Section 1:
Tomb Treasures
Part 2: Curriculum
Connections
Link to California
State Social Studies / History Standards
Skills:
Grades 68:
Chronological and Spatial Thinking
- students explain how major events are related
to each other in time
- students construct various timelines of key
events, people, and periods of the historical
era being studied
- students use a variety of maps and documents
to identify physical and cultural features of
neighborhoods, cities, states, and countries and
to explain the historical migration of people,
expansion and disintegration of empires, and the
growth of economic systems
Research, Evidence and Point of View
- students frame questions that can be answered
by historical study and research
- students distinguish fact from opinion in historical
narratives and stories
- students distinguish relevant from irrelevant
information, essential from incidental information,
and verifiable from unverifiable information in
historical narratives and stories
- students assess the credibility of primary and
secondary sources and draw sound conclusions from
them
- students detect the different historical points
of view on historical events and determine the
context in which the historical statements were
made (the questions asked, sources used, author's
perspectives)
Historical Interpretation
- students explain the central issues and problems
of the past, placing people and events in a matrix
of time and place
- students understand and distinguish cause, effect,
sequence, and correlation in historical events,
including the long- and short-term causal relationships
- students explain the sources of historical continuity
and how the combination of ideas and events explains
the emergence of new patterns
- students recognize the role of chance, oversight,
and error in history
- students recognize interpretations of history
are subject to change as new information is uncovered
- students interpret basic indicators of economic
performance and conduct cost/benefit analyses
in order to analyze economic and political issues
Content:
Grade 6: World History and GeographyAncient
Civilizations
Students in grade six expand their understanding
of history by studying the people and events that
ushered in the dawn of the major western and non-western
ancient civilizations. Geography is of special significance
in the development of the human story. Continued
emphasis is placed on the everyday lives, problems
and accomplishments of people, their role in developing
social, economic and political structures, as well
as in establishing and spreading ideas that helped
transform the world forever.
Students develop higher levels of critical thinking
by considering why civilizations developed where
and when they did, why they became dominant and
why they declined. Students analyze the interactions
among the various cultures, emphasizing their enduring
contributions and the link, despite time, between
the contemporary and ancient worlds.
Students analyze the geographic, political, economic,
religious, and social structures of the early civilizations
of China, in terms of the significance of the trans-Eurasian
"silk roads" in the period of the Han
and Roman empires and their locations.
Grade 7: World History and GeographyMedieval
and Early Modern Times
Students in grade seven study the social, cultural,
and technological changes that occurred in Europe,
Africa, and Asia from 5001789 AD. After
reviewing the ancient world and the ways in which
archaeologists and historians uncover the past,
students study the history and geography of great
civilizations that were developing concurrently
throughout the world during medieval and early modern
times. They examine the growing economic interaction
among civilizations as well as the exchange of ideas,
beliefs, technologies and commodities.
Students analyze the geographic, political, economic,
religious, and social structures of civilizations
of Islam in the Middle Ages in terms of the growth
of cities and the trade routes created among Asia,
Africa and Europe and the products and inventions
that traveled along these routes.
|