Not all readers are leaders, but all leaders are readers.

Harry S. Truman

modern world history honors Syllabus

DESCRIPTION OF COURSE  

Syllabus in Document Form

This course is aligned with the 2019 South Carolina Social Studies College and Career Standards for Modern World History and is designed to assist students in understanding how people and countries of the world have become increasingly interconnected beginning with the time period of 1300 to present. Instruction will utilize the historical thinking skills that are identified and defined in the standards. The skills are: Comparison, Causation, Periodization, Context, Continuities, Change, and Evidence. These standards represent a continuum of tools, strategies, and perspectives that are necessary for the student’s understanding of social studies material and are aligned with the Profile of a South Carolina Graduate. Students will acquire content knowledge through reading and analyzing multiple primary and secondary sources, group discussions, and whole class instruction. They will apply the historical thinking skills to the acquired knowledge, and then design and communicate their interpretation of the past. This process as a whole is known as inquiry. Rather than focusing on the memorization of facts with one correct answer, inquiry differs because students are evaluated on their ability to make a claim and support it with reliable evidence from research.


In honors courses, students should be challenged to learn beyond the standard coursework with work that is deep in rigor, complexity, and creativity. Pacing should be accelerated so that students will have additional time to research topics of study and respond with extended written response essays. Honor course students will be required to read additional historical sources. Students in Modern World History honors classes will read more complex primary and secondary documents, participate in more self-directed inquiry, and engage in deeper problem-solving and critical thinking.  


INSTRUCTIONAL PHILOSOPHY

A general goal for all classes is for all students to gain confidence in their abilities, develop problem-solving skills;  make historical and geographical connections, and learn to correctly communicate (both in writing and verbally) within a social science context.  The following skills and competencies will be reinforced weekly and daily:  Reading, Speaking, Decision Making, Reasoning, Acquiring Information, Organizing Information, Writing, Listening, Evaluating Information, Interpreting Information, Individual Responsibility, Teamwork, and Visualizing.



Materials Needed:


Scope and Sequence


MAJOR ASSESSMENTS AND PROJECTS


GRADING PROCEDURES/WEIGHTING AND HOMEWORK POLICY 


There is a minimum of 8 minor assignments and three major assignments per 9 weeks.


Extra Help: Please contact me to set an appointment. I am here to help.


ABSENCES, TARDIES AND MISSED ASSIGNMENTS POLICIES


Tardy Policy: You are tardy if you are not inside the room when the bell begins to ring.


Attendance and Make Up Work: Regular attendance is essential for success. Students are responsible for all work missed due to an absence or tardy, and will receive a “0” for any missed assignments. All such work must be submitted within five days of the student’s absence. Tests and quizzes must be retaken during the morning or afterschool.


Late Work: All assignments are due at the beginning of class. Late assignments are 75% for one day late, 50% for two days late, and no late assignments will be accepted after two days.


CLASS RULES 


A classroom is an environment in which learning should take place.  Therefore I want to create a learning environment which is open, engaging and structured.  Each student should be responsible for their own learning.