Wayne RESA

Unit PlannerSocial Studies 7

Wayne RESA – SS / Grade 7 / Social Studies / Social Studies 7 / Week 17 - Week 20
RESA, MAISA MC3 Units
Unit Abstract

This unit explores the development and emergence of empires during the era from 1000 B.C.E. to 500 C.E. A focus is placed on the concept of empire and factors influencing the rise and fall of empires. One of the big challenges of this – and most units in history – is for the students to see connections within and among the content. The great danger is that this becomes a cultural or civilizational/empire cavalcade: one week we’re in classical China and the next week we’re in Ancient Rome. So, the teachers’ challenge is to keep the focus on the world historical problem: (1) What new forms of human community developed during this time and what were their characteristics? (2) What was the impact of new social organizations – particularly empires and world religions? (3) What factors led to the development of empires and how did they change human organization and interaction?

 

One of the tendencies for teachers is to emphasize the differences. They focus on some of the most interesting empires and delve deeply into topics highly interesting to students, such as the role of gladiators in Rome, styles of weapons and warfare, interesting cultural practices or differences between empires in different regions. To what end are these interesting tidbits taught? A focus on distinctive practices or famous leaders can, in many cases, lead to a lack of attention to the larger common patterns across empires. Again, we are looking at differences, but world history focuses on the larger human story – the story we all share.

 

In this unit we look at the common problems that people living at this time faced and the related factors that lead to the development of large-scale empires and the emergence of portable and more generalized belief systems. In this context, we focus on empires and the key characteristics that make a civilization into an empire. Further, we want students to understand how empires develop and how patterns of leadership, social hierarchy, technology development, and societal interactions changed in the process. Thus, the unit begins with connections back to the previous era and a brief review of the growth of civilization in Mesopotamia. Using this region as an example, students grapple with the characteristics of an empire.

 

As students proceed through the lessons, they use both timelines and maps to “see” changes in civilizations, and to investigate scale and the impact of geography on people and the formation of empires. They also engage with a range of primary documents to get a sense of social hierarchy, belief systems, and government during this era. Overall then, students develop an understanding of the historical concept of empire as it existed in this era and use specific case studies of empires, emperors, and other historical events/patterns to form a broad understanding of the global pattern in Afroeurasia during Era 3. At the end of the unit, students spend some time learning about societies in the Americas, sub-Saharan Africa, and Oceania and compare their development to the growth of the Afroeurasian empires.

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Stage One - Desired Results

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Standards
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Compelling Question

What factors lead to the development of empires, and how did government, technology, culture, and human interaction change in this age of empire?

Supporting Questions
  1. Why did some civilizations develop into large-scale empires while others did not?
  2. How and why did changes in social institutions change how people lived in large-scale empires?
  3. How did empires change exchanges between peoples across large expanses of territory?
  4. How did the emergence of world religions both influence and reflect the rise of empires?
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Content (Key Concepts)

bureaucracy

collective learning

cultural diffusion

democracy

empire / emperor

leadership

militarism

monarchy

non-examples

philosophy

power and authority

religious tolerance

republic

right to rule (divine right, inherited power)

rise and fall of empires

Silk Roads

slavery

social hierarchy/class

social inequality

society

specialization of labor

trade networks

world religions

Skills (Intellectual Processes)

Classifying/Grouping

Compare and Contrast

Cause and Effect

Description

Generalizing

Identifying Perspectives

Evidentiary Argument

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Stage Two - Assessment Evidence

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Unit Assessment Tasks
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Stage Three - Learning Plan

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Lesson Plan Sequence
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Resources
  • Computer with projector
  • PowerPoint
  • Poster paper and markers to make signs
  • LCD/Overhead Projector
  • Sticky notes
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Expectations/Standards
MI: Literacy in History/Social Studies, Science, & Technical Subjects 6-12
MI: Grades 6-8
Reading: History/Social Studies
Key Ideas and Details
1. Read closely to determine what the text says explicitly and to make logical inferences from it; cite specific textual evidence when writing or speaking to support conclusions drawn from the text.
RH.6-8.1. Cite specific textual evidence to support analysis of primary and secondary sources.
2. Determine central ideas or themes of a text and analyze their development; summarize the key supporting details and ideas.
RH.6-8.2. Determine the central ideas or information of a primary or secondary source; provide an accurate summary of the source distinct from prior knowledge or opinions.
Craft and Structure
4. Interpret words and phrases as they are used in a text, including determining technical, connotative, and figurative meanings, and analyze how specific word choices shape meaning or tone.
RH.6-8.4. Determine the meaning of words and phrases as they are used in a text, including vocabulary specific to domains related to history/social studies.
5. Analyze the structure of texts, including how specific sentences, paragraphs, and larger portions of the text (e.g., a section, chapter, scene, or stanza) relate to each other and the whole.
RH.6-8.5. Describe how a text presents information (e.g., sequentially, comparatively, causally).
6. Assess how point of view or purpose shapes the content and style of a text.
RH.6-8.6. Identify aspects of a text that reveal an author’s point of view or purpose (e.g., loaded language, inclusion or avoidance of particular facts).
Integration of Knowledge and Ideas
7. Integrate and evaluate content presented in diverse formats and media, including visually and quantitatively, as well as in words.
RH.6-8.7. Integrate visual information (e.g., in charts, graphs, photographs, videos, or maps) with other information in print and digital texts.
Range of Reading and Level of Text Complexity
10. Read and comprehend complex literary and informational texts independently and proficiently.
RH.6-8.10. By the end of grade 8, read and comprehend history/social studies texts in the grades 6–8 text complexity band independently and proficiently.
Writing
Text Types and Purposes
1. Write arguments to support claims in an analysis of substantive topics or texts using valid reasoning and relevant and sufficient evidence.
WHST.6-8.1. Write arguments focused on discipline-specific content.
WHST.6-8.1a. Introduce claim(s) about a topic or issue, acknowledge and distinguish the claim(s) from alternate or opposing claims, and organize the reasons and evidence logically.
WHST.6-8.1b. Support claim(s) with logical reasoning and relevant, accurate data and evidence that demonstrate an understanding of the topic or text, using credible sources.
Production and Distribution of Writing
4. Produce clear and coherent writing in which the development, organization, and style are appropriate to task, purpose, and audience.
WHST.6-8.4. Produce clear and coherent writing in which the development, organization, and style are appropriate to task, purpose, and audience.
6. Use technology, including the Internet, to produce and publish writing and to interact and collaborate with others.
WHST.6-8.6. Use technology, including the Internet, to produce and publish writing and present the relationships between information and ideas clearly and efficiently.
9. Draw evidence from literary or informational texts to support analysis, reflection, and research.
WHST.6-8.9. Draw evidence from informational texts to support analysis reflection, and research.
Range of Writing
10. Write routinely over extended time frames (time for research, reflection, and revision) and shorter time frames (a single sitting or a day or two) for a range of tasks, purposes, and audiences.
WHST.6-8.10. Write routinely over extended time frames (time for reflection and revision) and shorter time frames (a single sitting or a day or two) for a range of discipline-specific tasks, purposes, and audiences.
MI: Social Studies (2007)
6th Grade
History
H1 The World in Temporal Terms: Historical Habits of Mind (Ways of Thinking)
Evaluate evidence, compare and contrast information, interpret the historical record, and develop sound historical arguments and perspectives on which informed decisions in contemporary life can be based.
H1.1 Temporal Thinking
Use historical conceptual devices to organize and study the past.
Hide details
Grade 6 & 7
6 – H1.1.1 Explain why and how historians use eras and periods as constructs to organize and explain human activities over time.
H1.2 Historical Inquiry and Analysis
Use historical inquiry and analysis to study the past.
6 – H1.2.1 Explain how historians use a variety of sources to explore the past (e.g., artifacts, primary and secondary sources including narratives, technology, historical maps, visual/mathematical quantitative data, radiocarbon dating, DNA analysis).
6 – H1.2.2 Read and comprehend a historical passage to identify basic factual knowledge and the literal meaning by indicating who was involved, what happened, where it happened, what events led to the development, and what consequences or outcomes followed.
6 – H1.2.3 Identify the point of view (perspective of the author) and context when reading and discussing primary and secondary sources.
6 – H1.2.4 Compare and evaluate competing historical perspectives about the past based on proof.
6 – H1.2.5 Identify the role of the individual in history and the significance of one person’s ideas.
H1.4 Historical Understanding
Use historical concepts, patterns, and themes to study the past.
6 – H1.4.1 Describe and use cultural institutions to study an era and a region (political, economic, religion/ belief, science/technology, written language, education, family).
6 – H1.4.2 Describe and use themes of history to study patterns of change and continuity.
6 – H1.4.3 Use historical perspective to analyze global issues faced by humans long ago and today.
W3 WHG Era 3 – Clasical Traditions and Major Empires, 1000 B.C.E./B.C. to 300 C.E./A.D.
Analyze the civilizations and empires that emerged during this era, noting their political, economic, and social systems, and their changing interactions with the environment. Analyze the innovations and social, political, and economic changes that occurred through the emergence of agrarian societies of Mesoamerica and Andean South America and the subsequent urbanization and trading economies that occurred in the region. (Grade 6)
W3.1 Classical Traditions and Major Empires in the Western Hemisphere
Describe empires and agrarian civilizations in Mesoamerica and South America.
6 – W3.1.2 Explain the role of economics in shaping the development of early civilizations (trade routes and their significance – Inca Road, supply and demand for products).
Geography
G1 The World in Spatial Terms: Geographical Habits of Mind
Describe and study the relationships between people, places, and environments by using information that is in a geographic (spatial) context. Engage in mapping and analyzing the information to explain the patterns and relationships they reveal both between and among people, their cultures, and the natural environment. Identify and access information, evaluate it using criteria based on concepts and themes, and use geography in problem solving and decision making. Explain and use key conceptual devices (places and regions, spatial patterns and processes) that geographers use to organize information and inform their study of the world.
G1.1 Spatial Thinking
Use maps and other geographic tools to acquire and process information from a spatial perspective.
Hide details
Grades 6 & 7
6 – G1.1.1 Describe how geographers use mapping to represent places and natural and human phenomena in the world.
G1.2 Geographical Inquiry and Analysis
Use geographic inquiry and analysis to answer important questions about relationships between people, cultures, their environment, and relations within the larger world context.
6 – G1.2.6 Apply the skills of geographic inquiry (asking geographic questions, acquiring geographic information, organizing geographic information, analyzing geographic information, and answering geographic questions) to analyze a problem or issue of importance to a region of the Western Hemisphere.
G1.3 Geographical Understanding
Use geographic themes, knowledge about processes and concepts to study the Earth.
6 – G1.3.1 Use the fundamental themes of geography (location, place, human environment interaction, movement, region) to describe regions or places on earth.
6 – G1.3.3 Explain the different ways in which places are connected and how those connections demonstrate interdependence and accessibility.
G2.2 Human Characteristics of Place
Describe the human characteristics of places.
6 – G2.2.1 Describe the human characteristics of the region under study (including languages, religion, economic system, governmental system, cultural traditions).
6 – G2.2.2 Explain that communities are affected positively or negatively by changes in technology (e.g., Canada with regard to mining, forestry, hydroelectric power generation, agriculture, snowmobiles, cell phones, air travel).
6 – G2.2.3 Analyze how culture and experience influence people’s perception of places and regions (e.g., the Caribbean Region that presently displays enduring impacts of different immigrant groups – Africans, South Asians, Europeans – and the differing contemporary points of view about the region displayed by islanders and tourists).
G4.3 Patterns of Human Settlement
Describe patterns, processes, and functions of human settlement.
6 – G4.3.2 Describe patterns of settlement by using historical and modern maps (e.g., coastal and river cities and towns in the past and present, locations of megacities – modern cities over 5 million, such as Mexico City, and patterns of agricultural settlements in South and North America).
G4.4 Forces of Cooperation and Conflict
Explain how forces of conflict and cooperation among people influence the division of the Earth’s surface and its resources.
6 – G4.4.1 Identify factors that contribute to conflict and cooperation between and among cultural groups (control/use of natural resources, power, wealth, and cultural diversity).
Civics & Government
C3 Structure and Functions of Government
Describe the major activities of government, including making and enforcing laws, providing services and benefits to individuals and groups, assigning individual and collective responsibilities, generating revenue, and providing national security.
C3.6 Characteristics of Nation-States Describe the characteristics of nation-states and how they may interact.
6 – C3.6.1 Define the characteristics of a nation-state (a specific territory, clearly defined boundaries, citizens, and jurisdiction over people who reside there, laws, and government), and how Western Hemisphere nations interact.
Economics
E3 International Economy
Analyze reasons for individuals and businesses to specialize and trade, why individuals and businesses trade across international borders, and the comparisons of the benefits and costs of specialization and the resulting trade for consumers, producers, and governments.
E3.1 Economic Interdependence
Describe patterns and networks of economic interdependence, including trade.
6 – E3.1.2 Diagram or map the movement of a consumer product from where it is manufactured to where it is sold to demonstrate the flow of materials, labor, and capital (e.g., global supply chain for computers, athletic shoes, and clothing).
7th Grade
History
H1 The World in Temporal Terms: Historical Habits of Mind (Ways of Thinking)
Evaluate evidence, compare and contrast information, interpret the historical record, and develop sound historical arguments and perspectives on which informed decisions in contemporary life can be based.
H1.1 Temporal Thinking
Use historical conceptual devices to organize and study the past.
Hide details
Grade 6 & 7
7 – H1.1.1 Explain why and how historians use eras and periods as constructs to organize and explain human activities over time.
H1.2 Historical Inquiry and Analysis
Use historical inquiry and analysis to study the past.
7 – H1.2.1 Explain how historians use a variety of sources to explore the past (e.g., artifacts, primary and secondary sources including narratives, technology, historical maps, visual/mathematical quantitative data, radiocarbon dating, DNA analysis).
7 – H1.2.2 Read and comprehend a historical passage to identify basic factual knowledge and the literal meaning by indicating who was involved, what happened, where it happened, what events led to the development, and what consequences or outcomes followed.
7 – H1.2.3 Identify the point of view (perspective of the author) and context when reading and discussing primary and secondary sources.
7 – H1.2.4 Compare and evaluate competing historical perspectives about the past based on proof.
7 – H1.2.6 Identify the role of the individual in history and the significance of one person’s ideas.
H1.4 Historical Understanding
Use historical concepts, patterns, and themes to study the past.
7 – H1.4.1 Describe and use cultural institutions to study an era and a region (political, economic, religion/ belief, science/technology, written language, education, family).
7 – H1.4.2 Describe and use themes of history to study patterns of change and continuity.
7 – H1.4.3 Use historical perspectives to analyze global issues faced by humans long ago and today.
W3 WHG Era 3 – Clasical Traditions and Major Empires, 1000 B.C.E./B.C. to 300 C.E./A.D.
Analyze the civilizations and empires that emerged during this era, noting their political, economic, and social systems, and their changing interactions with the environment. Analyze the innovations and social, political, and economic changes that occurred through the emergence of agrarian societies of Mesoamerica and Andean South America and the subsequent urbanization and trading economies that occurred in the region. (Grade 6)
W3.1 Classical Traditions and Major Empires in the Western Hemisphere
Describe empires and agrarian civilizations in Mesoamerica and South America.
7 – W3.1.1 Describe the characteristics that classical civilizations share (institutions, cultural styles, systems of thought that influenced neighboring peoples and have endured for several centuries).
7 – W3.1.2 Using historic and modern maps, locate three major empires of this era, describe their geographic characteristics including physical features and climates, and propose a generalization about the relationship between geographic characteristics and the development of early empires.
7– W3.1.3 Compare and contrast the defining characteristics of a city-state, civilization, and empire.
7 – W3.1.4 Assess the importance of Greek ideas about democracy and citizenship in the development of Western political thought and institutions.
7 – W3.1.5 Describe major achievements from Indian, Chinese, Mediterranean, African, and Southwest and Central Asian civilizations in the areas of art, architecture and culture; science, technology and mathematics; political life and ideas; philosophy and ethical beliefs; and military strategy.
7 – W3.1.6 Use historic and modern maps to locate and describe trade networks among empires in the classical era.
7 – W3.1.8 Describe the role of state authority, military power, taxation systems, and institutions of coerced labor, including slavery, in building and maintaining empires (e.g., Han Empire, Mauryan Empire, Egypt, Greek city-states and the Roman Empire).
7 – W3.1.9 Describe the significance of legal codes, belief systems, written languages and communications in the development of large regional empires.
7 – W3.1.10 Create a time line that illustrates the rise and fall of classical empires during the classical period.
W3.2 Growth and Development of World Religions
Explain how world religions or belief systems of Hinduism, Judaism, Buddhism, Christianity, Confucianism and Islam grew and their significance. (Islam is included here even though it came after 300 C.E./A.D.)
7 – W3.2.1 Identify and describe the beliefs of the five major world religions.
7 – W3.2.2 Locate the geographical center of major religions and map the spread through the 3rd century C.E./A.D.
7 – W3.2.3 Identify and describe the ways that religions unified people’s perceptions of the world and contributed to cultural integration of large regions of Afro-Eurasia.
Geography
G1 The World in Spatial Terms: Geographical Habits of Mind
Describe and study the relationships between people, places, and environments by using information that is in a geographic (spatial) context. Engage in mapping and analyzing the information to explain the patterns and relationships they reveal both between and among people, their cultures, and the natural environment. Identify and access information, evaluate it using criteria based on concepts and themes, and use geography in problem solving and decision making. Explain and use key conceptual devices (places and regions, spatial patterns and processes) that geographers use to organize information and inform their study of the world.
G1.1 Spatial Thinking
Use maps and other geographic tools to acquire and process information from a spatial perspective.
Hide details
Grades 6 & 7
7 – G1.1.1 Explain and use a variety of maps, globes, and web based geography technology to study the world, including global, interregional, regional, and local scales.
G1.2 Geographical Inquiry and Analysis
Use geographic inquiry and analysis to answer important questions about relationships between people, cultures, their environment, and relations within the larger world context.
7 – G1.2.6 Apply the skills of geographic inquiry (asking geographic questions, acquiring geographic information, organizing geographic information, analyzing geographic information, and answering geographic questions) to analyze a problem or issue of importance to a region of the Eastern Hemisphere.
G1.3 Geographical Understanding
Use geographic themes, knowledge about processes and concepts to study the Earth.
7 – G1.3.1 Use the fundamental themes of geography (location, place, human environment interaction, movement, region) to describe regions or places on earth.
7 – G1.3.3 Explain the different ways in which places are connected and how those connections demonstrate interdependence and accessibility.
G2.2 Human Characteristics of Place
Describe the human characteristics of places.
7 – G2.2.1 Describe the human characteristics of the region under study (including languages, religion, economic system, governmental system, cultural traditions).
7 – G2.2.2 Explain that communities are affected positively or negatively by changes in technology (e.g., increased manufacturing resulting in rural to urban migration in China, increased farming of fish, hydroelectric power generation at Three Gorges, pollution resulting from increased manufacturing and automobiles).
7 – G2.2.3 Analyze how culture and experience influence people’s perception of places and regions (e.g., that beaches are places where tourists travel, cities have historic buildings, northern places are cold, equatorial places are very warm).
G4 Human Systems
Explain that human activities may be seen on Earth’s surface.
G4.1 Cultural Mosaic
Describe the characteristics, distribution and complexity of Earth’s cultural mosaic.
7 – G4.1.1 Identify and explain examples of cultural diffusion within the Eastern Hemisphere (e.g., the spread of sports, music, architecture, television, Internet, Bantu languages in Africa, Islam in Western Europe).
G4.3 Patterns of Human Settlement
Describe patterns, processes, and functions of human settlement.
7 – G4.3.2 Describe patterns of settlement by using historical and modern maps (e.g., the location of the world’s mega cities, other cities located near coasts and navigable rivers, regions under environmental stress such as the Sahel).
G4.4 Forces of Cooperation and Conflict
Explain how forces of conflict and cooperation among people influence the division of the Earth’s surface and its resources.
7 – G4.4.1 Identify and explain factors that contribute to conflict and cooperation between and among cultural groups (e.g., natural resources, power, culture, wealth).
Civics & Government
C1 Purposes of Government
Analyze how people identify, organize, and accomplish the purposes of government.
C1.1 Nature of Civic Life, Politics, and Government
Describe Civic Life, Politics, and Government and explain their relationships.
Hide details
Grades 6 & 7
7 – C1.1.1 Explain how the purposes served by government affect relationships between the individual, government, and society as a whole and the differences that occur in monarchies, theocracies, dictatorships, and representative governments.
C3 Structure and Functions of Government
Describe the major activities of government, including making and enforcing laws, providing services and benefits to individuals and groups, assigning individual and collective responsibilities, generating revenue, and providing national security.
C3.6 Characteristics of Nation-States
Describe the characteristics of nation-states and how they may interact.
7 – C3.6.1 Define the characteristics of a nation-state (a specific territory, clearly defined boundaries, citizens, and jurisdiction over people who reside there, laws, and government) and how Eastern Hemisphere nations interact.
Economics
E3 International Economy
Analyze reasons for individuals and businesses to specialize and trade, why individuals and businesses trade across international borders, and the comparisons of the benefits and costs of specialization and the resulting trade for consumers, producers, and governments.
E3.1 Economic Interdependence
Describe patterns and networks of economic interdependence, including trade.
7 – E3.1.2 Diagram or map the movement of a consumer product from where it is manufactured to where it is sold to demonstrate the flow of materials, labor, and capital (e.g., global supply chain for computers, athletic shoes, and clothing).
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