Top Banner
The Columbian Exchange October 1st-2nd, 2015 Objective: Students will evaluate the Columbian Exchange from various perspectives to determine if it was beneficial or detrimental to the world as a whole through texts and written response. Warm Up: What resources besides gold did European nations get from the New World?
19

The Columbian Exchange ● October 1st-2nd, 2015 ● Objective: Students will evaluate the Columbian Exchange from various perspectives to determine if it.

Jan 21, 2016

Download

Documents

Sabrina Carr
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: The Columbian Exchange ● October 1st-2nd, 2015 ● Objective: Students will evaluate the Columbian Exchange from various perspectives to determine if it.

The Columbian Exchange

●October 1st-2nd, 2015●Objective: Students will evaluate the

Columbian Exchange from various perspectives to determine if it was beneficial or detrimental to the world as a whole through texts and written response.

Warm Up:What resources besides gold did European nations get from the New World?

Page 2: The Columbian Exchange ● October 1st-2nd, 2015 ● Objective: Students will evaluate the Columbian Exchange from various perspectives to determine if it.

THIS IS US!!

Page 3: The Columbian Exchange ● October 1st-2nd, 2015 ● Objective: Students will evaluate the Columbian Exchange from various perspectives to determine if it.

The Columbian Exchange

●The transmission of native plants,animals, and diseases from Europe to the Americas and the Americas to Europe after 1492.

Page 4: The Columbian Exchange ● October 1st-2nd, 2015 ● Objective: Students will evaluate the Columbian Exchange from various perspectives to determine if it.

Test Your Knowledge

1. From what country/continent didtomatoes originate?

2. From what country/continent did potatoes originate?

3. From what country/continent did oranges/lemons originate?

Page 5: The Columbian Exchange ● October 1st-2nd, 2015 ● Objective: Students will evaluate the Columbian Exchange from various perspectives to determine if it.

From Europe to the Americas● Crabgrass

● Pears● Pigs● Bananas

● Daffodils● Rice● Oranges● Peaches● Tulips● Barley● Daisies● Turnip● Cabbages● Dandelions

● Sheep● Tulips ● Disease● Carnations● Horses● Sugarcane● Wheat● Chickens● Lemons

● Coffee● Lettuce

● Cows● Lilacs● Olives

Page 6: The Columbian Exchange ● October 1st-2nd, 2015 ● Objective: Students will evaluate the Columbian Exchange from various perspectives to determine if it.

From the Americas to Europe● Avocados● Papayas● Tobacco● Beans

(kidney, navy, lima)

● Peanuts● Tomatoes● Bell peppers● Petunias● Black-eyed

Susans● Pineapples● Vanilla beans

● Sweet potatoes● Cacao (for

chocolate)● Poinsettias● Chili peppers ● Potatoes● Corn● Pumpkins● Cotton● Rubber● Turkeys● Squashes● Papayas● Sunflowers

Page 7: The Columbian Exchange ● October 1st-2nd, 2015 ● Objective: Students will evaluate the Columbian Exchange from various perspectives to determine if it.
Page 8: The Columbian Exchange ● October 1st-2nd, 2015 ● Objective: Students will evaluate the Columbian Exchange from various perspectives to determine if it.

Smallpox ●Rash and Bumps, High Fever, No

cases since 1973

Page 9: The Columbian Exchange ● October 1st-2nd, 2015 ● Objective: Students will evaluate the Columbian Exchange from various perspectives to determine if it.

► The Church and plantations are central features of Spanish colonial society.

Page 10: The Columbian Exchange ● October 1st-2nd, 2015 ● Objective: Students will evaluate the Columbian Exchange from various perspectives to determine if it.

In New Mexico and California the church built MISSIONS and the goal of the missions was to convert Native Americans to CHRISTIANITY. The mission also increased Spanish control over the land.

Page 11: The Columbian Exchange ● October 1st-2nd, 2015 ● Objective: Students will evaluate the Columbian Exchange from various perspectives to determine if it.

SUGAR PLANTATIONS develop in the Americas and were large and raised much money for Spain. They forced Native Americans to work on the sugar plantations.

These crops were exported to Europe. The plantations required many workers, Spaniards treated Native Americans terribly.

Page 12: The Columbian Exchange ● October 1st-2nd, 2015 ● Objective: Students will evaluate the Columbian Exchange from various perspectives to determine if it.

► Exchange was the transfer of GERMS from Europe to the Americas. Native Americans had no IMMUNITY to them.

Page 13: The Columbian Exchange ● October 1st-2nd, 2015 ● Objective: Students will evaluate the Columbian Exchange from various perspectives to determine if it.

But there were positive changes like the adaptation and domestication of plants

…and animals.

Page 15: The Columbian Exchange ● October 1st-2nd, 2015 ● Objective: Students will evaluate the Columbian Exchange from various perspectives to determine if it.

Warm Up:●Write and Answer the question

in your Unit 2 Digital notebook. Use RACE:

“According to the quote byAlfred Crosby, in what ways did exploration impact the world?”

Quote is on next slide. What is RACE? Slide 17.

Page 16: The Columbian Exchange ● October 1st-2nd, 2015 ● Objective: Students will evaluate the Columbian Exchange from various perspectives to determine if it.

Alfred Crosby:“In 1491, the world was in many of its aspects and characteristics a minimum of two worlds—the New World, of the Americas, and the Old World, consisting of Eurasia and Africa. Columbus brought them together, and almost immediately and continually ever since, we have had an exchange of native plants, animals and diseases moving back and forth across the oceans between the two worlds. A great deal of the economic, social, political history of the world is involved in the exchange of living organisms between the two worlds.”

Page 17: The Columbian Exchange ● October 1st-2nd, 2015 ● Objective: Students will evaluate the Columbian Exchange from various perspectives to determine if it.

What is RACE?●R – Restate the question

◦Reread and restate the question in your topic sentence

●A – Answer the question◦Use your answer in the topic

sentence●C – Cite Evidence from text

◦Use examples and evidence from the text to support the topic sentence

●E – Extend your answer◦Explain your answer with prior

knowledge

Page 18: The Columbian Exchange ● October 1st-2nd, 2015 ● Objective: Students will evaluate the Columbian Exchange from various perspectives to determine if it.

Classwork 1. Copy the Columbian Exchange Chart in

Google Classroom to your Unit 2 Digital Notebook.

2. Using Discovery Education section “Decline of Native Americans” and Explore tab 10 called “Tomatoes for Horses” fill out the chart.

3. Make sure you check out the video and map of exchange of goods.

After you get done, go to the next slide and start working on your homework.

Page 19: The Columbian Exchange ● October 1st-2nd, 2015 ● Objective: Students will evaluate the Columbian Exchange from various perspectives to determine if it.

Works cited

● http://www.shmoop.com/columbian-exchange/● http://gphscrossroads.wetpaint.com/page/Unit+III+Part+2+

Lesson+4+Mercantilism+%26+Columbian+Exchange● http://www.smithsonianmag.com/history-archaeology/Alfred

-W-Crosby-on-the-Columbian-Exchange.html?c=y&page=1● http://www.scholastic.com/teachers/article/columbian-excha

nge● http://www.u-s-history.com/pages/h436.html● http://www.smithsonianmag.com/multimedia/photos/?c=y&

c=y&articleID=131157478&articleID=131157478● http://www.gilderlehrman.org/history-by-era/imperial-rivalrie

s/resources/treaty-tordesillas-resolving-%E2%80%9C-certain-controversy%E2%80%9D-over