After Rome falls
Students start the year by looking at what happened when the Roman Empire broke apart. They follow the rise of new kingdoms in Europe, the spread of Christianity, and the Byzantine Empire in the east.
This is the year history opens up beyond one region and stretches across the whole world. Students follow the fall of Rome, the rise of Islam, the kingdoms of medieval Africa and Asia, and the empires of the Maya, Aztec, and Inca. From there, they trace how the Renaissance, the Reformation, and European exploration reshaped daily life on every continent. By spring, students can explain how one event in Europe rippled out to change Africa, Asia, or the Americas.
Students start the year by looking at what happened when the Roman Empire broke apart. They follow the rise of new kingdoms in Europe, the spread of Christianity, and the Byzantine Empire in the east.
Students travel through the Middle Ages around the globe. They study the spread of Islam, the dynasties of China and Japan, the African kingdoms of Mali and Songhai, the Maya and Aztec, and feudal life in Europe.
Students look at the burst of art, science, and new ideas in Italy and northern Europe. They also study how Martin Luther and others split the Catholic Church and changed who held power in Europe.
Students examine why European countries sailed across the oceans and what happened when they reached the Americas and Africa. They study the Columbian Exchange and the brutal realities of the transatlantic slave trade.
Students learn how rulers like Louis XIV, Peter the Great, and the Tokugawa shoguns claimed near-total control. They also see how England moved the other direction, toward Parliament and a bill of rights.
Students close the year with the Scientific Revolution and the Enlightenment. They follow how thinkers like Copernicus, Galileo, Hobbes, and Locke changed the way people understood the universe, government, and human rights.
Students study why the Roman Empire collapsed and what changed in Europe afterward, from the shift in trade routes to the rise of new kingdoms that replaced Roman rule.
Students study how people lived, governed, and traded during the medieval period, roughly 500 to 1500 CE. Think feudal kingdoms, the Catholic Church's political power, and how towns grew into trade centers across Europe, Asia, and Africa.
Students trace how new ideas about art, science, and religion spread across Europe in the 1400s and 1500s, challenging the authority of the Church and reshaping how people understood the world around them.
Students examine how European explorers claimed land in the Americas and what that meant for the people already living there.
Students study how European monarchs in the 1600s and 1700s claimed total power over their kingdoms, pushing aside nobles, courts, and the church to rule without limits.
Big ideas from the 1600s and 1700s, like reason, individual rights, and scientific thinking, reshaped how people understood government and the natural world. Students trace how those ideas influenced revolutions and shaped modern societies.
| Standard | Definition | Code |
|---|---|---|
| Effects of the Fall of Rome | Students study why the Roman Empire collapsed and what changed in Europe afterward, from the shift in trade routes to the rise of new kingdoms that replaced Roman rule. | SS24.8.EFR |
| Medieval Societies | Students study how people lived, governed, and traded during the medieval period, roughly 500 to 1500 CE. Think feudal kingdoms, the Catholic Church's political power, and how towns grew into trade centers across Europe, Asia, and Africa. | SS24.8.MS |
| Renaissance and Reformation | Students trace how new ideas about art, science, and religion spread across Europe in the 1400s and 1500s, challenging the authority of the Church and reshaping how people understood the world around them. | SS24.8.RR |
| Age of Exploration and Colonization in the Americas | Students examine how European explorers claimed land in the Americas and what that meant for the people already living there. | SS24.8.AEC |
| Rise of Absolutism | Students study how European monarchs in the 1600s and 1700s claimed total power over their kingdoms, pushing aside nobles, courts, and the church to rule without limits. | SS24.8.RA |
| Enlightenment and the Scientific Revolution | Big ideas from the 1600s and 1700s, like reason, individual rights, and scientific thinking, reshaped how people understood government and the natural world. Students trace how those ideas influenced revolutions and shaped modern societies. | SS24.8.ESR |
Students study what happened after Rome fell: why trade broke down, how local lords replaced emperors, and how daily life changed across Europe. The goal is to trace cause and effect across economics, government, and society.
After Rome fell, Christianity spread across Europe and the Mediterranean. Students trace how the early Catholic Church organized itself, including what the Bishop of Rome and church councils actually did to hold that growing institution together.
Germanic tribes moved into former Roman lands after the empire fell, forming new kingdoms and redrawing the political map of Europe. Students trace how those migrations shifted borders and replaced Roman rule with a patchwork of smaller kingdoms.
Students learn how the Eastern Roman Empire survived for a thousand years after Rome fell. They look at how Byzantine laws, religion, and trade shaped the cultures of Eastern Europe and the Middle East.
Students learn why the Christian church split into two branches (Roman Catholic and Eastern Orthodox) and trace how the Orthodox Church shaped laws, art, and daily life across Eastern Europe and Central Asia.
Students examine what the Byzantine Empire left behind: its distinct style of religious art, the spread of Orthodox Christianity, and buildings like the Hagia Sophia. They weigh how those contributions shaped the cultures that came after.
Students study the Code of Justinian, a set of laws written in the 500s, and trace how its ideas about courts, contracts, and justice shaped the legal systems many countries still use today.
| Standard | Definition | Code |
|---|---|---|
| Analyze the economic, political | Students study what happened after Rome fell: why trade broke down, how local lords replaced emperors, and how daily life changed across Europe. The goal is to trace cause and effect across economics, government, and society. | SS24.8.1 |
| Trace the spread of Christianity in Europe and the wider Mediterranean region… | After Rome fell, Christianity spread across Europe and the Mediterranean. Students trace how the early Catholic Church organized itself, including what the Bishop of Rome and church councils actually did to hold that growing institution together. | SS24.8.1a |
| Explain the rise of Germanic kingdoms, the migration of their peoples | Germanic tribes moved into former Roman lands after the empire fell, forming new kingdoms and redrawing the political map of Europe. Students trace how those migrations shifted borders and replaced Roman rule with a patchwork of smaller kingdoms. | SS24.8.1b |
| Describe the Byzantine Empire, its institutions | Students learn how the Eastern Roman Empire survived for a thousand years after Rome fell. They look at how Byzantine laws, religion, and trade shaped the cultures of Eastern Europe and the Middle East. | SS24.8.2 |
| Identify factors leading to the separation of Eastern Orthodoxy and Western… | Students learn why the Christian church split into two branches (Roman Catholic and Eastern Orthodox) and trace how the Orthodox Church shaped laws, art, and daily life across Eastern Europe and Central Asia. | SS24.8.2a |
| Evaluate the cultural contributions of the Byzantines to art, religion | Students examine what the Byzantine Empire left behind: its distinct style of religious art, the spread of Orthodox Christianity, and buildings like the Hagia Sophia. They weigh how those contributions shaped the cultures that came after. | SS24.8.2b |
| Analyze the influence of the Code of Justinian on modern legal codes | Students study the Code of Justinian, a set of laws written in the 500s, and trace how its ideas about courts, contracts, and justice shaped the legal systems many countries still use today. | SS24.8.2c |
Students follow how Islam spread across the Mediterranean world after 632, tracing which regions came under caliphate rule and how the Qur'an was gathered into a single written text during that period.
Muhammad founded Islam in Arabia in the early 600s. Students trace how his teachings, recorded in the Qur'an, united Arab tribes and sparked a faith that spread across three continents within a century of his death.
After Muhammad died, Muslims disagreed about who should lead their faith. Students learn how those disagreements split Islam into distinct groups, each with different beliefs about leadership and religious authority.
Islamic rule shaped trade routes, laws, and daily life across three continents. Students study how ideas, goods, and governing systems spread from Arabia into Africa and Europe between the 600s and 1200s.
Students compare how China, India, Japan, and Korea were organized during the medieval period, looking at how each society governed itself, traded, and shaped its culture across different landscapes.
Students study how China shaped neighboring civilizations through trade, religion, writing systems, and government ideas. They explain which of China's practices spread to places like Japan, Korea, and India, and why those ideas took hold.
Students examine how Mongol conquests reshaped trade routes, daily life, and cultural exchange across Asia, from China to Persia. They explain what changed for ordinary people, merchants, and rulers after the Mongols took control.
Students trace how Buddhism, Hinduism, Jainism, and Sikhism spread and changed across Asia during the medieval period, looking at where each religion took hold and how it shaped daily life and government.
Students trace how Japan shifted from rule by emperors to rule by military leaders, following the rise of the Shogunate under Minamoto no Yoritomo and the feudal system that organized land, loyalty, and power below him.
Students compare three West African kingdoms, Ghana, Mali, and Songhai, looking at how each was governed, how trade worked, what people believed, and how geography shaped daily life.
Physical features like rivers, deserts, and savannas determined where medieval African kingdoms grew and who they could trade with. Students explain how geography pushed Ghana, Mali, and Songhai toward specific trade routes and partners.
Students trace how ideas, languages, and religions moved across West Africa as kingdoms like Ghana, Mali, and Songhai rose and traded with one another.
Students examine how leaders like Mansa Musa and cities like Timbuktu shaped West African kingdoms through trade, scholarship, and wealth. The goal is to weigh what those contributions actually changed.
Students examine the Maya, Aztec, Inca, and Mississippian peoples at their peak: how they governed, built, traded, and organized daily life before European contact.
Students examine why civilizations like the Maya, Aztec, and Inca built where they did, connecting the land around them, rivers, mountains, and soil, to how their cities grew and their people survived.
Students learn how Indigenous civilizations built cities, roads, and irrigation systems without the tools Europeans used. The focus is on real engineering, like Inca rope bridges or Aztec causeways, and what those achievements reveal about each society.
Religion touched everything in these societies: who ruled, how people farmed, what buildings they built, and which days they celebrated. Students explain how those beliefs drove daily life and decision-making across the Maya, Aztec, Inca, and Mississippian peoples.
Students trace how life in early medieval Europe was shaped by the Church, feudal lords, trade, and the slow rebuilding of towns after the fall of Rome.
Students compare how medieval societies grew differently depending on where they were in Europe, looking at what shaped daily life, trade, and power in different regions.
Students examine how the Catholic Church shaped daily life, government decisions, and trade in medieval Europe, and why kings and lords often needed the Church's approval to hold onto their power.
Feudalism was medieval Europe's organizing system: kings granted land to nobles, who in turn provided soldiers and taxes, while peasants worked the land in exchange for protection. Students explain how this chain of obligations shaped daily life, wealth, and power.
Three turning points reshaped medieval Europe: Charlemagne's coronation united much of Western Europe under one Christian ruler, the Norman Conquest changed England's language and laws, and the Hundred Years' War shifted how France and England thought about loyalty and nationhood.
Students learn how the Magna Carta forced the English king to follow the same laws as everyone else. It was one of the first times a written document put limits on what a ruler could and couldn't do.
Students study why medieval Europe began to change, looking at shifts in wealth, power, and daily life that set the stage for the Renaissance and Reformation.
Students explain how four major historical events reshaped power and daily life across Europe and the Middle East: the Crusades, the Reconquista, the Spanish Inquisition, and the rise of the Ottoman Empire.
Students trace how the bubonic plague traveled from Asia into Europe and explain what changed afterward, including how a new middle class began to take shape as the old social order broke down.
Students examine what daily life, legal rights, and political power looked like for women in medieval Europe, and study specific women who shaped events in ways history books often overlook.
| Standard | Definition | Code |
|---|---|---|
| Trace and analyze the spread of Islam through the Mediterranean region under… | Students follow how Islam spread across the Mediterranean world after 632, tracing which regions came under caliphate rule and how the Qur'an was gathered into a single written text during that period. | SS24.8.3 |
| Outline the founding and development of Islam under Muhammad | Muhammad founded Islam in Arabia in the early 600s. Students trace how his teachings, recorded in the Qur'an, united Arab tribes and sparked a faith that spread across three continents within a century of his death. | SS24.8.3a |
| Differentiate among the Islamic sects that developed after the death of… | After Muhammad died, Muslims disagreed about who should lead their faith. Students learn how those disagreements split Islam into distinct groups, each with different beliefs about leadership and religious authority. | SS24.8.3b |
| Analyze the influence of Islamic cultural, economic | Islamic rule shaped trade routes, laws, and daily life across three continents. Students study how ideas, goods, and governing systems spread from Arabia into Africa and Europe between the 600s and 1200s. | SS24.8.3c |
| Compare and contrast the cultural, economic, geographic | Students compare how China, India, Japan, and Korea were organized during the medieval period, looking at how each society governed itself, traded, and shaped its culture across different landscapes. | SS24.8.4 |
| Explain China’s influence on other civilizations in Asia | Students study how China shaped neighboring civilizations through trade, religion, writing systems, and government ideas. They explain which of China's practices spread to places like Japan, Korea, and India, and why those ideas took hold. | SS24.8.4a |
| Describe how the Mongols influenced the cultural, economic | Students examine how Mongol conquests reshaped trade routes, daily life, and cultural exchange across Asia, from China to Persia. They explain what changed for ordinary people, merchants, and rulers after the Mongols took control. | SS24.8.4b |
| Analyze the evolution of religion in Asia, including the growth of Buddhism… | Students trace how Buddhism, Hinduism, Jainism, and Sikhism spread and changed across Asia during the medieval period, looking at where each religion took hold and how it shaped daily life and government. | SS24.8.4c |
| Trace the development of the feudal structure of medieval Japan, including the… | Students trace how Japan shifted from rule by emperors to rule by military leaders, following the rise of the Shogunate under Minamoto no Yoritomo and the feudal system that organized land, loyalty, and power below him. | SS24.8.4d |
| Compare the African kingdoms of Ghana, Mali | Students compare three West African kingdoms, Ghana, Mali, and Songhai, looking at how each was governed, how trade worked, what people believed, and how geography shaped daily life. | SS24.8.5 |
| Describe how physical geography shaped the growth of medieval African kingdoms… | Physical features like rivers, deserts, and savannas determined where medieval African kingdoms grew and who they could trade with. Students explain how geography pushed Ghana, Mali, and Songhai toward specific trade routes and partners. | SS24.8.5a |
| Trace the spread of culture, language | Students trace how ideas, languages, and religions moved across West Africa as kingdoms like Ghana, Mali, and Songhai rose and traded with one another. | SS24.8.5b |
| Evaluate the economic and cultural contributions of key leaders and trade… | Students examine how leaders like Mansa Musa and cities like Timbuktu shaped West African kingdoms through trade, scholarship, and wealth. The goal is to weigh what those contributions actually changed. | SS24.8.5c |
| Describe key aspects and figures of Indigenous societies during the Postclassic… | Students examine the Maya, Aztec, Inca, and Mississippian peoples at their peak: how they governed, built, traded, and organized daily life before European contact. | SS24.8.6 |
| Analyze how geographic and environmental factors led to the location and growth… | Students examine why civilizations like the Maya, Aztec, and Inca built where they did, connecting the land around them, rivers, mountains, and soil, to how their cities grew and their people survived. | SS24.8.6a |
| Describe technological and engineering achievements of Indigenous societies | Students learn how Indigenous civilizations built cities, roads, and irrigation systems without the tools Europeans used. The focus is on real engineering, like Inca rope bridges or Aztec causeways, and what those achievements reveal about each society. | SS24.8.6b |
| Explain how religious beliefs and practices shaped culture in Indigenous… | Religion touched everything in these societies: who ruled, how people farmed, what buildings they built, and which days they celebrated. Students explain how those beliefs drove daily life and decision-making across the Maya, Aztec, Inca, and Mississippian peoples. | SS24.8.6c |
| Outline the social, cultural, economic | Students trace how life in early medieval Europe was shaped by the Church, feudal lords, trade, and the slow rebuilding of towns after the fall of Rome. | SS24.8.7 |
| Compare and contrast the growth of medieval societies in different geographic… | Students compare how medieval societies grew differently depending on where they were in Europe, looking at what shaped daily life, trade, and power in different regions. | SS24.8.7a |
| Analyze the relationship of the Catholic Church to economic, political | Students examine how the Catholic Church shaped daily life, government decisions, and trade in medieval Europe, and why kings and lords often needed the Church's approval to hold onto their power. | SS24.8.7b |
| Explain the significant economic, political | Feudalism was medieval Europe's organizing system: kings granted land to nobles, who in turn provided soldiers and taxes, while peasants worked the land in exchange for protection. Students explain how this chain of obligations shaped daily life, wealth, and power. | SS24.8.7c |
| Analyze the effects of political events in Europe during the Middle Ages… | Three turning points reshaped medieval Europe: Charlemagne's coronation united much of Western Europe under one Christian ruler, the Norman Conquest changed England's language and laws, and the Hundred Years' War shifted how France and England thought about loyalty and nationhood. | SS24.8.7d |
| Summarize the significance of the issuing of the Magna Carta in limiting royal… | Students learn how the Magna Carta forced the English king to follow the same laws as everyone else. It was one of the first times a written document put limits on what a ruler could and couldn't do. | SS24.8.7e |
| Analyze the social, political | Students study why medieval Europe began to change, looking at shifts in wealth, power, and daily life that set the stage for the Renaissance and Reformation. | SS24.8.8 |
| Explain the political and cultural consequences of the Crusades, the… | Students explain how four major historical events reshaped power and daily life across Europe and the Middle East: the Crusades, the Reconquista, the Spanish Inquisition, and the rise of the Ottoman Empire. | SS24.8.8a |
| Trace the spread of the bubonic plague from Asia to Europe and describe the… | Students trace how the bubonic plague traveled from Asia into Europe and explain what changed afterward, including how a new middle class began to take shape as the old social order broke down. | SS24.8.8b |
| Describe the role of women in society and politics in medieval Europe, citing… | Students examine what daily life, legal rights, and political power looked like for women in medieval Europe, and study specific women who shaped events in ways history books often overlook. | SS24.8.8c |
Students learn how Italy became a hotbed of art, trade, and new ideas in the 1400s and 1500s, and how wealthy families like the Medicis bankrolled painters, architects, and scholars who changed what European culture looked like.
Humanism was the Renaissance idea that human potential and reason matter as much as religious doctrine. Students study how that shift shaped the work of painters, sculptors, and thinkers across Italy and Northern Europe.
The Renaissance brought major breakthroughs in science and technology. Students study inventions like the printing press and explain how those discoveries changed the way people lived, worked, and shared ideas.
Students study why the Catholic Church lost its hold on Europe in the 1500s and how the split between Catholics and Protestants reshaped kingdoms, alliances, and wars across the continent.
Church practices like selling forgiveness and appointing leaders for political reasons sparked serious disputes. Students learn what pushed reformers and local rulers to openly challenge the authority of the Catholic Church in the 1500s.
Reformers like Martin Luther and John Calvin challenged the Catholic Church's authority and reshaped how millions of Europeans worshipped. Students learn what these men believed, what they changed, and how their ideas split both the church and the governments of Europe.
Students learn how the Catholic Church and European rulers responded to Protestant challenges: the Church's internal reform movement, England's break from Rome, and the wars that followed. Key figures like Henry VIII and Ignatius of Loyola shaped each response.
| Standard | Definition | Code |
|---|---|---|
| Describe cultural and economic developments in Italy and Northern Europe during… | Students learn how Italy became a hotbed of art, trade, and new ideas in the 1400s and 1500s, and how wealthy families like the Medicis bankrolled painters, architects, and scholars who changed what European culture looked like. | SS24.8.9 |
| Analyze humanism and the contributions of philosophers and artists during the… | Humanism was the Renaissance idea that human potential and reason matter as much as religious doctrine. Students study how that shift shaped the work of painters, sculptors, and thinkers across Italy and Northern Europe. | SS24.8.9a |
| Summarize major scientific and technological advancements in the Renaissance… | The Renaissance brought major breakthroughs in science and technology. Students study inventions like the printing press and explain how those discoveries changed the way people lived, worked, and shared ideas. | SS24.8.9b |
| Analyze the factors that contributed to the Reformation and explain how it… | Students study why the Catholic Church lost its hold on Europe in the 1500s and how the split between Catholics and Protestants reshaped kingdoms, alliances, and wars across the continent. | SS24.8.10 |
| Summarize the policies and practices within the Roman Catholic Church that led… | Church practices like selling forgiveness and appointing leaders for political reasons sparked serious disputes. Students learn what pushed reformers and local rulers to openly challenge the authority of the Catholic Church in the 1500s. | SS24.10a |
| Describe the political, religious | Reformers like Martin Luther and John Calvin challenged the Catholic Church's authority and reshaped how millions of Europeans worshipped. Students learn what these men believed, what they changed, and how their ideas split both the church and the governments of Europe. | SS24.8.10b |
| Summarize responses to the Reformation, including the Counter-Reformation… | Students learn how the Catholic Church and European rulers responded to Protestant challenges: the Church's internal reform movement, England's break from Rome, and the wars that followed. Key figures like Henry VIII and Ignatius of Loyola shaped each response. | SS24.8.10c |
Students learn why European countries sent ships across the Atlantic in the 1400s and 1500s. The main drivers were finding new trade routes, claiming land, and gaining wealth, with religion and national rivalry pushing countries further.
Students learn how better maps, compasses, and ship designs made it possible for Europeans to sail farther from home and explore the Americas and other parts of the world.
European nations sent explorers overseas to gain wealth, expand power, and spread religion. Mercantilism pushed governments to find new trade routes and claim resources before rival nations did.
Students study what happened when Europeans first arrived in the Americas and met Indigenous peoples. They look at how those encounters changed both groups, including the spread of disease, forced labor, and the loss of Indigenous land and ways of life.
The Columbian Exchange was the transfer of plants, animals, people, and diseases between the Americas and Europe after 1492. Students explain how that transfer reshaped what people ate, how populations grew or shrank, and how land was used on both sides of the Atlantic.
Students trace how European colonization reshaped the lives of people in Africa, the Americas, and Europe itself, looking at shifts in trade, government, and culture that followed contact and conquest.
Students examine why European colonizers forced Indigenous people into brutal labor systems, and how those systems caused population collapse across the Americas.
Students examine how the transatlantic slave trade reshaped African kingdoms, disrupted families and trade networks, and built much of the colonial economy in the Americas on forced labor.
Students study what enslaved Africans endured during the ocean crossing from Africa to the Americas and the brutal conditions they faced once they arrived in the colonies.
| Standard | Definition | Code |
|---|---|---|
| Explain the motivations for exploration by European nations | Students learn why European countries sent ships across the Atlantic in the 1400s and 1500s. The main drivers were finding new trade routes, claiming land, and gaining wealth, with religion and national rivalry pushing countries further. | SS24.8.11 |
| Summarize how expanding knowledge of geographical features and the development… | Students learn how better maps, compasses, and ship designs made it possible for Europeans to sail farther from home and explore the Americas and other parts of the world. | SS24.8.11a |
| Explain the economic, political | European nations sent explorers overseas to gain wealth, expand power, and spread religion. Mercantilism pushed governments to find new trade routes and claim resources before rival nations did. | SS24.8.11b |
| Analyze the consequences of initial contact between Europeans and Indigenous… | Students study what happened when Europeans first arrived in the Americas and met Indigenous peoples. They look at how those encounters changed both groups, including the spread of disease, forced labor, and the loss of Indigenous land and ways of life. | SS24.8.11c |
| Describe the Columbian Exchange and its contributions to cultural, demographic… | The Columbian Exchange was the transfer of plants, animals, people, and diseases between the Americas and Europe after 1492. Students explain how that transfer reshaped what people ate, how populations grew or shrank, and how land was used on both sides of the Atlantic. | SS24.8.11d |
| Trace the cultural, economic | Students trace how European colonization reshaped the lives of people in Africa, the Americas, and Europe itself, looking at shifts in trade, government, and culture that followed contact and conquest. | SS24.8.12 |
| Explain how the desire for cheap labor led to the enslavement and decline of… | Students examine why European colonizers forced Indigenous people into brutal labor systems, and how those systems caused population collapse across the Americas. | SS24.8.12a |
| Analyze the economic, political | Students examine how the transatlantic slave trade reshaped African kingdoms, disrupted families and trade networks, and built much of the colonial economy in the Americas on forced labor. | SS24.8.13 |
| Describe the conditions and treatment of enslaved Africans during the Middle… | Students study what enslaved Africans endured during the ocean crossing from Africa to the Americas and the brutal conditions they faced once they arrived in the colonies. | SS24.8.13a |
Students learn how powerful kings and queens in the 1600s took total control of their governments, and how that shift broke from the shared power between monarchs, nobles, and the church that had defined European rule for centuries before.
The Thirty Years' War devastated Europe, and the Peace of Westphalia ended it in 1648. Students explain how that war and peace deal pushed European rulers toward absolute monarchy, where one king held total power without sharing it with nobles or the church.
Louis XIV ruled France as an absolute monarch, meaning he held total power with no parliament or nobles to check him. Students learn how he justified that power through divine right, the claim that God, not the people, made him king.
Students learn how Peter the Great, Frederick the Great, and Catherine the Great built governments where the monarch held nearly total power, and compare that to how Russia and Prussia were ruled before these leaders took control.
Students study how the Ottoman Empire's power and expansion pushed European kingdoms to strengthen their own rulers and rethink how they governed. Its presence reshaped the political choices European monarchies made in the 1600s.
Students trace how England gradually shifted power away from the king and toward an elected parliament, eventually establishing written rules that no monarch could override.
Students compare two 17th-century thinkers who disagreed about power: Hobbes believed people need a strong ruler to prevent chaos, while Locke argued that governments exist to protect individual rights and can be replaced if they fail.
Students learn how two English documents, the Petition of Right and the Bill of Rights, placed legal limits on the king's power and shaped the idea that government must follow written rules.
Students learn how China and Japan were governed from the 1500s through the 1700s, including who held power, how rulers controlled their people, and why both countries largely closed their borders to the outside world.
Students trace how Japan's military leaders gained power in the 1500s and 1600s, then explain how that military buildup pushed Japan to invade Korea.
Students examine how Buddhism and Shinto shaped daily life in Japan and influenced who held power, including how religious authority supported or challenged the shogun and emperor.
Students compare how Japan's Tokugawa Shogunate and European monarchies each concentrated power and organized society by rank during the same era. The goal is to spot what those distant governments had in common and where they differed.
Students trace how China's imperial government weakened over two centuries, from the Ming rulers losing control to the collapse of the Qing Dynasty. They look at the political shifts that made each dynasty harder to sustain.
| Standard | Definition | Code |
|---|---|---|
| Summarize the rise of absolutism and explain how absolute monarchy differed… | Students learn how powerful kings and queens in the 1600s took total control of their governments, and how that shift broke from the shared power between monarchs, nobles, and the church that had defined European rule for centuries before. | SS24.8.14 |
| Explain how the Thirty Years’ War and the Peace of Westphalia led to the rise… | The Thirty Years' War devastated Europe, and the Peace of Westphalia ended it in 1648. Students explain how that war and peace deal pushed European rulers toward absolute monarchy, where one king held total power without sharing it with nobles or the church. | SS24.8.14a |
| Analyze the rise of absolutism in France under Louis XIV, including the divine… | Louis XIV ruled France as an absolute monarch, meaning he held total power with no parliament or nobles to check him. Students learn how he justified that power through divine right, the claim that God, not the people, made him king. | SS24.8.14b |
| Describe how the development of absolutism affected governments in Russia and… | Students learn how Peter the Great, Frederick the Great, and Catherine the Great built governments where the monarch held nearly total power, and compare that to how Russia and Prussia were ruled before these leaders took control. | SS24.8.14c |
| Summarize the influence of the Ottoman Empire on the political landscape of… | Students study how the Ottoman Empire's power and expansion pushed European kingdoms to strengthen their own rulers and rethink how they governed. Its presence reshaped the political choices European monarchies made in the 1600s. | SS24.8.14d |
| Analyze the development of parliamentary and constitutional government in… | Students trace how England gradually shifted power away from the king and toward an elected parliament, eventually establishing written rules that no monarch could override. | SS24.8.15 |
| Compare and contrast the political philosophies of Thomas Hobbes and John Locke | Students compare two 17th-century thinkers who disagreed about power: Hobbes believed people need a strong ruler to prevent chaos, while Locke argued that governments exist to protect individual rights and can be replaced if they fail. | SS24.8.15a |
| Summarize how major provisions in the Petition of Right and the English Bill of… | Students learn how two English documents, the Petition of Right and the Bill of Rights, placed legal limits on the king's power and shaped the idea that government must follow written rules. | SS24.8.15b |
| Describe the governing policies in East Asia during the sixteenth, seventeenth | Students learn how China and Japan were governed from the 1500s through the 1700s, including who held power, how rulers controlled their people, and why both countries largely closed their borders to the outside world. | SS24.8.16 |
| Trace the rise of militarism in Japan and explain how it led to the invasion of… | Students trace how Japan's military leaders gained power in the 1500s and 1600s, then explain how that military buildup pushed Japan to invade Korea. | SS24.8.16a |
| Explain the effects of religion on Japanese society and politics | Students examine how Buddhism and Shinto shaped daily life in Japan and influenced who held power, including how religious authority supported or challenged the shogun and emperor. | SS24.8.16b |
| Compare the policies of absolutism and social structures of the Tokugawa… | Students compare how Japan's Tokugawa Shogunate and European monarchies each concentrated power and organized society by rank during the same era. The goal is to spot what those distant governments had in common and where they differed. | SS24.8.16c |
| Describe how political changes in China led to the decline of imperial power… | Students trace how China's imperial government weakened over two centuries, from the Ming rulers losing control to the collapse of the Qing Dynasty. They look at the political shifts that made each dynasty harder to sustain. | SS24.8.16d |
Students examine how discoveries in astronomy during the 1500s and 1600s challenged what the church and most Europeans believed about Earth's place in the universe. Copernicus and Galileo showed that Earth moves around the sun, and the fallout reshaped religious and scientific authority.
Students learn what the scientific method is and why it mattered. Testing ideas through observation and experiment gave thinkers a way to challenge old beliefs and open the door to discoveries that changed how Europeans understood the world.
Students learn what Enlightenment thinkers believed about reason, individual rights, and government, and how those ideas spread through books, salons, and debate across 18th-century Europe.
Enlightenment thinkers didn't start from scratch. Their ideas about reason, rights, and government grew out of ancient Greek philosophy, Christian thought, Renaissance art and learning, and the discoveries of the Scientific Revolution.
| Standard | Definition | Code |
|---|---|---|
| Analyze the influence of the Scientific Revolution on European religion and… | Students examine how discoveries in astronomy during the 1500s and 1600s challenged what the church and most Europeans believed about Earth's place in the universe. Copernicus and Galileo showed that Earth moves around the sun, and the fallout reshaped religious and scientific authority. | SS24.8.17 |
| Explain the significance of the development of the scientific method and its… | Students learn what the scientific method is and why it mattered. Testing ideas through observation and experiment gave thinkers a way to challenge old beliefs and open the door to discoveries that changed how Europeans understood the world. | SS24.8.17a |
| Summarize the main ideas of the Enlightenment and describe their emergence in… | Students learn what Enlightenment thinkers believed about reason, individual rights, and government, and how those ideas spread through books, salons, and debate across 18th-century Europe. | SS24.8.18 |
| Trace the origins of Enlightenment ideas to earlier eras and movements… | Enlightenment thinkers didn't start from scratch. Their ideas about reason, rights, and government grew out of ancient Greek philosophy, Christian thought, Renaissance art and learning, and the discoveries of the Scientific Revolution. | SS24.8.18a |
Students walk through world history from the fall of Rome to the Enlightenment. That includes medieval empires in Europe, Asia, Africa, and the Americas, then the Renaissance, the Reformation, European exploration, the slave trade, absolute monarchs, and new scientific ideas.
Pick one person or place from the week and ask students to tell the story in their own words. A five-minute retelling at dinner sticks better than rereading notes. Maps and short videos help when a name feels stuck on the page.
Connect a topic to something students already care about. The printing press is about how news spreads, the Columbian Exchange is about the food on the table, and feudalism is about who has power. Ask what feels fair or unfair about what they learned today.
Most teachers move in rough chronological order but group by region inside each era. Spend real time on the fall of Rome and medieval Europe early, since later units on the Renaissance, Reformation, and exploration build directly on that base.
Feudalism, the split between Eastern Orthodoxy and Western Christianity, and the causes of the Reformation tend to blur together for students. The transatlantic slave trade and the Columbian Exchange also need careful time, both for accuracy and for the weight of the content.
By spring, students should be able to explain why an event happened, not just when. Ask them to give two causes and two effects of something like the Crusades or European exploration. If they can do that without notes, they are in good shape.
Aim for a small core of names, dates, and places students truly own, then spend class time on cause and effect, comparison, and primary sources. Analysis without any facts floats, and facts without analysis fade by June.
After a unit, ask students to write one paragraph answering a why question, such as why the Roman Empire fell or why Europeans started exploring. One clear claim and two pieces of evidence from class is plenty.