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Paleolithic and Neolithic

Paleolithic and Neolithic. Unit 1. Bellringer. Practice walking in, picking up papers by the door and placing your homework in the in box before the bell rings. ALL CELL PHONE SHOULD BE TURNED OFF!. Review Procedures. Entering class Take today’s papers Sharpen pencils, etc.

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Paleolithic and Neolithic

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  1. Paleolithic and Neolithic Unit 1

  2. Bellringer • Practice walking in, picking up papers by the door and placing your homework in the in box before the bell rings. ALL CELL PHONE SHOULD BE TURNED OFF!

  3. Review Procedures • Entering class • Take today’s papers • Sharpen pencils, etc. • Start the Bellringer • “On time” means in your seat working when the bell rings

  4. Procedures • Leaving the room • Bathroom/water/nurse ask before leaving. • Wait till all instructions have been given. • Interrupt class for emergencies • End of class: clean up supplies, move desks to where they belong, wait for teacher to dismiss you

  5. Day 2 Agenda • Bellringer • Stations • Station 1: Time and Timelines • Station 2: Charts and Graphs • Station 3: Textbook scavenger hunt • Station 4: Vocabulary Words m(1-18)/ Maps • Review • Begin on Homework

  6. Skills Objectives Students will be able to… • Identify and locate key features of the textbook. • Take effective notes from textbook readings. S S

  7. Textbooks • You break it (or lose it), you bought it! • Make sure your name is in it • Make sure my name is in it • Make sure the Textbook List is filled out completely and legibly

  8. StationsDirections • You will have 15 minutes at each station • Complete packet located in each folder • You may work in pairs within your group NO MOREthan 3 per group • When time is up pass folder to the next group

  9. Stations Review • Station 1: Time and Timelines • Station 2: Charts and Graphs • Station 3: Textbook scavenger hunt • Station 4: Vocabulary Words/ Maps

  10. Vocabulary Words

  11. Objective #1 Prehistory • Prehistory – the time in human history before the invention of writing • What sources can we use to understand the “prehistoric” world? What this? This help you identify which objective this slide is related to! VOCABULARY word! With definition!

  12. Unwritten History • Oral histories • Drawings • Stuff they left behind

  13. Oral Histories • Storytellers prized in many cultures, and stories are passed down for generations • Problems: • “Whisper down the lane” effect • Dead people don’t tell stories

  14. Drawings • Mostly, cave paintings • Famous pictures from Lascaux (France)

  15. Cave Paintings • Art is in the eye of the beholder • Stories? • Actual events? • Religious beliefs? • Nice pictures? • Textbooks?

  16. Artifacts • Something made by people VOCABULARY word!

  17. Fossils • Solidified remains of living things

  18. Using Artifacts • Some assembly required • Like a giant puzzle with no idea what the picture will be • What if we use things for different purposes? • If we know what, do we know when? • Some things get lost

  19. Objective #2 Studying the Past • Archeology • Anthropology

  20. Archeology • The study of the human past by examining artifacts and remains • Excavation • Hoping to find ancient settlements, burial sites, tools, etc.

  21. Carbon Dating • A scientific test used to analyze the age of artifacts and fossils • (based on the half-life decay of Carbon-14… ask a science teacher) • Pretty accurate for the last 40,000 years or so

  22. Anthropology • Study of human origins, relationships, and cultures • Try to determine how humans evolved (physically and culturally) • Archeology is a subfield of anthropology • What isculture?

  23. Objective #3 Culture • Culture is a system of beliefs, values, and assumptions about life that guide behavior and are shared by a group of people • Everyone has culture • What does culture include?

  24. Homework • Buy a notebook. Bring by next class • Read: Paleolithic, Mesolithic and Neolithic Societies • Read Directions carefully!

  25. Bellringer • Pull out the following items • Syllabus • Your homework • Vocabulary words • Grab the following (will need to share!) • Glue • Scissors

  26. Agenda • Bellringer: Setting up interactive notebook • Preview (aka: Bellringer) • Notes • Working with book • Working independently • Discussion • Process • Homework

  27. Objectives • 1: Identify the characteristics of Prehistoric man, and their migration patterns throughout the prehistoric world • 2: List the major advances early humans made during the Paleolithic Era. • 3: Describe hunter-gatherer life.

  28. Interactive notebook • Why: • To help student to be organized • Allow student to become more active with their learning • Expectations • Placing all required work in notebook • Leaving notebook in class room • Will use a folder to carry homework in

  29. Notebook Set up • On the back of the front cover: • Syllabus • First page • Front: table of contents (pg1) • Back: level of questioning (pg2) • 2nd Page • Front Ms. Heath’s Rule of World History (pg3) • Back: Page one of Vocabulary words (pg 4) • 3rd page • Front: page two of vocabulary words (pg 5) • Back: Preview activity (pg6)

  30. Notebook Set up • Glue the notes and Process on the next pages Any Questions??? • From now on when you walk • Collect your notebook • Glue homework in • Cut and glue in Preview • I will give you directions on the notes and process • Either in the powerpoint or after I get class started

  31. Objective #2 Early Humans

  32. Early Humans • Start our story at the dawn of the Paleolithic Era, about 2.5 million years ago • the Old Stone Age • Humans created the first tools made out of stone

  33. Better than Monkeys • Early humans developed • Simple stone tools • Control of fire • Oral language • All keys to cooperating in hunts, which bring food and resources

  34. Wise Man • Smarter, larger-brained humans known as homo sapiens(Latin for “wise man”) • Developedtechnology • Clothing • Shelter • Art • Homo sapiens are modern humans

  35. Out of Africa • Homo sapiens arose in Africa about 200,000 years ago • Migrationto all continents (except Antarctica) beginning around 100,000 years ago

  36. Objective #3 Hunter-gatherer Life People Profiles

  37. Source of Food • Hunting • Main source, whatever they could catch, kill, and cook! • Gathering • Wild fruits, vegetables, nuts, grains, etc. • Get it? Hunter-gatherers!

  38. Size of Groups • Small groups • Clans: 60-100 people, one or a few extended families • Why?

  39. Permanent Settlements • No! They were nomads • Why move? • Follow herds • No food left • Seasons change • Too cold or hot • No water left

  40. Location Factors • Mainly, Paleolithic (and prehistoric) people followed their food • Animals migrate, so did the people • Overpopulation (of people) • Overconsumption (of resources in one spot)

  41. Getting Along • Cooperation was necessary for survival • Knew everyone in their clan – all relatives • No private property – no where to put it • No fighting other groups – no one around • Finding food…just not that hard

  42. Bellringer • Have completed 10minutes after the bell • Collect your notebook • Cut and glue all items into notebook • Finish Process from last class and begin working on Preview for lesson 2 • REMEMBER the order! • Preview (can begin once completed) • Notes • Process • homework from last night

  43. Agenda • Preview: Discussion • Activity • Lecture • Reading • Process

  44. Homework • Study for Test • Will be allowed to take home your notebook DO NOT LOSE IT!

  45. Neolithic Age • Neolithic Age means: • New Stone Age • How did Neolithic Age differ from Paleolithic Age? • Learnt to polish tools • Make pottery • Grow crops anddomesticatedanimals

  46. Neolithic Revolution • Shift from hunting and gathering to farming

  47. Neolithic Revolution Cont. • Provided a steady source of food and extra • Causing • Need to store food • Causing • Permanent Settlement • Causing • Population growth • Causing • Specialization and Organization

  48. Early Farming Methods Crops Domestication taming of animals Happened slowly Human being to control some animals lives Animals • Slash and burn faming • Cut tree or grass and burnt them to clear a field • Ashes fertilized the soil

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