AP WORLD HISTORY Room H203 Period 7 Mrs. Poia.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Welcome to A.P. World History. Course Description In A.P. World History we will explore key themes of world history, including interaction with the environment,
Advertisements

Introduction to World History AP
Welcome to AP World History. What is the AP (Advanced Placement)? The AP, or Advanced Placement, indicates a college-level course. Through college-level.
9 th Grade AP ® World History Pilot Proposal Think Like a World Historian.
Warm-Up: Tuesday, 8/26 Get two post-it notes from the front table. On one note, write down a few skills you have (think academic) that will help you be.
AP World History Welcome Parents! Debra Cave, B.S., M.Ed.
AP World History Review Project
Ms. Bryant. WHAP Course objectives At the completion of the course all students will be able to perform the following at a higher personal level:  analyze.
US AP Exam Review Revised Exam for THE AP EXAM The College Board redesigned the APUSH Exam for the school year. Students will need to.
Seventh Grade Social Studies East Middle School Mrs. J. Christmon, B.S., M.S. Voic (248)
 Team taught  CP World Literature  AP World History  Literature selections complement historical time periods and themes.  Historical context enriches.
Historical Thinking Skills and Themes in American History
AP World History: An Introduction
World History Honors Course Description: Students will investigate the progression of world history from 10,000 years ago to about 1750 CE. Major units.
Welcome to AP World History Mr. Rock SHS
WELCOME PARENTS AND GUARDIANS MY NAME IS MRS. DEBORAH A. SARRION 8 TH GRADE U.S. HISTORY PLEASE SIGN IN Somerset Academy Middle School Open House! September.
AP World History Welcome Parents!
Social Studies Grade 8: Per. 2 Grade 7: Per. 3,4,6,7
AP World History Course Description
BACK TO SCHOOL NIGHT Mr. Sakole Room 169.
World Cultures Mrs. Cummings Room
Welcome to Ms. Bruggeman’s History Class! (G-701)
American History II Syllabus
AP World History What to Expect.
Honors Comp and Lit II Syllabus Mrs. Rogers
World Cultures Mrs. Rosen Room
Welcome to AP US History
AP European History Mr. Vincent Spina
Honors Comp and Lit II Syllabus Mrs. Rogers
Welcome to AP World History
The Beginning of Our Journey Through History
Kelly Pratt-Booth World History Teacher Rank II
Multiple Choice—55 Questions | 55 Minutes | 40% of Exam Score
AP Themes and Key Concepts
Thinking Like an Historian
US AP Exam Review.
Mr. Sager 2nd Period Room 708 Spring 2018
AP WORLD HISTORY Mr. Sager Spring 2017.
Welcome to A.P. World History
Advanced Placement United States History
Mr. Sweet’s social studies class
Warm-Up: Get two post-it notes from the front table.
World History Advanced Placement WHAP
Long Essay Question (LEQ)
Mr. Hurst AP® World History Mr. Hurst
COACH WOLFE WORLD GEOGRAPHY.
Mr. Slevcove mslevcove.weebly.com
About the course…and the test
WHAP Bootcamp.
Mr. Mize Under Graduate Graduate Bachelors in Communications (2005)
Social Science Course Selection
Advanced Placement United States History Mrs. Wilson Periods 3 & 6
World History Ms. Corson F200 Planning Periods: 2A and 2B
Welcome to Tomball Intermediate
AP World History and AP Capstone Seminar and Research
Welcome to Mr Auzenne’s Classroom
Thursday, March 29 Retrieve your ‘World War I Power Point’ notes
Mrs. Braun AP European History.
Welcome to AP Human Geography!
LIVINGSTON HIGH SCHOOL SOCIAL STUDIES DEPARTMENT
AP World History Exam The Long Essay.
AP World History Introduction.
Thinking, Themes, Time Periods, Seminars & The AP Exam
APWH Teacher: Ms. Vanessa Gordon
World Cultures and Geography
WHAP Bootcamp.
Aim: How do I ACE the SAQ (Short Answer Question)?
AP World History: Modern
Pre AP World History Course Description
Honors Comp and Lit II Syllabus Mrs. Rogers
Presentation transcript:

AP WORLD HISTORY Room H203 Period 7 Mrs. Poia

What is AP World History? This is a one year course that journeys through the history of five major geographical regions: Africa, Asia, the Americas, Europe and Oceania. This course gives students the unique opportunity to learn the history of past civilizations through their culture, politics, geography and economic interactions. Students will make connections and explore the similarities and differences between various historical eras, geographical regions and the diverse people who existed in these time periods

AP Classes: AP classes allow students to take college level courses while still in high school The textbook is a college level read This course requires the writing of different types of essays and various other types of historical analysis While there will be some lecture, most of the class periods will be devoted to students learning the required historical analytical skills This will require the student to gain most of his/her content background from the assigned readings. It is imperative that students keep up with the reading assignments and notes activities.

FIVE COURSE THEMES: The course is developed around five course themes and a collection of key concepts that span six different chronological periods, from approximately 8000 B.C.E. to the present. Theme 1: Interaction Between Humans and the Environment Theme 2: Development and Interaction of Cultures Theme 3: State-Building, Expansion, and Conflict Theme 4: Creation, Expansion, and Interaction of Economic Systems Theme 5: Development and Transformation of Social Structures

UNITS OF STUDY: Unit 1: Early History up to 600 BCE Unit 2: 600 BCE to 600 CE Unit 3: 600-1450 CE Unit 4: 1450-1750 CE Unit 5: 1750-early 1900s CE Unit 6: Early 1900s-Present CE

Unit Exams: There are weekly quizzes and students will periodically be writing one of the formal required essays (DBQ, Comparison-Contrast or Continuity/Change Over Time Essay) The AP Exam given in May is optional but students usually take an AP class with the goal in mind to take this test Students can earn college credit based on their performance and whether the college chosen accepts AP credit for that course Here is a link for what colleges accept for every AP course: https://apstudent.collegeboard.org/creditandplacement/search-credit-policies The test costs money with financial aid available for those who may not be able to afford it Sign up for the exam is online (more information will follow as we get closer to the test)

AP Exam May Format Section I – 1 hour 35 minutes 55 multiple-choice questions (55 minutes; 40 % of exam score) Three short-answer questions (40 minutes; 20 % of exam score) Question 1- Required, Periods 3-6 Question 2- Required, Periods 3-6 Choice between: Question 3-Periods 1-3 OR Questions 4- Periods 4-6 SAQ: 3 parts to every question A. Identify B. Explain C. Apply Possible skill will be: analyzing secondary source, CCOT, and Comparison

Section II- 1 hour 40 minutes One document-based question (60 minutes, which includes a 15-minute reading period; 25 percent of exam score) DBQ- Periods 3-6 One long-essay question, choice of 3 (40 minutes; 15 percent of exam score) One question chosen from three options on the same theme/skill Periods 1-2 Periods 3-4 Periods 5-6

Struggling? Available before school, Break, Pride Period, and Lunch second half Use the website: calendar, handouts, notes, assignments, and unit vocabulary & concepts list, etc. on Haiku Online resources- too many to list- see Haiku

Website: https://mvusd.haikulearning.com/cpoia/apwh/cms_page/view/30837947

Companion Study Books available for purchase online

Grading: The following is the grade percentage breakdown of the course: Assessments (formative and summative) essays, quizzes, unit exams: 60% Assignments- classwork and homework: 40%

What you will need for this class Organization is very important for success in this class. Gone are the days of random papers in your bag cracked on the edges and frayed due to misplacement Binders you bring every class meeting include: Subsections titled: Notes, essays, assessments Portable 3-hole puncher Plenty of paper Materials: Three different highlighters, plus black, blue, and red pens, pencils, and erasers. Tabs optional.

What you will need for this class con’t The right mindset- determined to stick with the grueling amount of content and work that is expected to be done on due date. Attitude- that will allow you to persevere and not take lazy route leading to failure. Expecting your personal best- you will grow here in this class and understand what taking your academic studies seriously means- in the end it’s not about knowing 10,000 years of history but seeing personal accomplishment at the end of the journey of APWH. You’re gong to be amazed at what you can do when you apply the above.

Typical weekly schedule A/B Block Roughly one chapter a week, this will change slightly in Spring Day 1- reading and completed notes checked beginning of class, skill work, activity, and quiz on reading due. Day 2/3- finish any activity leftover from Day 1, Doc. Analysis, essay work, test

Incentives Quiz on Day 1 will be multiple choice. *If you average 80% or higher on quizzes for the unit- you are exempt from taking the M/C questions on the test. The incentive is to read and take notes over the weekend and come prepared for the week. Assessments including quizzes and exams count for 60% of your grade.

How we study World History and what makes this class different from all the other classes you take: On a daily basis we aim to use Habits of Mind: 1. construct and evaluate arguments: using evidence to make plausible arguments. 2. use documents and primary data: developing necessary skills to analyze point of view, context, and bias, and to interpret information. 3. develop the ability to assess issues of change in continuity overtime. 4. enhance the capacity to handle diversity of interpretations through analysis 5. see global patterns over time and space and connect local developments to global ones.

Contact Information: Please email me if you have questions or concerns: Email is the best way to get in touch with me

Sample Question: 1. Which global force was the FIRST to consistently integrate sub-Saharan Africa into a global network of exchange of goods and ideas? A. Islamic civilization B. Modern globalization C. Transatlantic slave trade D. The Roman Empire -Correct Answer is A