1 / 28

Asia

Asia. Asia Statistics. World’s largest and most populated continent 30% of land area 60% of people (about 4 billion) Highest mountain peak Mt Everest (29,029 ft) Lowest depression Dead Sea (-1,371ft). Himalayan Mountains. Highest mountain range on earth

tasya
Download Presentation

Asia

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Asia

  2. Asia Statistics • World’s largest and most populated continent • 30% of land area • 60% of people (about 4 billion) • Highest mountain peak • Mt Everest (29,029 ft) • Lowest depression • Dead Sea (-1,371ft)

  3. Himalayan Mountains • Highest mountain range on earth • Also one of the youngest and still growing • Caused by Indian subcontinent being pushed underneath Asian plate • Still moving about 67 mm per year

  4. Journal • In a paragraph, explain 3 good things and 3 bad things that the Himalayan Mountains provide to people. Based on these, do you think a lot or very few people living in the Himalayas?

  5. Asia Reader Questions • Read p.205-210 and do all questions on p.211-212 • Part A & B • just write the answer • Main Ideas and Thinking Critically • answer in complete sentences

  6. Asia Reader Questions • Organize desks into groups of 4 • Designate each person a number between 1 and 4 • (1) P.205-206 (South Asia) • (2) P.231-232 (East Asia) • (3) P.249-250 (Ring of Fire) • (4) P.259 (Southeast Asia) • Answer each of the questions in the reading, and create a paragraph summary • Now, get with the other people at your station and write 2 facts you learn after talking to each of your other partners • Turn in before you leave today!!!

  7. Example • South Asia (p.205-206) • Question 1 • Question 2 • Question 3 • Paragraph • East Asia • Fact 1 • Fact 2 • Ring of Fire • Fact 1 • Fact 2 • Southeast Asia • Fact 1 • Fact 2

  8. 24-1 Reader Questions • Read p.205-210 • Answer questions during reading • Also do part A & B • Just write letter/vocab word

  9. South Asia • Much of south Asia was conquered and re-conquered by foreign invaders • Came from Iran (Persia), Greece, and later Europe • Spread ideas of Buddhism, Islam, as well as different cultural influences

  10. British Rule • India’s spices and cloths were sought after by Europeans for hundreds of years • Many early explorers of North America were searching for a route to India • British ultimately gained control of trade in 1757 • Established the British East India Company

  11. BEIC Reading • Read over the article • In your notebook, create a chart which shows the following • How did the BEIC become so powerful? • What are 2 ways that the BEIC remained powerful • What are 2 negative effects you think this power created? • Perhaps within England; maybe to the Indian people? • Overall, do you think the BEIC was good or bad for India? Why?

  12. British East India Company

  13. Indian Independence • Mohandas Gandhi led peaceful movement to achieve a free India • Was granted by England on August 15, 1947 • Division of areas due to religion caused India to break up • Created countries of Pakistan and Bangladesh

  14. India today • After many conflicts along its borders, India has begun to surge as an economic power • Many poor still live in the country of over 1 billion • Border of Kashmir is still disputed with Pakistan and China

  15. Reflection • Explain, in at least ½ page, how differences in culture and religion can have an affect on an area. • Use examples we have discussed in class • i.e. Sub-Saharan Africa, the Middle East, India, etc.

  16. Ancient China • Ruled by dynasties for thousands of years • Under a single family’s control over a long period • Shang was the first (1700 BCE) • Qin (chihn) began building the Great Wall • Lasted until early 1900’s

  17. Communist Revolution • Led by Mao Zedong • Gained control in 1949 • Promised to industrialize China and called for a population boom • Opposing Nationalists concentrated in Taiwan

  18. China Today • Economy is 2nd largest in the world thanks to manufacturing and textiles • 20% of China’s exports go to U.S. • Government still controls most aspects, but consumers are having more of an impact

  19. China’s population • What are some of the consequences China has faced since the enforcement of the “one-child policy? • What do you notice about the graphs in figure 1? • What type of effect could this have on society? • What would you expect the graph in figure 2 to do once the year 2050 has passed? Why?

  20. Japanese History • Throughout the early years of Japan’s history, it was not a united country • Ruled by hundreds of clans • Samurai served as soldiers of the clans • Unified in late 1500’s • Tokogawa Ieyasu helped bring lords together

  21. Japanese leadership

  22. Japanese Scenarios • Get into a group of 3 • Choose 1 person to be each of these positions • Emperor, Shogun, Daimyo • After reading the scenario, come to a decision as to how you would handle that situation • Create a 5 step process to resolve the issue • Prepare to explain to the class

  23. Japanese isolationism • Up until mid 1800’s Japan isolated itself from rest of the world • Only Portuguese traders were allowed into the country • Brought Christianity and modern firearms • Matthew Perry sailed from the U.S. to Japan to begin negotiations • Tried to improve trade relations

  24. Modern Japan • Became military power in early 20th century • Captured Korea, Manchuria, and many Pacific islands • After WWII, lost most of that territory and U.S. helped them rebuild • Economy slowed in 1990’s • Economy largely dependent upon imports

  25. Today’s issues • Group 1 - p.661-663 • Answer assessment q’s 1-3 • Group 2 - p.665-667 • Answer assessment q’s 1-3 • Group 3 - p.668-669 • Summarize in ½ page

More Related