Unit: Prehistoric Man (Grade 5)



Similar documents
Unit 1: Introduction to Environmental Science

Unit One Study Guide

6 th Grade Vocabulary-ALL CAMPUSES

Forensic Anthropology

Unit 2 Lesson 4 Early Human Migration and Stone Age Tools

I. Title of Lesson: Learning from Artifacts and What Artifacts Tell Us

Integrating the Common Core Standards into the Music Curriculum

Common Core State Standards for Literacy in History/Social Studies, Science, and Technical Subjects, Grades 9-10

archaeologist artifact WC-1

World History: Essential Questions

Short Stories Grade 9

The Neolithic Revolution

Available in English and Spanish

Sky Academy Skills Studios Livingston: Curriculum Matrix

America's first people

Kansas Board of Regents Precollege Curriculum Courses Approved for University Admissions

New York State K-12 Social Studies Framework Introduction

Lesson Plan Template

Tennessee Curriculum Standards for High School World History Correlations to Wright Group/McGraw-Hill s World History

HACKETTSTOWN, NEW JERSEY. Computer Animation Grades CURRICULUM GUIDE FINAL DRAFT. July 2014

Prentice Hall World Studies: Latin America 2008 Correlated to: Missouri Social Studies Grade Level Expectations (Grade 7)

Ninth Grade History & Social Science World History I

Standard Two: Knowledge of Mathematics: The teacher shall be knowledgeable about mathematics and mathematics instruction.

The Alignment of Common Core and ACT s College and Career Readiness System. June 2010

Teacher s Guide. Alignment with the Common Core State Standards for Reading Alignment with the Common Core State Standards for Writing...

Department of Communication Studies M.A. Program Annual Report

TEACHER GUIDE K-12 GLOBAL COMPETENCE GRADE-LEVEL INDICATORS

Intended Use of the document: Teachers who are using standards based reporting in their classrooms.

The Pillars of Agricultural Literacy

Grade 6 English Language Arts Performance Level Descriptors

Hieroglyphic Questions

Financial Institutions - All the Same? EPISODE # 204

700.B0. Dawson College. Liberal Arts

Bills, Budgets and Bank Accounts

Jefferson Township Public Schools. Technology Curriculum. Video Production II: Television Studio. Grades 10, 11 & 12. August 2011

North Carolina Essential Standards Third grade Social Studies

TABLE OF CONTENTS CURRICULUM AND LESSON PLANS

What s Up With The Stock Market? EPISODE # 404

Urbanization Grade Nine

Sports and Entertainment Management

Endemic and Introduced Species Lesson Plan

Oliver Wendell Holmes and Business Careers High Schools AP World History

Unit 1/Concept 2 Grade 8 ELA Grade 8 ELA Start Date: September 30, 2013 End Date : October 25, 2013

What s Up With The Stock Market? EPISODE # 404

Desertification: Cause and Effect Students learn about the causes and effects of desertification threatening the African Sahel.

Is the General Education program purpose congruent with the overall mission of the institution?

Teacher's Guide to Meeting the Common Core State Standards* with Scott Foresman Reading Street 2008

Course Outline Communications Technology (TGJ2O / TGJ3O) Bayridge Secondary School

NATIONAL STANDARDS Lesson 1: Healthy Me!

Core Ideas of Engineering and Technology

Journey Across Time The Early Ages 2008

NW COLORADO BOCES ALTERNATIVE LICENSURE PROGRAM

What factors influence a future career choice?

NEW YORK STATE TEACHER CERTIFICATION EXAMINATIONS

HISTORY. History A.A. for Transfer Degree

Implementation Date Fall Marketing Pathways

Liberal Arts with an Emphasis in Arts and Humanities Associate in Arts Degree

ASU College of Education Course Syllabus ED 4972, ED 4973, ED 4974, ED 4975 or EDG 5660 Clinical Teaching

ADVANCED PLACEMENT WORLD HISTORY COURSE SYLLABUS. Mrs. Chase

JEFFERSON TOWNSHIP PUBLIC SCHOOLS RELATED ARTS AND TECHNOLOGY CURRICULUM TITLE: 3D COMPUTER GRAPHICS GRADE: 10-12

GT Differentiated Exemplar Lesson Science TEKS/Student Expectations:

Everett Public Schools Framework: Digital Photography I

This curriculum is part of the Educational Program of Studies of the Rahway Public Schools. ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

Essential Questions Critical Knowledge and Needed Skills Resources Assessments

Please this completed form as an attachment to

agricultural economy agriculture CALIFORNIA EDUCATION AND THE ENVIRONMENT INITIATIVE I Unit I Cultivating California I Word Wall Cards 426WWC

Pacemaker World Geography and Cultures. correlated to. Florida Sunshine State Standards Social Studies Grades 6-8

Copyright 2013 CTB/McGraw-Hill LLC. 1

Essential Questions Who is an entrepreneur? What types of decisions does he/she have to make when introducing a new product?

Middle School Course Catalog

Economic Cycles EPISODE # 208

Ch.1. Name: Class: Date: Matching

GT Humanities I & II in Frisco ISD Information and FAQs

A CONTENT STANDARD IS NOT MET UNLESS APPLICABLE CHARACTERISTICS OF SCIENCE ARE ALSO ADDRESSED AT THE SAME TIME.

parent ROADMAP SUPPORTING YOUR CHILD IN GRADE FIVE ENGLISH LANGUAGE ARTS

activity 7 Section II: Digging Deeper Who s Against Renewable Energy (And Why!)?

The American School Expands Curriculum and Introduces Online Courses

Teacher s Guide For. Ancient History: Ancient Pueblo People: The Anasazi

The General Education Program at Sweet Briar College

SmartLab. Welcome to the Elementary SmartLab. Learning s different here...

7 WHERE AND WHY DID THE FIRST CITIES APPEAR?

Minnesota K-12 Academic Standards in Language Arts Curriculum and Assessment Alignment Form Rewards Intermediate Grades 4-6

COURSE TITLE: ADVANCED TEXTILES & FASHION DESIGN LENGTH: FULL YEAR GRADES SCHOOL: RUTHERFORD HIGH SCHOOL RUTHERFORD, NEW JERSEY DATE:

North Carolina Essential Standards Seventh Grade Social Studies

UNIT 1: CAREER PORTFOLIO - COMPONENTS AND COMPETENCIES

PROGRAM CONCENTRATION: Public Safety and Government COURSE TITLE: Exploring Public Safety and Government Education Sixth Grade

Alignment of the National Standards for Learning Languages with the Common Core State Standards

Tab 3: STEM Alignment * Identifies connections between recognized STEM Career Cluster standards and NDG Linux Essentials curriculum.

Business PROGRAM OVERVIEW ADMISSIONS CAREER PATHS EDUCATIONAL PATHS

READY NCEXTEND2 End-of-Grade English Language Arts (ELA)/Reading Grades 3-8 Assessments

Bourns College of Engineering Breadth Requirements Effective 2010 Fall Quarter

Transcription:

Unit: Prehistoric Man (Grade 5) Content Area: Social Studies Course(s): Generic Course, Social Studies, Science, Social Studies 1 Time Period: 6 weeks Length: weeks Status: Published Unit Overview The origins of humans and the development of hunter-gatherer societies help us discover how the world's first cities and civilizations were developed. Transfer Students will be able to independently use their learning to... Predict what scientist might learn about our lives from examining what items we leave behind. Identify examples of tools and purposes, such as paper and pencil that help student s record ideas for later study. List steps food must take from farm to table, such as growing, harvesting, shipping, buying, and preparing. Discuss how their lives have changed from younger children until now. Predict how their communities may change through growth just as ancient villages grew into cities. Connect ways that government affects their lives every day to how government has in the past. For more information, read the following article by Grant Wiggins. http://www.authenticeducation.org/ae_bigideas/article.lasso?artid=60 Meaning

Understandings Students will understand... The origins of humans and the development of hunter-gatherer societies. Discover how the world's first cities and civilizations developed. the importance of Mary Leakey's discoveries and the rule of Gilgamesh. Essential Questions Students will keep considering... -What are the consequences of technology? - What should governments do? Application of Knowledge and Skill Students will know... Students will know... What artifacts show about early humans. Specific archaeological finds that suggest human life began in Africa. What skills helped hunter-gatherer societies survive. features of early humans of the Stone Age. ways modern humans migrated to populate Earth's regions that Ice Age human societies became increasingly complex and religious domesticating plants and animals changed human life agriculture led to permanent settlements and specialized roles how villages became cities and then civilizations

common features of all early civilizations understand the role of primary and secondary sources in the archaeological process. Students will be skilled at... Students will be skilled at... identifying main ideas about the scientific study of early humans. synthesizing information about archaeological discovery. analyzing cause-and-effect links in the development of early human societies. demonstrating usefulness of new tools or skills sequencing human migration paths and the development of complex societies analyzing cause and effect relationships between tools and survival analyzing cause and effect links between agriculture and early human societies draw conclusions about the future needs of an early agricultural settlement summarize features of early civilizations identify evidence that two specific cultures are civilizations Academic Vocabulary anthropology geologist archaeologist artifact prehistory fossil hunter-gatherer

technology culture nomad populate animism migration environment adapt clan revolution domesticate surplus specialization economy civilization resource religion social class Learning Goal 1 Hunter/gatherers adapted to their physical environments using resources, the natural world, and technological advancements. The agricultural revolution led to an increase in population, specialization of labor, new forms of social organization, and the beginning of societies. Archaeology provides historical and scientific explanations for how ancient people lived. SOC.5-8.6.2.8.1 Hunter/gatherers adapted to their physical environments using resources, the natural world, and technological advancements. The agricultural revolution led to an increase in population, specialization of labor, new forms of social organization, and the beginning of societies. Archaeology provides historical and scientific

MA.5.CCSS.Math.Content.5.MD LA.5. LA.5.CCSS.ELA-Literacy.CCRA.R.2 LA.5.CCSS.ELA-Literacy.CCRA.R.4 LA.5.CCSS.ELA-Literacy.CCRA.R.5 LA.5.CCSS.ELA-Literacy.RL.5.1 SOC.5-8. TEC.5-8.8.1.8.E TEC.5-8.8.2.8 explanations for how ancient people lived. Measurement and Data Key Ideas and Details Determine central ideas or themes of a text and analyze their development; summarize the key supporting details and ideas. 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. 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. Quote accurately from a text when explaining what the text says explicitly and when drawing inferences from the text. The Beginnings of Human Society Research and Information Literacy All students will develop an understanding of the nature and impact of technology, engineering, technological design and the designed world as they relate to the individual, global society, and the environment. Target 1 - Chapter 1 Chapter 1: Identify main ideas about the scientific study of early humans. SOC.5-8.6.2.8.A.1.a Target 2 - Chapter 1 Synthesize information about archaeological discovery. Compare and contrast the social organization of early hunters/gatherers and those who lived in early agrarian societies. SOC.5-8.6.2.8.B.1.a SOC.5-8.6.2.8.B.1.b Explain the various migratory patterns of hunters/gatherers who moved from Africa to Eurasia, Australia, and the Americas, and describe the impact of migration on their lives and on the shaping of societies. Compare and contrast how nomadic and agrarian societies used land and natural resources. Target 3 - Chapter 1 Analyze cause-and-effect links in the development of early human societies. SOC.5-8.6.2.8.C.1.a SOC.5-8.6.2.8.C.1.b Target 4 - Chapter 1 Demonstrate usefulness of new tools or skills. Relate the agricultural revolution (including the impact of food surplus from farming) to population growth and the subsequent development of civilizations. Determine the impact of technological advancements on hunter/gatherer and agrarian societies. SOC.5-8.6.2.8.B.1.b SOC.5-8.6.2.8.C.1.a SOC.5-8.6.2.8.C.1.b Compare and contrast how nomadic and agrarian societies used land and natural resources. Relate the agricultural revolution (including the impact of food surplus from farming) to population growth and the subsequent development of civilizations. Determine the impact of technological advancements on hunter/gatherer and agrarian societies. Target 5 - Chapter 1 Sequence human migration paths and the development of complex societies. SOC.5-8.6.2.8.B.1.a Explain the various migratory patterns of hunters/gatherers who moved from Africa to Eurasia, Australia, and the Americas, and describe the impact of migration on their lives and on the shaping of societies.

SOC.5-8.6.2.8.B.1.b SOC.5-8.6.2.8.C.1.b Compare and contrast how nomadic and agrarian societies used land and natural resources. Determine the impact of technological advancements on hunter/gatherer and agrarian societies. Target 6 - Chapter 2 Analyze cause-and-effect links between agriculture and early human societies. SOC.5-8.6.2.8.B.1.b SOC.5-8.6.2.8.C.1.a Compare and contrast how nomadic and agrarian societies used land and natural resources. Relate the agricultural revolution (including the impact of food surplus from farming) to population growth and the subsequent development of civilizations. Target 7 - Chapter 2 Draw conclusions about the future needs of an early agricultural settlement. SOC.5-8.6.2.8.C.1.a Target 8 - Chapter 2 Summarize and identify features of early civilizations. Relate the agricultural revolution (including the impact of food surplus from farming) to population growth and the subsequent development of civilizations. SOC.5-8.6.2.8.C.1.b SOC.5-8.6.2.8.B.3.a Proficiency Scale Determine the impact of technological advancements on hunter/gatherer and agrarian societies. Determine how geography and the availability of natural resources influenced the development of the political, economic, and cultural systems of each of the classical civilizations and provided motivation for expansion. Summative Assessment All assessments are differentiated and aligned to the social studies standards and curriculum. Alternate assessments may include projects or presentations, or a common paper/pencil assessment or both. The assessment used with be from the my World History Assessment guide. 21st Century Life and Careers Select all applicable standards from the applicable standards WORK.5-8.9.1.8 All students will demonstrate creative, critical thinking, collaboration and problem solving skills to function successfully as global citizens and workers in diverse ethnic and organizational cultures. WORK.5-8.9.1.8.A Critical Thinking & Problem Solving WORK.5-8.9.1.8.B Creativity and Innovation WORK.5-8.9.1.8.C Collaboration, Teamwork and Leadership WORK.5-8.9.1.8.D Cross-Cultural Understanding and Interpersonal Communication Formative Assessment and Performance Opportunities class discussion social studies notebook o student journal section

student displays and presentations quizzes Differentiation/Enrichment 504 accommodations and IEP modifications Student Notebook entries Unit Resources black line masters guest speakers Interactive white board activities Internet supplemental textbooks/teacher resources Social Studies Notebook videos and online videos ProGuide Activity Cards myworldhistory.com Essential Question posters myworld History wall maps Student Journal online project builder