friday • Open text book to the Atlas or page 18 • FOLLOW DIRECTIONS! (when to use marker vs. colored pencil…) • purple is always an acceptable substitute for blue (for water) • I will walk around to help with #8 • Turn in when finished • Keep book open – turn to chapter 1, section 1 • Have a pen/pencil and your highlighter ready
Reading “How-To” 1.1 BuzzWords • read, don’t skim • ask if you don’t know a word or if a concept is confusing to you • “chunk” your reading: • read to the end of a “blue headline” section • stop & think about what was read • fill in blanks/answer questions • look at maps, charts, graphs, pictures, and anything else in the section • highlight buzzwords as you read, not after • if the word repeats, highlight each time • highlight short phrases as one item • write neatly – PRINT • capitalize appropriately (do as the book does) • archeologist • artifact • Stone Age • carbon-14 • Louis & Mary Leakey • Olduvai Gorge • hominids • Austroalopithecus • homo Habillis • culture • homo Erectus • homo Sapiens • Neanderthals • Cro-Magnons • Lascaux Cave
All required materials needed today. MUST HAVE PENCIL (OR PURCHASE ONE FOR 25₵) Tuesday August 19, 2013 • Turn in any signed parent forms, 1.1 FIB readings, or anything else that needs to be turned in • With PENCIL, fill our top LEFT of scantron • Name: full first & last name • Course: WORLD HISTORY – MCVEY • Date: 8-20-2013 • Period: 2 • Fill in your ID in the top RIGHT • Put number in first 6 boxes – leave the rest BLANK! • Fill in the correct bubbles underneath – leave the empty ones blank! • Clear desk & be ready for the PRETEST • Don’t freak out
IT’S HOT. WE MAY BE RELOCATING. • Turn in any signed parent forms, absent work, missing work, or homework you have today – just put it all in the class bin • The seating chart is “official” as of today – any new students will just have to take the only open seat (if any) • Don’t get too settled because you may be moving • Remind me if you need to sit in the front & I moved you • Open notebook to the next fresh, clean page • TITLE AT TOP: 1.1 Reading Check • use your brain or your outline to answer the following • Write BOTH the question & answer – either as Q&A or as a single statement Wednesday August 21, 2013 • Which scientist studies clue left behind by ancient people: . . archeologist or anthropologist? • Name one of the most common artifacts found by archeologists: • Name the location where the Leakey’s discovered the remains of an early hominid: • Which hominid was the fist tool making human? • Name the early humans famous for their art:
1.2 Development of Agriculture end of Last Ice Age large game animals die out meat spoils quickly in warm weather food becomes scarce people rely more on plants foods for survival people begin to domesticate animal development of agriculture small farming settlements grow to villages villages practice “division of labor” new technologies life is easier productivity rises people have more “stuff” private property
Turn in any signed parent forms, 1.1 FIB readings, 1.2 FIB readings, or anything else that needs to be turned in EITHER on a new page OR underneath the 1.2 reading check, answer these questions: Thursday August 22, 2013 (title) 1.2 Settled Societies What did people use to irrigate fields? Çatalhüyük was located in: What is a “mace-head”? Which city is one of the oldest continually inhabited settlements in the world? List 3 benefits to settled life over a nomadic life.
1.3 Characteristics of a Civilization “Characteristics” are the different qualities or traits needed in order to qualify for the topic of “civilization.” For the most part, all civilizations will meet all the requirements. Only a few civilizations in history are called so but are missing some characteristics. Religion Job Specialization Advanced Technology Writing & Record Keeping Social Classes Government Cities
Thursday: Aug 23, 2012PARENT FORMS DUE TOMORROW!Pretest tomorrow! Bring pencil! Open book to pages 16-17 Take out notebook Title: Characteristics of Civilization Using pages 16-17 (A. What is a Civilization?), list (no need to describe) 4 characteristics a society must have to be called a “civilization” (there are more than 4)
Chapter 1: Review History • Use what YOU know first (beginning to end) • (back to beginning) use what your NOTES know next • If you still have empties, use the book and/or ask In World History the Review Histories go in order that the information appears in the chapter
Part C options • Explainhow historians identify a civilization. • Explain: the action you will take – give specific examples • identify a civilization: subject of your answer – relate your examples back to this topic • how: additional directions – how are your examples connected to the subject • Describeone of the early river valley civilizations that developed in Africa or Asia. • Describe: the action you will take – give many details • river valley civilization: subject of your answer – relate your details back to this topic • one: additional directions: pick ONE from the options implied (in this case, from the 4 civilizations described at the end of the chapter)
Chapter 1 Quiz Concerns please be sure to put the quiz together correctly: name on FRONT (side with #1) staple with all pages facing up, extra pages in the back, top left hand corner NEVER leave a blank when options are given ALWAYS attempt “Part C” – minimum 15% of the quiz grade – 27% of chapter 1 quiz grade ALWAYS rewrite the “Part C” question at the top of the page so that you know what you are really answering reread what you write – complete sentences that make sense, did you used BuzzWords? grades under 50% will require parent signature before grade goes in grade book STUDENT RESPONSIBILITY
Part C; Example A • Explainhow historians identify a civilization. Civilizations are complex societies. Historians identify civilizations and separate them from simple societies by using very specific qualifications. Civilizations must have cities and governmentto keep order and provide services for the people. They must also have specialized jobs that help to developadvanced technologies. Religion is present to explain life events and social structure is used to create purpose for people. Lastly, a civilization must have a writing system to keeprecordsfrom grain harvests to taxes. Historians know a group of people met these qualifications by the artifacts left behind.
Part C; Example B • Describeone of the early river valley civilizations that developed in Africa or Asia. One early river valley civilization to develop in Africa or Asia was the Nile Valley Civilization, otherwise known as Egypt. Egypt was located in north east Africa along the Nile river. Egypt had a pictograph writing system called hieroglyphics. Theirgovernment was run by a family of rulers called dynasties. The people practiced irrigation to help control the annual flooding of the Nile and help their agriculture. Historians know about Nile valley civilization by the artifacts left behind.
The development of agriculture is described on pages 17-18 of your text book. Some scholars believe that farming was invented by women. Explain the reasons scholars might have for thinking that. Good Answer: Some scholars believe that farming was invented by women because traditionally women are nurtures. Women have children and then take care of them. This nurturing is useful for farming because plants need to be taken care of in order to grow well and produce food. Also, women had to take care of the home and children. It was more practical to plant grains near the home than to walk long distances to find food. Bad Answers: • They think that cuz women like to plant stuff. • Because men hunt and like to kill things. • Men do hard work and farming isn’t hard.
Review… • Explain the culture of most Native Americans. • What effect do you think the reconquista had on Spanish exploration of the Americas? • Describe slavery in West African society before the Europeans. • How did the Columbian Exchange effect the Native Americans?