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Overview and Syllabus U. S. History 8 th grade Ms. Scott Building 3A Room @ 2012-2013 850-875-8737...

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Overview and Syllabus U. S. History 8 th grade Ms. Scott Building 3A Room @ 2012-2013 850-875-8737 Extension 3116 Email: [email protected] Planning period: 7th
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Page 1: Overview and Syllabus U. S. History 8 th grade Ms. Scott Building 3A Room @ 2012-2013 850-875-8737 Extension 3116 Email: scottt@gcpsmail.com Planning period:

Overview and SyllabusU. S. History8th grade

Ms. ScottBuilding 3ARoom @2012-2013850-875-8737 Extension 3116 Email: [email protected] period: 7th

Page 2: Overview and Syllabus U. S. History 8 th grade Ms. Scott Building 3A Room @ 2012-2013 850-875-8737 Extension 3116 Email: scottt@gcpsmail.com Planning period:

Expectations

Be on time and prepared for class (i.e.. Pencils, paper, erasers and blue or black pens)

Respect others and their personal property.

Be prepared for class. Obey all school rules. Follow the dress code. Productive behaviors only. ALWAYS RESPECT Ms. Scott !!!!!!!!!!!!

Page 3: Overview and Syllabus U. S. History 8 th grade Ms. Scott Building 3A Room @ 2012-2013 850-875-8737 Extension 3116 Email: scottt@gcpsmail.com Planning period:

Discovering Our Past:A History of the United States

Chapter 1- Exploring Social Studies

Chapter 2- Exploring the Americas

Chapter 3- Colonial America Chapter 4- Life in the

American Colonies

Chapter 5- The Spirit of

Independence Chapter 6- The American

Revolution Chapter 7- A More Perfect

Union

Chapter 8- The Constitution Chapter 9- The Federalist

Era

Chapter 10- The Jefferson Era

Chapter 11- Growth and

Expansion Chapter 12- The Jackson Era Chapter 13- Manifest Destiny Chapter 14- North and South Chapter 15- The Spirit of

Reform

Chapter 16- Toward Civil War Chapter 17- The Civil War Chapter 18- The

Reconstruction

Era

Page 4: Overview and Syllabus U. S. History 8 th grade Ms. Scott Building 3A Room @ 2012-2013 850-875-8737 Extension 3116 Email: scottt@gcpsmail.com Planning period:

Grading Scale 100-90 A

89-80 B

79-70 C

69-60 D

59-0 F

Page 5: Overview and Syllabus U. S. History 8 th grade Ms. Scott Building 3A Room @ 2012-2013 850-875-8737 Extension 3116 Email: scottt@gcpsmail.com Planning period:

Grading Criteria

Class Participation 15% 3-Ring Binder 15% Homework 10% Quizzes 20% Exams 40%

100%

Page 6: Overview and Syllabus U. S. History 8 th grade Ms. Scott Building 3A Room @ 2012-2013 850-875-8737 Extension 3116 Email: scottt@gcpsmail.com Planning period:

Themes in the “American Journey” Culture and

Traditions Continuity and

Change Geography and

History Individual Action Groups and

Institutions

Government and Democracy

Science and Technology

Economic Factors Global

Connections Civic Rights and

Responsibilities

Page 7: Overview and Syllabus U. S. History 8 th grade Ms. Scott Building 3A Room @ 2012-2013 850-875-8737 Extension 3116 Email: scottt@gcpsmail.com Planning period:

Culture and Traditions Being aware of cultural differences helps us

understand ourselves and others. People from around the world for

generations have sung of the “land of the Pilgrim’s pride, land where our fathers died” even though their ancestors arrived on these shores long after these events occurred.

Page 8: Overview and Syllabus U. S. History 8 th grade Ms. Scott Building 3A Room @ 2012-2013 850-875-8737 Extension 3116 Email: scottt@gcpsmail.com Planning period:

Continuity and Change Recognizing our

historic roots helps us understand why things are the way they are today.

This theme includes political, social, religious, and economic changes that have influenced the way Americans think and act.

Page 9: Overview and Syllabus U. S. History 8 th grade Ms. Scott Building 3A Room @ 2012-2013 850-875-8737 Extension 3116 Email: scottt@gcpsmail.com Planning period:

Geography and History Understanding

geography helps us understand how humans interact with their environment .

The United States succeeded in part because of its rich natural resources and its vast open spaces.

In many regions, the people changed the natural landscape to fulfill their wants and needs.

Page 10: Overview and Syllabus U. S. History 8 th grade Ms. Scott Building 3A Room @ 2012-2013 850-875-8737 Extension 3116 Email: scottt@gcpsmail.com Planning period:

Individual Action Responsible individuals have often

stepped forward to help lead the nation.

America’s strong family values helped create such individuals .

These values spring in part from earlier times when the home was the center of many activities, including work, education, and daily worship.

Page 11: Overview and Syllabus U. S. History 8 th grade Ms. Scott Building 3A Room @ 2012-2013 850-875-8737 Extension 3116 Email: scottt@gcpsmail.com Planning period:

Groups and Institutions Identifying how

political and social groups and institutions work helps us work together.

Americans formed groups and institutions to act in support of their economic, political, and religious beliefs.

Page 12: Overview and Syllabus U. S. History 8 th grade Ms. Scott Building 3A Room @ 2012-2013 850-875-8737 Extension 3116 Email: scottt@gcpsmail.com Planning period:

Government and Democracy Understanding the

workings of government helps us become good citizens.

Abraham Lincoln explained the meaning of democracy as “government of the people, by the people, for the people.

Democracy, at its best, is “among “ the people.

Page 13: Overview and Syllabus U. S. History 8 th grade Ms. Scott Building 3A Room @ 2012-2013 850-875-8737 Extension 3116 Email: scottt@gcpsmail.com Planning period:

Science and Technology Americans have always been quick to

adopt innovations. The nation was settled and built by people

who blended their old ways with new ways.

Americans’ lives are deeply influenced by technology, the use of science and machines. Perhaps no machine has so shaped modern life as the automobile.

Understanding the roles of science and technology helps us see their impact on our society and the roles of they play in the future.

Page 14: Overview and Syllabus U. S. History 8 th grade Ms. Scott Building 3A Room @ 2012-2013 850-875-8737 Extension 3116 Email: scottt@gcpsmail.com Planning period:

Economic Factors The free enterprise

economy of the United States is consistent with the nation’s history of rights and freedoms.

Freedom of choice in economic decisions supports other freedoms.

Understanding the concept of free enterprise is basic to studying American history.

Page 15: Overview and Syllabus U. S. History 8 th grade Ms. Scott Building 3A Room @ 2012-2013 850-875-8737 Extension 3116 Email: scottt@gcpsmail.com Planning period:

Global Connections The world seems

smaller than it did only 50 years ago. Modern transportation and communication have brought people around the globe closer together.

As a result, countries today are more dependent on one another.

As citizens of the United States and members of the global community, we have a responsibility to be informed.

Page 16: Overview and Syllabus U. S. History 8 th grade Ms. Scott Building 3A Room @ 2012-2013 850-875-8737 Extension 3116 Email: scottt@gcpsmail.com Planning period:

Civic Rights and Responsibilities For a democratic system to survive, its

citizens must take an active role in government.

The foundation of democracy is the right of every person to take part in government and to voice one’s views on issues.

An appreciation for the struggle to preserve these freedoms is vital to the understanding of democracy.

Page 17: Overview and Syllabus U. S. History 8 th grade Ms. Scott Building 3A Room @ 2012-2013 850-875-8737 Extension 3116 Email: scottt@gcpsmail.com Planning period:

Bell Ringer08-23-10

Name 3 themes from the American Journey.

Page 18: Overview and Syllabus U. S. History 8 th grade Ms. Scott Building 3A Room @ 2012-2013 850-875-8737 Extension 3116 Email: scottt@gcpsmail.com Planning period:

Bell Ringer 08-24-10 What precautionary methods did you take

during the Tropical Storms ? Assignment for today: Continue notes on “Cities and Empires” Complete page 19 in the textbook 2-6.

Write the questions. Explorer Wheel (3rd) pages 104-114. (Write

amendments) 3-ring binder check on Friday Textbooks will be issued on Friday.

Page 19: Overview and Syllabus U. S. History 8 th grade Ms. Scott Building 3A Room @ 2012-2013 850-875-8737 Extension 3116 Email: scottt@gcpsmail.com Planning period:

Assignment(s) for today:08-25-10

Bellringer: Who were the Maya?(Don’t forget to

write the questions) Assignment for today: Continue notes on “Cities and

Empires” and “Native American Peoples”.

Page 20: Overview and Syllabus U. S. History 8 th grade Ms. Scott Building 3A Room @ 2012-2013 850-875-8737 Extension 3116 Email: scottt@gcpsmail.com Planning period:

The American Journey

Chapter 1-section 1“Early Peoples”Week of August 24-28, 2010Ms. Scott

Page 21: Overview and Syllabus U. S. History 8 th grade Ms. Scott Building 3A Room @ 2012-2013 850-875-8737 Extension 3116 Email: scottt@gcpsmail.com Planning period:

Did You Know?

Beringia, the ancient land bridge between Asia and North America, may have been around 937.5 miles wide. Early hunters who migrated across this land bridge to follow animals were not aware that they had crossed onto a new continent.

Page 22: Overview and Syllabus U. S. History 8 th grade Ms. Scott Building 3A Room @ 2012-2013 850-875-8737 Extension 3116 Email: scottt@gcpsmail.com Planning period:

Discussion Question

Why did these early people spread out across the Americas?

Page 23: Overview and Syllabus U. S. History 8 th grade Ms. Scott Building 3A Room @ 2012-2013 850-875-8737 Extension 3116 Email: scottt@gcpsmail.com Planning period:

The Journey From Asia The first people

migrated from Asia to North, Central and South America during the last Ice Age. They reached the Americas thousands of years ago.

This migration took centuries, and people spread out across the Americas as far east as the Atlantic Ocean and as far south as the tip of south America.

Page 24: Overview and Syllabus U. S. History 8 th grade Ms. Scott Building 3A Room @ 2012-2013 850-875-8737 Extension 3116 Email: scottt@gcpsmail.com Planning period:

These early people crossed a land bridge from Siberia in northeastern Asia to present day Alaska. This land bridge, Beringia, now lies under the waters of the Bering Strait.

These early Americans were nomads, moving from place to place in search of food.

These early peoples were skilled hunters. They used every part of the animal for food, clothing, weapons, and tools.

Page 25: Overview and Syllabus U. S. History 8 th grade Ms. Scott Building 3A Room @ 2012-2013 850-875-8737 Extension 3116 Email: scottt@gcpsmail.com Planning period:

Settling Down As large animals such

as the mammoth disappeared, Native Americans hunted smaller game and ate plants and berries.

Native Americans began to find new food sources by learning to plant and raise crops.

Page 26: Overview and Syllabus U. S. History 8 th grade Ms. Scott Building 3A Room @ 2012-2013 850-875-8737 Extension 3116 Email: scottt@gcpsmail.com Planning period:

People living near the coast or rivers learned to fish.

Settlers formed villages and communities. Some people remained nomadic hunters.

Early peoples eventually developed their own cultures.

Page 27: Overview and Syllabus U. S. History 8 th grade Ms. Scott Building 3A Room @ 2012-2013 850-875-8737 Extension 3116 Email: scottt@gcpsmail.com Planning period:

Discussion Question

How did early Native Americans learn to adapt to their environment?

Page 28: Overview and Syllabus U. S. History 8 th grade Ms. Scott Building 3A Room @ 2012-2013 850-875-8737 Extension 3116 Email: scottt@gcpsmail.com Planning period:

Chapter 1 section 2

“Cities and Empires”Week of August 30- September 3, 2010

Page 29: Overview and Syllabus U. S. History 8 th grade Ms. Scott Building 3A Room @ 2012-2013 850-875-8737 Extension 3116 Email: scottt@gcpsmail.com Planning period:

Did You Know?

The present-day metropolitan Mexico City area sits on the same site as the great Aztec capital, Tenochtitlan.

Today the population is more than 20 million people.

Page 30: Overview and Syllabus U. S. History 8 th grade Ms. Scott Building 3A Room @ 2012-2013 850-875-8737 Extension 3116 Email: scottt@gcpsmail.com Planning period:

Early American Civilizations Several great civilizations arose in

present-day Mexico and in Central and South America. The most advanced were the Olmec, the Maya, the Aztec, and the Inca. Each thrived for centuries.

The Olmec people lived in what is now Mexico, Guatemala, and Honduras, between 1500 B.C. and 3000 B.C.

The Olmec built stone pavement and drainage systems and sculpted large stone monuments. Their civilization influenced their neighbors.

Page 31: Overview and Syllabus U. S. History 8 th grade Ms. Scott Building 3A Room @ 2012-2013 850-875-8737 Extension 3116 Email: scottt@gcpsmail.com Planning period:

Discussion Question

Why do you think early American civilizations developed along large bodies of water?

Page 32: Overview and Syllabus U. S. History 8 th grade Ms. Scott Building 3A Room @ 2012-2013 850-875-8737 Extension 3116 Email: scottt@gcpsmail.com Planning period:

The Maya The Maya civilization

flourished in present-day Mexico, Guatemala, Honduras, and Belize.

The people built large cities, each having at least one stone pyramid.

Tikal was the largest Mayan city and had five pyramids.

Page 33: Overview and Syllabus U. S. History 8 th grade Ms. Scott Building 3A Room @ 2012-2013 850-875-8737 Extension 3116 Email: scottt@gcpsmail.com Planning period:

The Mayan Civilization was a theocracy, or a society of ruled by religious leaders.

The Maya believed that the gods controlled all that happened on Earth. Atop the pyramids were religious and governmental centers.

The Maya became skilled astronomers and developed a writing system called hieroglyphics.

Mayan traders transported their goods such as maize, vegetables, jade, turquoise jewelry, and cacao beans on their backs and along the water.

No one knows what caused the decline of the Maya around A.D. 900, but descendants of the Maya still live in parts of Mexico and Central America.

Page 34: Overview and Syllabus U. S. History 8 th grade Ms. Scott Building 3A Room @ 2012-2013 850-875-8737 Extension 3116 Email: scottt@gcpsmail.com Planning period:

Discussion Question

Why do you think the Maya believed that the gods controlled what happened on Earth?

Page 35: Overview and Syllabus U. S. History 8 th grade Ms. Scott Building 3A Room @ 2012-2013 850-875-8737 Extension 3116 Email: scottt@gcpsmail.com Planning period:

The Aztec Founded in 1325, Tenochtitlan was the

home of the of the Aztec and their capital city.

Workers toiled day and night to make causeways liking the island to the mainland and filling in Lake Texcoco, upon which the city was built.

Tenochtitlan was also a center of trade. The Aztec people were warriors and

conquered nearly all rival communities. They built a military empire.

From the conquered people, the Aztec took weapons, maize, cotton club, and copper. The Aztec forced their captives to work as slaves.

Page 36: Overview and Syllabus U. S. History 8 th grade Ms. Scott Building 3A Room @ 2012-2013 850-875-8737 Extension 3116 Email: scottt@gcpsmail.com Planning period:

The Aztec people also believed in pleasing the gods. Their society was organized around religion, and they sacrificed thousands of prisoners in religious ceremonies.

Page 37: Overview and Syllabus U. S. History 8 th grade Ms. Scott Building 3A Room @ 2012-2013 850-875-8737 Extension 3116 Email: scottt@gcpsmail.com Planning period:

The Inca The Inca Empire

developed in the western highlands of South America.

Cuzco, the capital city, was founded around AD 1200.

The Inca ruler Pachacuti and his son, Topa Inca, conquered neighboring lands to build their empire.

It was the largest of the early American civilizations.

Page 38: Overview and Syllabus U. S. History 8 th grade Ms. Scott Building 3A Room @ 2012-2013 850-875-8737 Extension 3116 Email: scottt@gcpsmail.com Planning period:

The Inca empire stretched more than 3,000 miles from present-day Colombia to northern Argentina and Chile.

The population of the Inca empire at is height was more than nine million people.

The Inca were very advanced. They built 10,000 miles of paved roads. Rope bridges crossed canyons and rivers. They developed a record-keeping system

using guipus so that runners could take messages from one part of the empire to another.

Page 39: Overview and Syllabus U. S. History 8 th grade Ms. Scott Building 3A Room @ 2012-2013 850-875-8737 Extension 3116 Email: scottt@gcpsmail.com Planning period:

The language, Quechua, became the official language of the empire.

They developed a system of terracing the land by building platforms so that they could plant crops on slopes.

They were a religious people, worshipping the sun god.

Page 40: Overview and Syllabus U. S. History 8 th grade Ms. Scott Building 3A Room @ 2012-2013 850-875-8737 Extension 3116 Email: scottt@gcpsmail.com Planning period:

Discussion Question

Why is the Inca considered a great civilizations ?

Page 41: Overview and Syllabus U. S. History 8 th grade Ms. Scott Building 3A Room @ 2012-2013 850-875-8737 Extension 3116 Email: scottt@gcpsmail.com Planning period:

American Journey

Chapter 1-Section 3“North American Peoples”Ms. Scott09-6-2010 through 09-10-2010

Page 42: Overview and Syllabus U. S. History 8 th grade Ms. Scott Building 3A Room @ 2012-2013 850-875-8737 Extension 3116 Email: scottt@gcpsmail.com Planning period:

Did You Know?

Native Americans who hunted buffalo, such as the Apache and Navajo, relied on the animal for meat. The buffalo, however, served other uses such as hides for clothing, pouches, and dolls; hair for headdresses and pillow stuffing; tails for whips; hoofs for glue, and horns for cups and spoons.

Page 43: Overview and Syllabus U. S. History 8 th grade Ms. Scott Building 3A Room @ 2012-2013 850-875-8737 Extension 3116 Email: scottt@gcpsmail.com Planning period:

Early Native Americans Many Native American

cultures existed in North America before Europeans arrived in the 1500s.

The Hohokam lived in the desert of present-day Arizona. Their civilization flourished from about AD 300 to 1300. They built irrigation channels to bring water to the hot, dry land from the nearby Gila and Salt Rivers and left behind pottery, carved stone, and shells.

Page 44: Overview and Syllabus U. S. History 8 th grade Ms. Scott Building 3A Room @ 2012-2013 850-875-8737 Extension 3116 Email: scottt@gcpsmail.com Planning period:

The Anasazi built stone and cliff dwellings to settle in smaller communities, perhaps due to droughts during which their crops dried up.

The Mound Builders lived in central North America from present-day Pennsylvania to the Mississippi River valley. They built mounds of earth that looked like the Aztec stone pyramids.

The Adena were hunter and gatherers and among the earliest Mound builders living in the Ohio Valley around 800 BC.

The Hopewell people were farmers and traders who built large burial mounds shaped like birds, bears, and snakes. They left behind pearls, shells, cloth, and copper in the mounds to show their variety of trade.

Page 45: Overview and Syllabus U. S. History 8 th grade Ms. Scott Building 3A Room @ 2012-2013 850-875-8737 Extension 3116 Email: scottt@gcpsmail.com Planning period:

The Cahokia built the largest settlement in present-day Illinois. The city may have had 16,000 people. The highest mound, Monks Mound, rose nearly 100 feet and was probably the highest structure north of Mexico.


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