St. Rose School
Social Studies/History Curriculum Standards
June 2003
Grade
6
World History and Geography: Ancient 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 describe what is
known through archaeological studies of the early physical and cultural development
of humankind from the Paleolithic era to the agricultural revolution.
- Describe the hunter-gatherer societies,
including the development of tools and the use of fire.
- Identify the locations of human
communities that populated the major regions of the world and describe how
humans adapted to a variety of environments.
- Discuss the climatic changes and
human modifications of the physical environment that gave rise to the domestication
of plants and animals and new sources of clothing and shelter.
Students analyze the geographic,
political, economic, religious, and social structures of the early civilizations
of Mesopotamia, Egypt, and Kush.
- Locate and describe the major
river systems and discuss the physical settings that supported permanent settlement
and early civilizations.
- Trace the development of agricultural
techniques that permitted the production of economic surplus and the emergence
of cities as centers of culture and power.
- Understand the relationship between
religion and the social and political order in Mesopotamia and Egypt.
- Know the significance of Hammurabi's
Code.
- Discuss the main features of Egyptian
art and architecture.
- Describe the role of Egyptian
trade in the eastern Mediterranean and Nile valley.
- Understand the significance of
Queen Hatshepsut and Ramses the Great.
- Identify the location of the Kush
civilization and describe its political, commercial, and cultural relations
with Egypt.
- Trace the evolution of language
and its written forms.
Students analyze the geographic,
political, economic, religious, and social structures of the Ancient Hebrews.
- Describe the origins and significance
of Judaism as the first monotheistic religion based on the concept of one
God who sets down moral laws for humanity.
- Identify the sources of the ethical
teachings and central beliefs of Judaism (the Hebrew Bible, the Commentaries):
belief in God, observance of law, practice of the concepts of righteousness
and justice, and importance of study; and describe how the ideas of the Hebrew
traditions are reflected in the moral and ethical traditions of Western civilization.
- Explain the significance of Abraham,
Moses, Naomi, Ruth, David, and Yohanan ben Zaccai in the development of the
Jewish religion.
- Discuss the locations of the settlements
and movements of Hebrew peoples, including the Exodus and their movement to
and from Egypt, and outline the significance of the Exodus to the Jewish and
other people.
- Discuss how Judaism survived and
developed despite the continuing dispersion of much of the Jewish population
from Jerusalem and the rest of Israel after the destruction of the second
Temple in A.D. 70.
Students analyze the geographic,
political, economic, religious, and social structures of the early civilizations
of Ancient Greece.
- Discuss the connections between
geography and the development of city-states in the region of the Aegean Sea,
including patterns of trade and commerce among Greek city-states and within
the wider Mediterranean region.
- Trace the transition from tyranny
and oligarchy to early democratic forms of government and back to dictatorship
in ancient Greece, including the significance of the invention of the idea
of citizenship (e.g., from Pericles' Funeral Oration).
- State the key differences between
Athenian, or direct, democracy and representative democracy.
- Explain the significance of Greek
mythology to the everyday life of people in the region and how Greek literature
continues to permeate our literature and language today, drawing from Greek
mythology and epics, such as Homer's Iliad and Odyssey, and from Aesop's Fables.
- Outline the founding, expansion,
and political organization of the Persian Empire.
- Compare and contrast life in Athens
and Sparta, with emphasis on their roles in the Persian and Peloponnesian
Wars.
- Trace the rise of Alexander the
Great and the spread of Greek culture eastward and into Egypt.
- Describe the enduring contributions
of important Greek figures in the arts and sciences (e.g., Hypatia, Socrates,
Plato, Aristotle, Euclid, Thucydides).
Students analyze the geographic,
political, economic, religious, and social structures of the early civilizations
of India.
- Locate and describe the major
river system and discuss the physical setting that sup-ported the rise of
this civilization.
- Discuss the significance of the
Aryan invasions.
- Explain the major beliefs and
practices of Brahmanism in India and how they evolved into early Hinduism.
- Outline the social structure of
the caste system.
- Know the life and moral teachings
of Buddha and how Buddhism spread in India, Ceylon, and Central Asia.
- Describe the growth of the Maurya
empire and the political and moral achievements of the emperor Asoka.
- Discuss important aesthetic and
intellectual traditions (e.g., Sanskrit literature, including the Bhagavad
Gita; medicine; metallurgy; and mathematics, including Hindu-Arabic numerals
and the zero).
Students analyze the geographic,
political, economic, religious, and social structures of the early civilizations
of China.
- Locate and describe the origins
of Chinese civilization in the Huang-He Valley during the Shang Dynasty.
- Explain the geographic features
of China that made governance and the spread of ideas and goods difficult
and served to isolate the country from the rest of the world.
- Know about the life of Confucius
and the fundamental teachings of Confucianism and Taoism.
- Identify the political and cultural
problems prevalent in the time of Confucius and how he sought to solve them.
- List the policies and achievements
of the emperor Shi Huangdi in unifying northern China under the Qin Dynasty.
- Detail the political contributions
of the Han Dynasty to the development of the imperial bureaucratic state and
the expansion of the empire.
- Cite the significance of the trans-Eurasian
"silk roads" in the period of the Han Dynasty and Roman Empire and
their locations.
- Describe the diffusion of Buddhism
northward to China during the Han Dynasty.
Students analyze the geographic,
political, economic, religious, and social structures during the development
of Rome.
- Identify the location and describe
the rise of the Roman Republic, including the importance of such mythical
and historical figures as Aeneas, Romulus and Remus, Cincinnatus, Julius Caesar,
and Cicero.
- Describe the government of the
Roman Republic and its significance (e.g., written constitution and tripartite
government, checks and balances, civic duty).
- Identify the location of and the
political and geographic reasons for the growth of Roman territories and expansion
of the empire, including how the empire fostered economic growth through the
use of currency and trade routes.
- Discuss the influence of Julius
Caesar and Augustus in Rome's transition from republic to empire.
- Trace the migration of Jews around
the Mediterranean region and the effects of their conflict with the Romans,
including the Romans' restrictions on their right to live in Jerusalem.
- Note the origins of Christianity
in the Jewish Messianic prophecies, the life and teachings of Jesus of Nazareth
as described in the New Testament, and the contribution of St. Paul the Apostle
to the definition and spread of Christian beliefs (e.g., belief in the Trinity,
resurrection, salvation).
- Describe the circumstances that
led to the spread of Christianity in Europe and other Roman territories.
- Discuss the legacies of Roman
art and architecture, technology and science, literature, language, and law.