Home >
Teaching Units: Organization
and Index
|
|
|
This model curriculum groups instructional units into three
categories. The criterion for these categories is the scale
in time, geographical space, and subject matter of the topics
to be explored. This system has been designed to guide teachers
and students in the study of the past on a variety of scales,
from broad, global changes to developments that occurred within
regions, civilizations, or nations. Teachers may choose to
introduce students to an entire Big Era in a few class periods
by focusing on the sweeping changes of the era. Or, they may
devote a greater number of class days to an era, using several
teaching units in all three categories of scale to examine
the era in finer detail. Teachers may tailor class time spent
on a Big Era to their pedagogical strengths and interests
and to state or local content standards.. THIS IS A TEST, THIS IS A TEST. For more discussion
of scale in history, see Why an Integrative
World History Curriculum in the Foundations
of This Curriculum section.
All teaching units follow standard specifications for organization
and design. They are listed and described below, as well as
in the History, Geography, and Time, Big Eras 1-9, and Past and Future
sections of the curriculum. All teaching units have been formatted
in PDF to facilitate printing and duplicating of materials,
especially Student Handouts. Users must download and install
Adobe Acrobat Reader to
have access to the teaching units.
|
Panorama Teaching Units |
Each of the nine Big Eras of world history,
plus the History, Geography, and Time and the Past and Future sections,
offers one Panorama Teaching Unit. Panorama units address
very large-scale developments in world history. Each
one also includes a PowerPoint Overview Presentation.
Teachers and students may view the overview presentations
in HTML or download them into their own PowerPoint programs.
The Panorama units provide a model for teaching an
entire era of world history in a few lessons taking
no more than a week or two of class time. In this way,
students may learn about large patterns of change in
an era. Panorama units also serve teachers who wish,
or are obligated by local and state standards, to devote
more class time to particular eras than to others. The
Panorama Teaching Units are tailored to the time frames
of the Big Era units. This means that the unit for Big
Era One (13 billion - 200,000 years ago) encompasses
a much larger time frame than does the unit for Big
Era Nine (1945 - present). |
|
Landscape
Teaching Units |
Each Big Era, plus the History, Geography, and Time and the Past
and Future sections, offers from two to seven Landscape
Teaching Units. Landscape units focus on relatively
large-scale developments in world history, though not
as broad in subject matter as the Panorama units. All
Landscape units have transregional, cross-cultural,
or comparative elements. Teachers may use Landscape
units flexibly, depending on their interests, school
curriculum requirements, and instructional time available.
|
|
Closeup
Teaching Units |
Multiple Closeup Teaching Units will be developed
for each of the Big Eras. Closeup units address topics
in world history that are relatively more restricted
in time, space, and subject matter than either Panorama
or Landscape units. Some of these units will address
topics that embrace more than one Big Era. Teachers
may choose among Closeup units to probe more deeply
into specific aspects of world history. Closeup units
will be progressively added to the curriculum. We invite
history and social studies educators to submit Closeup
units for inclusion in the curriculum. Go to Contact
Us on the Home Page for more information
on submitting Closeup Teaching Units. |
The table below provides links to teaching units on the site
or under development.
Era |
Panorama Teaching Units |
Landscape Teaching Units |
Closeup Teaching Units |
|
|
|
|
Big
Era One
Humans in the Universe
13 Billion - 200,000 Years ago |
Panorama Teaching Unit |
Teaching Unit 1.1
The horizon of human history
13,000,000,000 - 200,000 years ago
Teaching Unit 1.2
Human ancestors in Africa and beyond
7,000,000 - 200,000 years ago |
|
Big Era Two
Human Beings Almost Everywhere
200,000 - 10,000 Years Ago |
Panorama Teaching Unit |
Teaching Unit 2.1
Human beings around the world
100,000 - 10,000 years ago
Teaching Unit 2.2
Language: What difference does it make?
200,000 - 40,000 BCE |
|
Big Era Three
Farming and the Emergence of Complex Societies
10,000 - 1000 BCE
In Development |
Panorama Teaching Unit |
Teaching Unit 3.1
Domesticating plants and animals
10,000 - 4000 BCE
Teaching Unit 3.2
Farmers around the world
10,000 - 1500 BCE
Teaching Unit 3.3
River valleys and the development of complex societies
in Afroeurasia
4000 - 1500 BCE
Teaching Unit 3.4
Migrations and militarism across Afroeurasia
2000 - 1000 BCE
Teaching Unit 3.5
Early complex societies in the Americas
1800 - 500 BCE
Teaching Unit 3.6
People on the move in Australia and the Pacific basin
10,000 - 1000 BCE 500 BCE |
Closeup Teaching Unit 3.2.5
Korea: From Calm to Conflict |
Big Era Four
Expanding Networks of Exchange and Encounter
1200 BCE - 500 CE
In Development |
Panorama Teaching Unit |
Teaching Unit 4.1
From the Mediterranean to India: Patterns of power and trade
1200 - 600 BCE
Teaching Unit 4.2
The expansion of complex society in East Asia
1200 - 300 BCE
Teaching Unit 4.3
Migration and change in Africa south of the Sahara
1200 - 200 CE
Teaching Unit 4.4
From the Mediterranean to India: An age of Greek and Persian
power
600 - 200 BCE
Teaching Unit 4.5
Giant empires of Afroeurasia
300 BCE - 200 CE
Teaching Unit 4.6
Empires and city-states of the Americas
800 BCE - 500 CE
Teaching Unit 4.7
Long-distance migrations in the tropical seas
500 BCE - 500 CE
|
Closeup Teaching Unit 4.2.1
Belief Systems in China:
Confucianism, Daoism, and Buddhism
Closeup Teaching Unit 4.4.1
The Budding of Buddhism
Closeup Teaching Unit 4.4.2
Pressured by Persia: The Persian Empire
Closeup Teaching Unit 4.5.1
Roman Art and Architecture
PowerPoint Feature!
Closeup Teaching Unit 4.5.2
Roman Slavery
PowerPoint Feature!
Closeup Teaching Unit 4.5.3
Women’s Life in Ancient Rome
PowerPoint Feature!
Note: documents in Powerpoint format (PPT) require Microsoft Viewer, download powerpoint.
|
Big Era Five
Patterns of Interregional Unity
300 - 1500 CE |
Panorama Teaching Unit |
Teaching Unit 5.1
Centuries of upheaval in Afroeurasia
300 - 600 CE
Teaching Unit 5.2
Afroeurasia and the rise of Islam
600 - 1000 CE
Teaching Unit 5.3
Consolidation of the trans-hemispheric network
1000 - 1250 CE
Teaching Unit 5.4
The Mongol Moment
1200- 1400 CE
Teaching Unit 5.5
Calamities and recoveries
1300-1500 CE
Teaching Unit 5.6
Spheres of interaction in the Americas
300 - 1500 CE
|
Closeup Teaching Unit 3.2.5
Korea: From Calm to Conflict
Closeup Teaching Unit 4.2.1
Belief Systems in China:
Confucianism, Daoism, and Buddhism
Closeup Teaching Unit 5.3.1
West African Geography, Climate, and History
PowerPoint Feature!
Closeup Teaching Unit 5.5.1
Coping with catastrophe
The Black Death of the fourteenth century
1330-1355
Note: documents in Powerpoint format (PPT) require Microsoft Viewer, download powerpoint.
|
Big Era Six
The Great Global Convergence
1400 - 1800 CE
|
Panorama Teaching Unit |
Teaching Unit 6.1
Oceanic ventures and the joining of the continents
1400 - 1550 CE
Teaching Unit 6.2
The Columbian Exchange and its consequences: biological,
social, and cultural
1400 - 1650 CE
Teaching Unit 6.3
Rulers with guns: the rise of powerful states
1400 - 1800 CE
Teaching Unit 6.4
The global economy takes shape
1500 - 1800 CE
Teaching Unit 6.5
The Making of the Atlantic Rim
1500 - 1800 CE
Teaching Unit 6.6
The Scientific Revolution
1500 - 1800 CE
Teaching Unit 6.7
The long reach of the major religions
1500 - 1800 CE |
Closeup Teaching Unit 3.2.5
Korea: From Calm to Conflict
Closeup Teaching Unit 6.6.1
Leaders of the Enlightenment
PowerPoint Feature!
Closeup Teaching Unit 6.7.1
The Protestant Reformation
PowerPoint Feature!
Note: documents in Powerpoint format (PPT) require Microsoft Viewer, download powerpoint.
|
Big Era Seven
Industrialization and Its Consequences
1750 - 1914 CE
In Development
|
Panorama Teaching Unit |
Teaching Unit 7.1
The Industrial Revolution as a world event
1750 - 1840 CE
Teaching Unit 7.2
The Atlantic revolutions as a world event
1750 - 1830 CE
Teaching Unit 7.3
People, Power, and Ideology: A whole new world
1830 - 1900 CE
Teaching Unit 7.4
Humans in a hurry: nineteenth-century migrations
1830 - 1900 CE
Teaching Unit 7.5
The experience of colonialism
1850 - 1914 CE
Teaching Unit 7.6
New identities: nationalism and religion
1850 - 1914 CE |
Closeup Teaching Unit 6.6.1
Leaders of the Enlightenment
PowerPoint Feature!
Closeup Teaching Unit 7.1.20
Living Rooms
1800-1900
Closeup Teaching Unit 7.5.1
Resistance to Imperialism in Africa, Asia, and the Americas
1880-1914
Note: documents in Powerpoint format (PPT) require Microsoft Viewer, download powerpoint.
|
Big Era Eight
A Half Century of Crisis
1900 - 1950 CE
|
Panorama Teaching Unit
|
Teaching Unit 8.1
The causes and global consequences of World War I
1900-1920 CE
Teaching Unit 8.2
The search for peace and stability in the 1920s and 1930s
1920-1930 CE
Teaching Unit 8.3
The Great Depression
1929-1939 CE
Teaching Unit 8.4
Social change and resistance in colonial empires
1914–1950 CE
Teaching Unit 8.5
The causes and global consequences of World War II
1939–1945 CE
Teaching Unit 8.6
Revolutions in science and technology
1900-1950 CE
Teaching Unit 8.7
Environmental change: the great acceleration
1900-1950 CE
|
Closeup Teaching Unit 3.2.5
Korea: From Calm to Conflict
|
Big Era Nine
Paradoxes of Global Acceleration
1945 - present CE
|
Panorama Teaching Unit |
Teaching Unit 9.1
World politics and the global economy after World War II
Teaching Unit 9.2
The two big powers and their Cold War
1945-1990 CE
Teaching Unit 9.3
A multitude of sovereign states
1945-1975
Teaching Unit 9.4
The scope of wealth and poverty
1945-present
Teaching Unit 9.5
The world at warp speed: science, technology, and the computer revolution
1970-present
Teaching Unit 9.6
Population explosion and environmental change
1945-present
Teaching Unit 9.7
Globe-girdling cultural trends
1980-present |
Closeup Teaching Unit 3.2.5
Korea: From Calm to Conflict
Closeup Teaching Unit 9.7.1
1968: A Year of Global Protest
|
Past
and Future
Reflecting on the Past, Thinking about the
Future
In Development
|
|
|
|
|