Transitioning to 1200
Transcript of Transitioning to 1200
Transitioning to 1200
Suggestions for teaching the NEW AP® World History Modern Course
WithDr. Robert Strayer Professor & AuthorAnda Lee Seat Teacher & Exam Table LeaderDeborah Grebel-Becker Teacher & Exam ReaderJanie Pierce-Bratcher Marketing Manager
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Introductions
Dr. Robert StrayerProfessor & Author
Dr. Eric NelsonProfessor & Author
Anda Lee SeatTeacher & AP Exam
Table Leader
Deborah Grebel-Becker
Teacher & AP Exam Reader
Janie Pierce-Bratcher
Marketing Manager
BFW’s AP® Updates Website
go.bfwpub.com/ap-course-updates
● Robert Strayer○ Dealing with the New Framework○ Developing a 1200 Edition
● Anda Lee & Deb○ What the new course is
& what it is not
● Janie○ How to get the 1200 Edition
Agenda for Webinar
Dealing with the New Framework
● New course
● New key concepts, theme, illustrative examples.
● New starting point.
How do we respond?
The existing 4th Edition
PART ONE First Things First: Beginnings in History, to 600 b.c.e.
PART TWO Continuity and Change in the Second-Wave Era, 600 b.c.e.–600 c.e.
PART THREE Civilizations and Encounters during the Third-Wave Era, 600–1450
PART FOUR The Early Modern World, 1450–1750
PART FIVE The European Moment in World History, 1750–1900
PART SIX The Most Recent Century, 1900–present
Developing the 1200 Edition
● Prologue: the human story in the context of big history
● Part 1: The meaning of 1200 as a starting point
● Chapter 1 & 2: Diversity of civilizations & societies
● Chapters 3 & 4: Connections, interactions, & encounters
Beyond Part 1
Ways of the World 4e Since 1200 New Modern Organization
Part 1 Units 1 & 2
Part 2 Units 3 & 4
Part 3 Units 5 & 6
Part 4 Units 7, 8, & 9
New Part 6 Structure
● Two chapters on major events of global significance
● Two chapters on major processes
What it is & what it is not
The New Course
What it is. What it’s not.
● What is the goal of this new framework?
● To offer teachers and students the opportunity for more in depth study and
analysis of world history following 1200 C.E.
● To better integrate skills and content in world history
● What has changed about the course/exam? Is this a redesign?
● This is an update to the world history course, rather than a course redesign. The
updates include:
○ Divides the course into four time periods starting at 1200 C.E.
○ The time periods are further divided into nine units of study
○ Renaming themes + the addition of a new theme
○ Clearer connections between learning objectives and specific topics of the
course
What it is. What it’s not.
● Is this Unit-based framework (correlations to the 3rd and 4th
editions) a curriculum?
● The Unit-based framework is more of a road map giving
suggestions to help you through the changes to the course than
curriculum guide
● What do I have to change?
● Two changes are (1) how you structure the course, but (2) you
have the opportunity to go more in-depth on different topics
How to get the 1200 Edition
Component When does it publish?
Preliminary Edition(Part 1 + Chapters 1 & 2)
8/1/2019
Student Book 9/16
Teacher’s Edition 12/15
Strive for a 5 9/16
LaunchPad 8/15 (preliminary) - complete w/LearningCurve July 2020
Teacher’s Resource Materials
9/16 (digital) - printed to flash drive 11/1
PD Videos Updated author videos by Eric Nelson + NEW videos by Barbara Brun-Ozuna specifically on tackling the 1200 course - January 2020
Thinking through SourcesSingle Volume!
January 2020
ExamView Test Bank 12/1 - January 2020
Questions?
Dr. Strayer: [email protected]
Anda Lee: [email protected]
Deborah: [email protected]
Janie: [email protected]
AP® is a trademark registered by the College Board, which is not affiliated with, and does not endorse, this message.