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Debra Cave, B.S., M.Ed. AP World History Welcome Parents!. AP World History. College-level Global events and trends Historical Thinking Skills Thematic Comparative “ Periodization ” Change & Continuity Balanced Coverage. Historical Thinking Skills.
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Debra Cave, B.S., M.Ed. AP World HistoryWelcome Parents!
AP World History • College-level • Global events and trends • Historical Thinking Skills • Thematic • Comparative • “Periodization” • Change & Continuity • Balanced Coverage
Historical Thinking Skills • Historical Arguments from historical evidence • Chronological Reasoning • Comparison and Contextualization • Historical Interpretation and Synthesis
Theme One • Interaction between humans & the environment • demography & disease • migration • settlement patterns • technology Example: Period 4: 1450-1750 Increasing Global Interactions Changes and Continuities in the Atlantic World due to the Columbian Exchange
Theme Two • Interaction of cultures • religions • beliefs systems • philosophies • ideologies • science and technology • arts and architecture Example: Period 2, 600 BCE-600 CE, Organization and Reorganization of Human Society Cultural Diffusion on the Silk Roads; Buddhism, sillk
Theme Three • State-building, expansion & conflict • Forms of governance • Empires, nations • Nationalism, revolts, revolutions Example: Period 5 Industrialization and Global Integration Japan’s vs. China’s Reaction to Western Industrialization
Theme Four • Creation, expansion, and interaction of economic systems • agricultural and pastoral production • trade and commerce • labor systems • industrialization • capitalism and socialism Example: Period 3 Regional and Trans-regional interactions Serfdom, Slavery
Theme Five • Development and transformation of social structures • gender roles & relations • family & kinship • racial/ethnic constructions • social/economic classes Example: Period 6, Accelerating Global Change and Realignments Changing Role of Women
Habits of Mind • Constructing/evaluating arguments; analyzing POV and context. • Assessing continuity/change over time and over different world regions. • Understanding diversity of interpretation • Seeing global patterns; connecting local developments to global processes. • Comparing within and among societies. • Exploring the relevance of world history to contemporary developments.
The Exam • May 15, 2014. • Section I: 70 Multiple Choice (55 min) • Section II: Free Response (130 min) • A. DBQ (50 min) • B. Change Over Time (40 min) • C. Comparison Essay (40 min)
Assignments • Unit Tests (100 pts) • Quizzes (25 pts) • Essays (50 pts) • Homework (25 pts) • Debates/Seminars/ /Presentations (25-50 pts) • Research Papers/Projects (100-200 pts) • Class Participation (varies)
What do I expect from students? • Be Prepared • Be realistic • Accept challenge • Self advocate • Give their best effort
What can you expect from me? • High standards • Fair and reasonable • Support • Flexible • Accessible
Contact debra.cave@apsva.us
Online Grades • Check ParentVue
How You Can Help • Get a Review Book • Discuss global issues • Play devil’s advocate • Read/discuss history • Watch/critique historical films • Contact me