IB HISTORY SYLLABUS & COURSE OUTLINE



DP HISTORY SYLLABUS & COURSE OUTLINE

12th Grade – Higher Level

Mr. Craig Talley, Instructor

Room: 301

Phone: (972) 501-0645

Email: ctalley@

Tutorials: Tuesdays before school, Thursdays before school, other times by appointment

Content: DP History is a two-year course.

 

Course Description: Over the course of the two years, students will engage in a systematic study of the History of the Americas.  This study comprises a general chronology of North and South American history from 1492 to 2000.  As part of their course of study, students will examine the political and diplomatic, intellectual and cultural, and social and economic history of the Americas.  An international aspect will be incorporated into the course in two ways.  Students will examine the interaction between American nations throughout the time period of the course.  Comparisons and connections will be made between events in the Americas and events in other regions of the world on an ongoing basis throughout the two years.

 

Required Materials: Please come to class prepared. You should have paper and pencil or pen every day. You should have some type of notebook in which to keep lecture notes and handouts.

 

Grades: Your grade will be based on a categories basis. Tests and major assignments will equal 60% of your total points earned during each semester. The other 40% of your grade will consist of the following: homework, quizzes, worksheets, participation, etc.

The grading scale is as follows: A = 90%; B = 80%; C = 70%. This scale applies to all assignments in this class.

 

Tests: There will be a test administered three times per quarter. Tests will generally be of the essay variety. A research-type paper (Historical Investigation) will also be required during the course of the year and will count as a test grade.

  

Late Work and Work Missed for Excused and Unexcused Absences: Please refer to the student handbook. All applicable rules found therein will be applied. It is the student’s responsibility to obtain any work missed due to absences.

Academic Dishonesty: Plagiarism or any other form of cheating is a violation of the North Hills Honor Code and is not tolerated. Those who cheat automatically receive a zero on the assignment in question.

Extra Credit: As a rule, no extra credit will be offered or accepted.

OVERVIEW

The study of History is far more than the memorization of names and dates from the past. Although the focus of study is that of our collective past, its significance is the bearing it has on our present, on the world we live in now and the world we will live in the future. More significantly, History greatly shapes and determines how we view the world we live in and our relationships with others. One of the greatest rewards of the study of History is the realization that truth is subjective and relative, and depends largely on contextual perspective. Historians and students of History alike critically question the historical truths that influence us today. The beauty of the discipline, contrary to the conventional view of History, is that the discipline is not static. Rather, it is dynamic and constantly evolving; History lives and changes as we change.

Students of History should learn that study of the discipline depends on the posing of questions without providing definite answers. In order to understand the past, students must engage with it through exposure to primary resources and the work of historians, while constantly analyzing and evaluating resources critically. At the same time, the study of History requires and depends on an individual’s understanding of, and empathy for, people living in other periods and contexts.

IB Diploma Program History provides both structure and flexibility, fostering an understanding of historical events in a global context. It requires students to make comparisons between similar and dissimilar solutions to human situations, whether they are political, economic, or social. It invites comparisons between, but not judgments of, different cultures, political systems and traditions. The international perspective in the IB Diploma Program History course provides an excellent foundation for the promotion of international understanding and intercultural awareness necessary to prepare students for global citizenship. Above all, it fosters respect and understanding of people and events in a variety of cultures throughout the world.

Aims of IB Diploma Program History

The primary aims of the 2-year IB Diploma Program are as follows:

To promote an understanding of History as a discipline, including the nature and diversity of its sources, methods and interpretations.

Encourage an understanding of the present through critical reflection of the past.

Encourage an understanding of the impact of historical developments at national, regional and international levels

Develop an awareness of one’s own historical identity through the study of historical experiences of different cultures.

Assessment Objectives

1. Knowledge and understanding

Recall and select relevant historical knowledge

Demonstrate an understanding of historical context

Demonstrate an understanding of historical processes: cause and effect; continuity and change

Understand historical sources (paper 1)

Deploy detailed, in-depth knowledge (paper 3)

Demonstrate knowledge and understanding of a specific historical topic (IA)

2. Application and interpretation

Apply historical knowledge as evidence

Show awareness of different approaches to, and interpretations of, historical issues and events

Compare and contrast historical sources as evidence (paper 1)

Present a summary of evidence (IA)

3. Synthesis and evaluation

Evaluate different approaches to, and interpretations of, historical issues and events

Evaluate historical sources as evidence (paper 1 and IA)

Evaluate and synthesize evidence from both historical sources and background knowledge (paper 1)

Develop critical commentary using the evidence base (papers 2 and 3)

Synthesize by integrating evidence and critical commentary (paper 3)

Present an analysis of a summary of evidence (IA)

4. Use of historical skills

Demonstrate the ability to structure an essay answer, using evidence to support relevant, balanced and focused historical arguments (papers 2 and 3)

Demonstrate evidence of research skills, organization, and referencing (IA)

ASSESSMENT

Similar to other IB Diploma Program courses, North Hills History students will be formally assessed both internally and externally upon completion of their 2-year program. Higher Level students will be assessed by: 1) writing an external examination and 2) producing an internal historical investigation research paper.

The chart below highlights how students at both levels will be assessed for these two assessments:

Form of Assessment Percentage of Total Marks

I. External Examination

A. Paper 1: Prescribed Subject (60 min.) 20%

B. Paper 2: 20th Century Topics (90 min.) 25%

C. Paper 3: Regional History (150 min.) 35%

II. Internal Assessment 20%

DP HISTORY COURSE OUTLINE

12th Grade – Higher Level

COURSE OUTLINE

The IB Diploma Program History course of study is a two-year curriculum at the Higher Level, which consists of a core curriculum that includes a prescribed subject and topic of units. For the purpose of the North Hills History course, our core curriculum for the 11th grade will focus on AP U.S. History. 12th grade will focus on Topics in 20th Century World History. The breakdown of the 12th grade Topics in 20th Century World History course will be as follows:

Topics in 20th Century World History Course

Paper One

Communism in Crisis, 1976-1991

The Paper 1 topic will be studied throughout the course of the year through the Paper 2 topics.

Paper Two

Origins and development of authoritarian and single-party states

The 20th century produced many authoritarian and single-party states. The origins, ideology, form of government, organization, nature, and impact of these regimes will be studied.

Origins and nature of authoritarian and single-party states

Conditions that produced authoritarian and single-party states

Emergence of leaders: aims, ideology, support

Totalitarianism: the aim and the extent to which it was achieved

Establishment of authoritarian and single-party states

Methods: force, legal

Form of government, (left- and right-wing) ideology

Nature, extent, and treatment of opposition

Domestic policies and impact

Structure and organization of government and administration

Political, economic, social, and religious policies

Role of education, the arts, the media, propaganda

Status of women, treatment of religious groups and minorities

Material for detailed study

USSR – Stalin

Germany – Hitler

China – Mao

Argentina – Peron

The Cold War and Communism in Crisis

This topic addresses East-West relations from 1945. It aims to promote an international perspective and understanding of the origins, course, and effects of the Cold War – a conflict that dominated global affairs from the end of the Second World War to the early 1990s. It includes superpower rivalry and events in all areas affected by Cold War politics such as spheres of interest, wars (proxy), alliances, and interferences in developing countries.

Origins of the Cold War

Ideological differences

Mutual suspicion and fear

From wartime allies to post-war enemies

Nature of the Cold War

Ideological opposition

Superpowers and spheres of influence

Alliances and diplomacy in the Cold War

Development and Impact of the Cold War

Global spread of the Cold War from its European origins

Cold War policies of containment, brinkmanship, peaceful coexistence, détente

Role of the United Nations and the Non-Aligned Movement

Role and significance of leaders

Arms race, proliferation and limitation

Social, cultural, and economic impact

End of the Cold War

Break-up of Soviet Union: internal problems and external pressures

Breakdown of Soviet control over Central and Eastern Europe

Material for detailed study

Wartime conferences: Yalta and Potsdam

US policies and developments in Europe: Truman Doctrine, Marshall Plan, NATO

Soviet policies, Sovietization of Eastern and Central Europe, COMECON, Warsaw Pact

Sino-Soviet relations

US – Chinese relations

Germany (especially Berlin (1945-61)), Congo (1960-64), Afghanistan (1979-88), Korea, Cuba, Vietnam, Middle East

Struggle for power in China following the death of Mao

China under Deng Xiaoping

Castro, Gorbachev, Kennedy, Mao, Reagan, Stalin, Truman

Detailed Syllabus

Quarter 1

Week 1, 08/04 – 08/07: Begin Topic 3, Stalin. 18-30.

Week 2, 08/10 – 08/14: Continue Stalin. Paper 3 Exam on 08/12-13.

Week 3, 08/17 – 08/21: Continue Stalin. Quiz. 31-45.

Week 4, 08/24 – 08/28: Continue Stalin. Quiz. 46-65.

Week 5, 08/31 – 09/04: Complete Stalin. Paper 2 Exam on 09/03-04.

Week 6, 09/08 – 09/11: Begin Hitler. Quiz. 67-78.

Week 7, 09/14 – 09/18: Continue Hitler. Quiz. HI Rough Draft on 09/16-17. 79-90.

Week 8, 09/21 – 09/25: Continue Hitler. Paper 1 Exam on 09/24-25. 91-110.

Week 9, 09/28 – 10/02: Continue Hitler. Quiz. 111-119.

Quarter 2

Week 1, 10/05 – 10/09: Complete Hitler. Quiz.

Week 2, 10/12 – 10/16: Begin Mao. Paper 2 Exam on 10/14-15. 121-131.

Week 3, 10/19 – 10/23: Continue Mao. Quiz. 132-48.

Week 4, 10/26 – 10/30: Continue Mao. Quiz. 149-157.

Week 5, 11/02 – 11/06: Continue Mao. Paper 1 Exam on 11/05-06. 157-167.

Week 6, 11/09 – 11/13: Complete Mao. Quiz. HI Final Draft on 11/09-10. 169-180.

Week 7, 11/16 – 11/20: Begin Peron. Quiz. 266-274.

Week 8, 11/30 – 12/04: Continue Peron. Paper 2 Exam on 12/02-03. 275-288.

Week 9, 12/07 – 12/11: Continue Peron. Quiz. 289-303.

Week 10, 12/14 – 12/18: Complete Peron. Semester Exams.

Quarter 3

Week 1, 01/06 – 01/08: Begin Cold War. Quiz. 10-41.

Week 2, 01/11 – 01/15: Origins of the Cold War. Paper 1 Exam on 01/14-15. 42-73.

Week 3, 01/17 – 01/22: Nature of the Cold War. Quiz. 74-101.

Week 4, 01/25 – 01/29: Development of the Cold War. Quiz. 102-137.

Week 5, 02/01 – 02/05: Impact of the Cold War. Paper 2 Exam on 02/04-05. 138-175.

Week 6, 02/08 – 02/11: Proxy Wars of the Cold War. Quiz. 176-231.

Week 7, 02/16 – 02/19: End of the Cold War. Quiz. 232-259.

Week 8, 02/22 – 02/26: Communism in Crisis. Paper 1 Exam on 02/24-25. 260-305.

Week 9, 02/29 – 03/04: Communism in Crisis.

Quarter 4

Review and practice.

Quizzes weekly in March and April.

Paper 2 Exam on 03/23-24.

Paper 1 Exam on 04/07-08.

Paper 3 Exam on 04/20-21.

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