This
information has been taken directly from the Accelerate
U - Standards and Resource Guides (with approval) from the K-12
Education, NEW YORK STATE EDUCATION DEPARTMENT site. No information
in this document has been changed.
Learning Standards for Social
Studies at Three Levels
Standard 2: World History
- Intermediate
1. The study of world history requires an
understanding at world cultures and civilizations, including an
analysis of important ideas, social and cultural values, beliefs,
and traditions. This study also examines the human condition and
the connections and interactions of people across time and space
and the ways different people view the same event or issue from
a variety of perspectives.
Students:
- know the social and economic characteristics,
such as customs, traditions, child-rearing practices, ways of
making a living, education and socialization practices, gender
roles, foods, and religious and spiritual beliefs that distinguish
different cultures and civilizations
- know some important historic events and
developments of past civilizations
- interpret and analyze documents and artifacts
related to significant developments and events in world history.
The is evident,
for example, when students:
- propose a list of characteristics to define
the concepts of culture and civilization, explaining how civilizations
develop and change
- investigate the important achievements and
accomplishments of the world's early civilizations (e.g., African,
Greek, Roman, Egyptian, Indian, Chines)
- analyze how the natural environments of
the Tigris-Euphrates, Nile, and Indus valleys shaped the early
development of civilization (Taken from National Standards
for World History)
- research an important event or development
in world history and include information about how different people
viewed the same event (e.g., the French Revolution as witnessed
by members of the ruling classes, the revolutionaries, members
of the Estates General, and the Church)
identify different ethnic, religious, and socioeconomic
groups throughout the world and analyze their varying perspectives
on the same historic events and contemporary issues. Explain how
those different perspectives developed.
2. Establishing timeframes, exploring different
periodizations, examining themes across time and within cultures,
and focusing on important turning points in world history help organize
the study of world cultures and civilization
Students:
- develop timelines by placing important events
and developments in world history in their correct chronological
order
- measure time periods by years, decade, centuries,
and millennia
- study about major turning points in world
history by investigating the causes and other factors that brought
about change and the results of these changes.
This is evident, for example, when students:
- construct multiple-tier timelines that display
a number of important historic events that occurred at the same
time, or during the same period of time (e.g., age of exploration
and contact showing events in Europe, Africa, and the Americas)
- present historical narratives that link
together a series of events in the correct chronological order
- recognize the reasons for periodizing history
and know some designations of historical periods; discuss the
usefulness of the following historical periods:
- The beginnings of Human Society
- Early Civilizations to 1000 BC
- Classical Traditions, Major Religions, and Giant Empires, 1000 BC-300
AD
- Expanding Zones of Exchange and Encounter, 300-1000 AD
- Intensified Hemispheric Interactions, 1000-1500
- Emergence of the First Global Age, 1450-1770
- The Age of Revolutions, 1750-1914
- The Twentieth Century
3. Study of the major social, political,
cultural, and religious developments in world history involves learning
about the important roles and contributions of individuals and groups.
Students:
- investigate the roles and contributions
of individuals and groups in relation to key social, political,
cultural, and religious practices throughout world history
- interpret and analyze documents and artifacts
related to significant developments and events in world history
- classify historic information according
to the type of activity or practice: social/cultural, political,
economic, geographic, scientific, technological, and historic.
This is evident, for example, when students:
- read historic narratives, biographies, literature,
diaries, and letters to learn about the important accomplishments
and roles played by individuals and groups throughout world history
- explain some of the following practices
as found in particular civilizations and cultures throughout world
history: social customs, child-rearing practices, government,
ways of making a living and distributing goods and services, language
and literature, education and socialization practices, values
and traditions, gender roles, foods, and religious/spiritual beliefs
and practices
- develop a map of Europe, the Mediterranean
world, India, South and Southeast Asia, and China to show the
extent of the spread of Buddhism, Christianity, Hinduism, and
Confusianism; explain how the spread of these religions changed
the lives of people living in these areas of the world (Adapted
from National Standards for World History)
- write diary accounts, journal entries, letters,
or news accounts from the point of view of a young person living
during a particular time period in world history, focusing on
an important historic, political, economic, or religious event
or accomplishment
study the historical writings of important figures
in world history to learn about their goals, motivations, intentions.
influences, and strengths and weaknesses.
4. The skills of historical analysis include
the ability to investigate differing and competing interpretations
of the theories of history, hypothesize about why interpretations
change over time, explain the importance of historical evidence, and
understand the concepts of change and continuity over time.
Students:
- explain the literal meaning of a historical
passage or primary source document, identifying who was involved,
what happened, where it happened, what events led up to these
developments, and what consequences or outcomes followed (Taken
from National Standards for World History)
- analyze different interpretations of important
events and themes in world history and explain the various frames
of reference expressed by different historians
- view history through the eyes of those who
witnessed key events and developments in world history by analyzing
their literature, diary accounts, letters, artifacts, art, music,
architectural drawings, and other documents
- investigate important events and developments
in world history by posing analytical questions, selecting relevant
data, distinguishing fact from opinion, hypothesizing cause-and-effect
relationships, testing these hypotheses, and forming conclusions.
This is evident, for example, when students:
- examine documents related to significant
developments in world history (e.g., excerpts from sacred texts
of the world's great religions, important political statements
or decrees, literary works, and historians' commentaries); employ
the skills of historical analysis and interpretation in probing
the meaning and importance of the documents by:
- identifying authors and sources for the historical documents
- comparing and contrasting differing sets of ideals and values contained
in each historical document
- considering multiple perspectives presented in the documents
- evaluating major debates among historians about the meaning of each
historical document
- hypothesizing about the influence of each document on present-day
activities and debates in the international arena.
- study about an event or development in world
history (e.g., the early civilizations, the age of exchange and
global expansion, the industrial revolution, political and social
revolutions, imperialism and colonization, case studies of genocide
and human rights violations, world wars) by analyzing accounts
written by eyewitnesses to the event or development; compare the
eyewitness accounts with reports and narratives written by historians
after the event or development
trace the impacts of different technological
innovations and advances (e.g., in transportation and communication,
agriculture, health and science, commerce and industry) over time
by analyzing the effects of technology on the lives of people.
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