Standards
Demonstrate respect for the rights of others in discussion and classroom debates, regardless of whether one agrees with the other viewpoint. Consider alternate views in discussion.
Generate resourceDevelop and frame questions about topics related to historical events occurring in the Eastern Hemisphere that can be answered by gathering, interpreting, and using evidence.
Generate resourceIdentify, effectively select, and analyze different forms of evidence used to make meaning in social studies (including primary and secondary sources such as art and photographs, artifacts, oral histories, maps, and graphs).
Generate resourceIdentify evidence and explain content, authorship, point of view, purpose, and format; identify bias; explain the role of bias and potential audience.
Generate resourceRecognize arguments on specific social studies topics and identify evidence to support the arguments. Examine arguments related to a specific social studies topic from multiple perspectives.
Generate resourceEmploy mathematical skills to measure time by years, decades, centuries, and millennia; to calculate time from the fixed points of the calendar system (B.C.E. and C.E.); and to interpret the data presented in time lines, with teacher support.
Generate resourceIdentify causes and effects from current events, grade-level content, and historical events
Generate resourceIdentify and classify the relationship between multiple causes and multiple effects.
Generate resourceDistinguish between long-term and immediate causes and effects of an event from current events or history.
Generate resourceRecognize and analyze the dynamics of historical continuity and change over periods of time. Identify the role of turning points as an important dynamic in historical change
Generate resourceCompare histories in different places in the Eastern Hemisphere, utilizing time lines. Identify ways that changing periodization affects the historical narrative.
Generate resourceIdentify the relationships of patterns of continuity and change to larger historical processes and themes.
Generate resourceUnderstand that historians use periodization to categorize events. Describe general models of periodization in history.
Generate resourceIdentify a region in the Eastern Hemisphere by describing a characteristic that places within it have in common, and then compare it to other regions.
Generate resourceCategorize and evaluate divergent perspectives on an individual historical event
Generate resourceDescribe and compare multiple events in the history of the Eastern Hemisphere in societies in similar chronological contexts and in various geographical contexts.
Generate resourceIdentify how the relationship between geography, economics, and history helps to define a context for events in the study of the Eastern Hemisphere.
Generate resourceDescribe historical developments in the history of the Eastern Hemisphere, with specific references to circumstances of time and place and to connections to broader regional or global processes.
Generate resourceUnderstand the roles that periodization and region play in developing the comparison of historical civilizations. Identify general characteristics that can be employed to conduct comparative analysis of case studies in the Eastern Hemisphere in the same historical period, with teacher support.
Generate resourceUse location terms and geographic representations such as maps, photographs, satellite images, and models to describe where places in the Eastern Hemisphere are in relation to each other, to describe connections between places, and to evaluate the benefits of particular places for purposeful activities
Generate resourceDistinguish human activities and human-made features from “environments” (natural events or physical features—land, air, and water—that are not directly made by humans) in the Eastern Hemisphere; identify the relationship between human activities and the environment.
Generate resourceIdentify and describe how environments affect human activities and how human activities affect physical environments through the study of cases in the Eastern Hemisphere.
Generate resourceRecognize and explain how characteristics (cultural, economic, and physical-environmental) of regions affect the history of societies in the Eastern Hemisphere
Generate resourceDescribe how human activities alter places and regions in the Eastern Hemisphere
Generate resourceDescribe the spatial organization of place, considering the historical, social, political, and economic implication of that organization. Recognize that boundaries and definitions of location are historically constructed.
Generate resourceExplain how scarcity necessitates decision making; employ examples from the Eastern Hemisphere to illustrate the role of scarcity historically and in current events; compare through historical examples the costs and benefits of economic decisions.
Generate resourceExamine the role that various types of resources (human capital, physical capital, and natural resources) have in providing goods and services.
Generate resourceExamine the role of job specialization and trade historically and during contemporary times in the Eastern Hemisphere.
Generate resourceProvide examples of unemployment, inflation, total production, income, and economic growth in economies in the Eastern Hemisphere.
Generate resourceDescribe government decisions that affect economies in case studies from the Eastern Hemisphere.
Generate resourceParticipate in activities that focus on a local issue or problem in a country in the Eastern Hemisphere
Generate resourceIdentify and explore different types of political systems and ideologies used at various times and in various locations in the Eastern Hemisphere and identify the role of individuals and key groups in those political and social systems.
Generate resourceIdentify and describe opportunities for and the role of the individual in social and political participation at various times and in various locations in the Eastern Hemisphere.
Generate resourceParticipate in negotiating and compromising in the resolution of differences and conflict; introduce and examine the role of conflict resolution.
Generate resourceIdentify situations with a global focus in which social actions are required and suggest solutions
Generate resourceDescribe the roles of people in power in the Eastern Hemisphere both historically and currently. Identify ways that current figures can influence people’s rights and freedom
Generate resourceIdentify rights and responsibilities of citizens within societies in the Eastern Hemisphere.
Generate resourceDevelop an understanding of an interdependent global community by developing awareness and/or engaging in the political process as it relates to a global context.
Generate resourceThe Eastern Hemisphere
Generate resourceCivic Participation
Generate resourceEconomics and Economic Systems
Generate resourceGeographic Reasoning
Generate resourceComparison and Contextualization
Generate resourceChronological Reasoning
Generate resourceGathering, Interpreting and Using Evidence
Generate resourcePresent-Day Eastern Hemisphere Geography: The diverse geography of the Eastern Hemisphere has influenced human culture and settlement patterns in distinct ways. Human communities in the Eastern Hemisphere have adapted to or modified the physical environment.
Generate resourceMaps can be used to represent varied climate zones, landforms, bodies of water, and resources of the Eastern Hemisphere.
Generate resourceThe Eastern Hemisphere can be divided into regions. Regions are areas that share common identifiable characteristics, such as physical, political, economic, or cultural features. Regions within the Eastern Hemisphere include:Middle East (North Africa and Southwest Asia), Sub-Saharan Africa, Europe (West, North, South, Central, and Southeast), Russia and the Independent States (Russia, Caucasia, Central Asia, the region of Belarus, Moldova, and Ukraine), East Asia (People's Republic of China, North Korea, South Korea, Japan, and Taiwan), Southeast Asia (Vietnam, Cambodia, Laos, Thailand, Myanmar [Burma], Malaysia, Singapore, Indonesia, Brunei, Philippines), South Asia (Afghanistan, Pakistan, India, Bangladesh, Nepal, Bhutan), and Oceania (Australia, New Zealand, the Pacific)
Generate resourceThe physical environment influences human population distribution, land use, economic activities, and political connections.
Generate resourceStudents will use physical, climate, and vegetation maps in combination with population density, land use, and resource distribution maps in order to discern patterns in human settlement, economic activity, and the relationship to scarcity of resources in the present-day Eastern Hemisphere.
Generate resourceTo understand scale, students will work with maps at a variety of scales so they can compare patterns in population density and land use, economic activity, and political connections across the present-day Eastern Hemisphere, within a region of the Eastern Hemisphere, and in a specific country. In doing so, students will examine maps of the hemisphere, three regions within the present-day Eastern Hemisphere, and one specific country within each region.
Generate resourceIssues and problems experienced in the regions of the Eastern Hemisphere have roots in the past.
Generate resourceStudents will examine current political and environmental issues in a region or country of the Eastern Hemisphere being studied.
Generate resourceThe First Humans Through The Neolithic Revolution In The Eastern Hemisphere: The first humans modified their physical environment as well as adapted to their environment.
Generate resourceHuman populations that settled along rivers, in rainforests, along coastlines, in deserts, and in mountains made use of the resources and the environment around them in developing distinct ways of life.
Generate resourceEarly peoples in the Eastern Hemisphere are often studied by analyzing artifacts and archaeological features. Archaeologists engage in digs and study artifacts and features in a particular location to gather evidence about a group of people and how they lived at a particular time.
Generate resourceThe Neolithic Revolution was marked by technological advances in agriculture and domestication of animals that allowed people to form semi-sedentary and sedentary settlements.
Generate resourceStudents will explore early human migration patterns and settlements through the use of multiple maps and the examination of various forms of archaeological evidence.
Generate resourceStudents will be introduced to pastoral nomadic peoples as a culture type that existed throughout history.
Generate resourceStudents will compare the use of tools and animals, types of dwellings, art, and social organizations of early peoples, and distinguish between the Paleolithic Age and Neolithic Age.
Generate resourceHistorians use archaeological and other types of evidence to investigate patterns in history and identify turning points. A turning point can be an event, era, and/or development in history that has brought about significant social, cultural, ecological, political, or economic change.
Generate resourceStudents will determine if the Neolithic Revolution is a turning point in world history, using various forms of evidence.
Generate resourceEarly River Valley Civilizations In The Eastern Hemisphere (ca. 3500 B.C.E. – ca. 500 B.C.E.): Complex societies and civilizations developed in the Eastern Hemisphere. Although these complex societies and civilizations have certain defining characteristics in common, each is also known for unique cultural achievements and contributions. Early human communities in the Eastern Hemisphere adapted to and modified the physical environment.
Generate resourceHumans living together in settlements develop shared customs, beliefs, ideas, and languages that give identity to the group.
Generate resourceComplex societies and civilizations share the common characteristics of religion, job specialization, cities, government, language/record keeping system, technology, and social hierarchy. People in Mesopotamia, the Yellow River valley, the Indus River valley, and the Nile River valley developed complex societies and civilizations.
Generate resourceStudents will explore at least two river valley societies and civilizations: one in the Middle East (Mesopotamia or Nile river valley), one in South Asia (Indus River valley), or one in East Asia (Yellow River valley) by examining archaeological and historical evidence to compare and contrast characteristics of these complex societies and civilizations.
Generate resourceMesopotamia, Yellow River valley, Indus River valley, and Nile River valley complex societies and civilizations adapted to and modified their environment to meet the needs of their population.
Generate resourceStudents will explore how the selected complex societies and civilizations adapted to and modified their environment to meet their basic needs of food, clothing, and shelter.
Generate resourcePolitical and social hierarchies influenced the access that groups and individuals had to power, wealth, and jobs and influenced their roles within a society.
Generate resourceStudents will compare and contrast the gender roles, access to wealth and power, and division of labor within the political and social structures of the selected river valley societies and civilizations.
Generate resourceStudents will examine the unique achievements of each of the selected complex societies and civilizations that served as lasting contributions.
Generate resourceComparative World Religions (ca. 2000 B.C.E – ca. 630 C.E): Major religions and belief systems developed in the Eastern Hemisphere. There were important similarities and differences between these belief systems.
Generate resourceCivilizations and complex societies developed belief systems and religions that have similar, as well as different, characteristics.
Generate resourceStudents will study the belief systems of Judaism, Christianity, Islam, Buddhism, Hinduism, and Confucianism by looking at where the belief system originated, when it originated, founder(s) if any, and the major tenets, practices, and sacred writings or holy texts for each. (Note: Although not within this historic period, students may also study Sikhism and other major belief systems at this point.)
Generate resourceBelief systems and religions often are used to unify groups of people, and may affect social order and gender roles.
Generate resourceStudents will be able to identify similarities and differences across belief systems, including their effect on social order and gender roles.
Generate resourceStudents will explore the influence of various belief systems on contemporary cultures and events.
Generate resourceComparative Classical Civilizations In The Eastern Hemisphere (ca. 600 B.C.E. – ca. 500 C.E.): As complex societies and civilizations change over time, their political and economic structures evolve. A golden age may be indicated when there is an extended period of time that is peaceful, prosperous, and demonstrates great cultural achievements.
Generate resourceGeographic factors influence the development of classical civilizations and their political structures.
Generate resourceStudents will locate the classical civilizations on a map and identify geographic factors that influenced the extent of their boundaries, locate their cities on a map, and identify their political structures.
Generate resourceStudents will compare and contrast the similarities and differences between the Chinese (Qin, Han) and Greco-Roman classical civilizations by examining religion, job specialization, cities, government, language/record keeping system, technology, and social hierarchy.
Generate resourcePolitical structures were developed to establish order, to create and enforce laws, and to enable decision making.
Generate resourceStudents will examine the similarities and differences between the political systems of Chinese (Qin, Han) and Greco-Roman (Athens, Sparta, Roman Republic, Roman Empire) classical civilizations.
Generate resourceA period of peace, prosperity, and cultural achievements may be indicative of a golden age.
Generate resourceStudents will examine evidence related to the Qin, Han, and Greco-Roman (Athens and Roman Empire) civilizations and determine if these civilizations have experienced a golden age.
Generate resourceStudents will examine how cultural achievements of these civilizations have influenced contemporary societies.
Generate resourceMediterranean World: Feudal Western Europe, The Byzantine Empire, And The Islamic Caliphates (ca. 600 C.E. – ca. 1450): The Mediterranean world was reshaped with the fall of the Roman Empire. Three distinct cultural regions developed: feudal Western Europe, the Byzantine Empire, and the Islamic caliphates. These regions interacted with each other and clashed over control of holy lands.
Generate resourceOverexpansion, corruption, invasions, civil wars, and discord led to the fall of Rome. Feudalism developed in Western Europe in reaction to a need for order and to meet basic needs.
Generate resourceStudents will examine reasons for the fall of the Roman Empire and the development of feudalism in Western Europe, including efforts to restore the empire, the decentralization of political authority, and the role of the Christian Church in providing some measure of central authority.
Generate resourceThe Byzantine Empire preserved elements of the Roman Empire, controlled lands within the Mediterranean basin, and began to develop Orthodox Christianity.
Generate resourceStudents will examine how the Byzantine Empire preserved elements of the Roman Empire by blending Roman traditions with Greek culture, and developed a Christian faith, known as Orthodox Christianity, which united Church and state authority in the person of the emperor.
Generate resourceIslam spread within the Mediterranean region from southwest Asia to northern Africa and the Iberian Peninsula.
Generate resourceStudents will examine the Umayyad and Abbasid caliphates, noting how the introduction of Islam changed the societies and cultures each conquered, blending with those societies and cultures and creating dynamic new Islamic societies and cultures.
Generate resourceCompetition and rivalry over religious, economic, and political control over holy lands led to conflict such as the Crusades.
Generate resourceStudents will examine the three distinct cultural regions of the Mediterranean world in terms of their location, the extent of each region at the height of its power, and the political, economic, and social interactions between these regions.
Generate resourceStudents will examine the conflict of the Crusades from three different perspectives: feudal Europe, Byzantine, and Islamic.
Generate resourceInteractions Across The Eastern Hemisphere (ca. 600 C.E. – ca. 1450): Trade networks promoted the exchange and diffusion of language, belief systems, tools, intellectual ideas, inventions, and diseases.
Generate resourceThe Silk Roads, the Indian Ocean, and the Trans-Saharan routes formed the major Afro-Eurasian trade networks connecting the East and the West. Ideas, people, technologies, products, and diseases moved along these routes.
Generate resourceStudents will create maps that illustrate items exchanged and ideas spread along the Silk Roads, across the Indian Ocean, and on the Trans-Saharan trade routes.
Generate resourceStudents will examine how the location of resources helped determine the location of trade routes and the economic impact of the exchange of resources.
Generate resourceStudents will study interregional travelers such as Marco Polo, Ibn Battuta, Mansa Musa, and Zheng He and examine why they traveled, the places visited, what was learned, and what was exchanged as a result of their travel.
Generate resourceThe Mongol conquests in Eurasia fostered connections between the East and the West, and the Mongols served as important agents of change and cultural diffusion.
Generate resourceStudents will map the extent of the Mongol Empire at the height of its power.
Generate resourceStudents will examine the methods used by the Mongols to enable them to rule over a diverse population, noting how Mongol rule expanded trade.
Generate resourceStudents will examine the spread of the Black Death (Bubonic Plague) as a result of interregional exchange and its effects on various regions within Afro-Eurasia, using a variety of sources, such as maps, poetry, and other primary source documents.
Generate resourceComplex societies and civilizations adapted and designed technologies for transportation that allowed them to cross challenging landscapes and move people and goods efficiently.
Generate resourceStudents will examine how various technologies affected trade and exchanges. Some examples are types of ships, including junks and caravels; improvements to ships, such as sails and rudders; navigation tools, such as the compass and astrolabe; and gunpowder.
Generate resourceDevelop and frame questions about topics related to historical events occurring in the Eastern Hemisphere that can be answered by gathering, interpreting, and using evidence.
Generate resourceIdentify, effectively select, and analyze different forms of evidence used to make meaning in social studies (including primary and secondary sources such as art and photographs, artifacts, oral histories, maps, and graphs).
Generate resourceIdentify evidence and explain content, authorship, point of view, purpose, and format; identify bias; explain the role of bias and potential audience.
Generate resourceRecognize arguments on specific social studies topics and identify evidence to support the arguments. Examine arguments related to a specific social studies topic from multiple perspectives.
Generate resourceEmploy mathematical skills to measure time by years, decades, centuries, and millennia; to calculate time from the fixed points of the calendar system (B.C.E. and C.E.); and to interpret the data presented in time lines, with teacher support.
Generate resourceIdentify causes and effects from current events, grade-level content, and historical events.
Generate resourceIdentify and classify the relationship between multiple causes and multiple effects.
Generate resourceDistinguish between long-term and immediate causes and effects of an event from current events or history.
Generate resourceRecognize and analyze the dynamics of historical continuity and change over periods of time. Identify the role of turning points as an important dynamic in historical change.
Generate resourceCompare histories in different places in the Eastern Hemisphere, utilizing time lines. Identify ways that changing periodization affects the historical narrative.
Generate resourceIdentify the relationships of patterns of continuity and change to larger historical processes and themes.
Generate resourceUnderstand that historians use periodization to categorize events. Describe general models of periodization in history.
Generate resourceIdentify a region in the Eastern Hemisphere by describing a characteristic that places within it have in common, and then compare it to other regions.
Generate resourceCategorize and evaluate divergent perspectives on an individual historical event.
Generate resourceDescribe and compare multiple events in the history of the Eastern Hemisphere in societies in similar chronological contexts and in various geographical contexts.
Generate resourceIdentify how the relationship between geography, economics, and history helps to define a context for events in the study of the Eastern Hemisphere.
Generate resourceDescribe historical developments in the history of the Eastern Hemisphere, with specific references to circumstances of time and place and to connections to broader regional or global processes.
Generate resourceUnderstand the roles that periodization and region play in developing the comparison of historical civilizations. Identify general characteristics that can be employed to conduct comparative analysis of case studies in the Eastern Hemisphere in the same historical period, with teacher support.
Generate resourceUse location terms and geographic representations such as maps, photographs, satellite images, and models to describe where places in the Eastern Hemisphere are in relation to each other, to describe connections between places, and to evaluate the benefits of particular places for purposeful activities.
Generate resourceDistinguish human activities and human-made features from “environments” (natural events or physical features—land, air, and water—that are not directly made by humans) in the Eastern Hemisphere; identify the relationship between human activities and the environment.
Generate resourceIdentify and describe how environments affect human activities and how human activities affect physical environments through the study of cases in the Eastern Hemisphere. Grades K-8 Page 80
Generate resourceRecognize and explain how characteristics (cultural, economic, and physical-environmental) of regions affect the history of societies in the Eastern Hemisphere.
Generate resourceDescribe how human activities alter places and regions in the Eastern Hemisphere.
Generate resourceDescribe the spatial organization of place, considering the historical, social, political, and economic implication of that organization. Recognize that boundaries and definitions of location are historically constructed.
Generate resourceExplain how scarcity necessitates decision making; employ examples from the Eastern Hemisphere to illustrate the role of scarcity historically and in current events; compare through historical examples the costs and benefits of economic decisions.
Generate resourceExamine the role that various types of resources (human capital, physical capital, and natural resources) have in providing goods and services.
Generate resourceExamine the role of job specialization and trade historically and during contemporary times in the Eastern Hemisphere.
Generate resourceProvide examples of unemployment, inflation, total production, income, and economic growth in economies in the Eastern Hemisphere.
Generate resourceDescribe government decisions that affect economies in case studies from the Eastern Hemisphere.
Generate resource1. Demonstrate respect for the rights of others in discussion and classroom debates, regardless of whether one agrees with the other viewpoint. Consider alternate views in discussion.
Generate resource2. Participate in activities that focus on a local issue or problem in a country in the Eastern Hemisphere.
Generate resource3. Identify and explore different types of political systems and ideologies used at various times and in various locations in the Eastern Hemisphere and identify the role of individuals and key groups in those political and social systems.
Generate resource4. Identify and describe opportunities for and the role of the individual in social and political participation at various times and in various locations in the Eastern Hemisphere.
Generate resource5. Participate in negotiating and compromising in the resolution of differences and conflict; introduce and examine the role of conflict resolution.
Generate resource6. Identify situations with a global focus in which social actions are required and suggest solutions.
Generate resource7. Describe the roles of people in power in the Eastern Hemisphere both historically and currently. Identify ways that current figures can influence people’s rights and freedom.
Generate resource8. Identify rights and responsibilities of citizens within societies in the Eastern Hemisphere.
Generate resource9. Develop an understanding of an interdependent global community by developing awareness and/or engaging in the political process as it relates to a global context.
Generate resource