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History Standards for Grades 5-12
United States
Era 1
Three
Worlds Meet (Beginnings to 1620)
Standard 1
Comparative
characteristics of societies in the Americas,
Western Europe, and Western Africa that
increasingly interacted after 1450.
Standard 2
How early European exploration and colonization resulted in cultural and
ecological interactions among previously unconnected peoples.
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Overview
The study of American
history properly begins with the first peopling of the Americas more than 30,000
years ago. Students will learn about the spread of ancient human
societies in the Americas,
North and South, and their adaptations to diverse physical and natural
environments. This prepares students to address the historical
convergence of European, African, and Native American people starting in
the late 15th century when the Columbian voyages began. In studying the
beginnings of North American history, it is important for students to
understand that Indian societies, like peoples in other parts of the
world, were experiencing change--political, economic, cultural--on the
eve of the arrival of Europeans. The history of the Native Americans was
complex, and it was continuing even as European settlers landed on South
and North American shores.
European mariners
were the agents of the encounters among these many peoples of the late
15th and early 16th centuries. To understand why the trans-oceanic
voyages took place students must gain an appreciation of Europe's economic growth, the rise of bureaucratic
states, the pace of technological innovation, intellectual and religious
ferment, and the continuing crusading tradition in the late medieval
period. Students' grasp of the encounters of diverse peoples in the Americas also requires attention to the
history of West and Central Africa. This
study will prepare students to investigate the conditions under which the
Atlantic slave trade developed.
By studying the
European colonization--and partial conquest--of the Americas to 1620, mostly played out in
Central and South America, students will embark upon a continuing
theme--the making of the many American people of the Western
Hemisphere. As a people, we were composed from the beginning
of diverse ethnic and linguistic strains. The nature of these manifold
and uneven beginnings spawned issues and tensions that are still
unresolved. How a composite American society was created out of such
human diversity was a complicated process of cultural transformation that
unfolded unevenly and unremittingly as the following eras will address.
By studying early
European exploration, colonization, and conquest, students will learn
about five long-range changes set in motion by the Columbian voyages.
First, the voyages initiated a redistribution of the world's population.
Several million voluntary European immigrants flocked to the Americas; at least 10-12 million
involuntary enslaved Africans relocated on the west side of the Atlantic,
overwhelmingly to South America and the Caribbean;
and indigenous peoples experienced catastrophic losses. Second, the
arrival of Europeans led to the rise of the first trans-oceanic empires
in world history. Third, the Columbian voyages sparked a world-wide
commercial expansion and an explosion of European capitalist enterprise.
Fourth, the voyages led in time to the planting of English settlements
where ideas of representative government and religious toleration would
grow and, over several centuries, would inspire similar transformations
in other parts of the world. Lastly, at a time when slavery and serfdom
were waning in Western Europe, new plantation economies were emerging in
the Americas
employing forced labor on a large scale.
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STANDARD 1
Comparative characteristics of societies in the Americas, Western Europe, and Western Africa that increasingly interacted after
1450.
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Standard 1A
The student
understands the patterns of change in indigenous societies in the Americas
up to the Columbian voyages.
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Grade Level
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Therefore, the student is able
to
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5-12
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Draw
upon data provided by archaeologists and geologists to explain the
origins and migration from Asia to the Americas
and contrast them with Native Americans' own beliefs concerning their
origins in the Americas.
[Compare and contrast different
sets of ideas]
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5-12
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Trace
the spread of human societies and the rise of diverse cultures from
hunter-gatherers to urban dwellers in the Americas. [Reconstruct patterns of historical
succession and duration]
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9-12
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Explain
the common elements of Native American societies such as gender roles,
family organization, religion, and values and compare their diversity in
languages, shelter, labor systems, political structures, and economic
organization. [Analyze multiple
causation]
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7-12
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Explore
the rise and decline of the Mississippian mound-building society. [Analyze multiple causation]
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Standard 1B
The
student understands changes in Western European societies in the age of
exploration.
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Grade Level
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Therefore, the student is able
to
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5-12
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Appraise
aspects of European society, such as family organization, gender roles,
property holding, education and literacy, linguistic diversity, and
religion. [Identify historical
antecedents]
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9-12
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Describe
major institutions of capitalism and analyze how the emerging capitalist
economy transformed agricultural production, manufacturing, and the uses
of labor. [Analyze
cause-and-effect relationships]
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7-12
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Explain
the causes and consequences of European Crusades in Iberia and analyze
connections between the Christian crusading tradition and European
overseas exploration. [Analyze
multiple causation]
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7-12
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Explain
dissent within the Catholic Church and analyze the beliefs and ideas of leading
religious reformers. [Explain the
influence of ideas]
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9-12
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Analyze
relationships among the rise of centralized states, the development of
urban centers, the expansion of commerce, and overseas exploration. [Identify historical antecedents]
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Standard 1C
The student understands developments in Western African
societies in the period of early contact with Europeans.
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Grade Level
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Therefore, the student is able
to
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5-12
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Describe
the physical geography of West and Central Africa
and analyze its impact on settlement patterns, cultural traits, and
trade. [Draw upon data in
historical maps]
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9-12
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Describe
general features of family organization, labor division, agriculture,
manufacturing, and trade in Western African societies. [Analyze multiple causation]
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7-12
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Describe
the continuing growth of Islam in West Africa
in the 15th and 16th centuries and analyze interactions between Islam and
local religious beliefs and practices. [Examine the influence of ideas]
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9-12
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Analyze
varieties of slavery in Western Africa
and the economic importance of the trans-Saharan slave trade in the 15th
and 16th centuries. [Analyze
multiple causation]
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9-12
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Analyze
the varying responses of African states to early European trading and
raiding on the Atlantic African coast. [Analyze cause-and-effect relationships]
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Standard 1D
The student understands the differences and similarities
among Africans, Europeans, and Native Americans who converged in the
western hemisphere after 1492.
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Grade Level
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Therefore, the student is able
to
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5-12
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Compare
political systems, including concepts of political authority, civic values,
and the organization and practice of government. [Compare and contrast different political systems]
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5-12
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Compare
social organizations, including population levels, urbanization, family
structure, and modes of communication. [Compare and contrast different social organizations]
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5-12
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Compare
economic systems, including systems of labor, trade, concepts of
property, and exploitation of natural resources. [Compare and contrast different economic institutions]
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5-12
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Compare
dominant ideas and values including religious belief and practice, gender
roles, and attitudes toward nature. [Compare
and contrast the influence of ideas]
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5-12
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Compare
political systems, including concepts of political authority, civic values,
and the organization and practice of government. [Compare and contrast different political systems]
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STANDARD 2
How early European exploration and colonization resulted in cultural
and ecological interactions among previously unconnected peoples.
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Standard 2A
The student understands the stages of European oceanic
and overland exploration, amid international rivalries, from the 9th to
17th centuries.
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Grade Level
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Therefore, the student is able
to
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5-12
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Trace
routes taken by early explorers, from the 15th through the 17th century,
around Africa, to the Americas,
and across the Pacific. [Draw upon
data in historical maps]
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7-12
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Evaluate
the significance of Columbus'
voyages and his interactions with indigenous peoples. [Assess the importance of the
individual in history]
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5-12
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Compare
English, French, and Dutch motives for exploration with those of the
Spanish. [Compare and contrast
different sets of ideas]
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9-12
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Appraise
the role of national and religious rivalries in the age of exploration
and evaluate their long-range consequences. [Consider multiple perspectives]
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7-12
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Evaluate
the course and consequences of the "Columbian Exchange." [Hypothesize the influence of the past]
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Standard 2B
The student understands the Spanish and Portuguese
conquest of the Americas.
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Grade Level
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Therefore, the student is able
to
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7-12
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Describe
the social composition of the early settlers and compare their various
motives for exploration and colonization. [Compare and contrast differing sets of ideas]
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5-12
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Explain
and evaluate the Spanish interactions with such people as Aztecs, Incas,
and Pueblos.
[Examine the influence of ideas]
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9-12
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Describe
the evolution and long-term consequences of labor systems such as
encomienda and slavery in Spanish and Portuguese America. [Appreciate historical perspectives]
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7-12
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Analyze
connections between silver mined in Peru
and Mexico and the
rise of global trade and the price revolution in 16th-century Europe. [Analyze
cause-and-effect relationships]
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NEXT: Era
2: Colonization and Settlement (1585-1763)
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