1TTO, Topweek 1: Lesson 1.1 - 1.6

HISTORY
TEST (version A)
AGE 1 
Lesson 1.1, 1.2, 1.3, 1.4, 1.5, 1.6


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Slide 1: Slide
HistoryMiddelbare schoolhavoLeerjaar 1,2

This lesson contains 48 slides, with interactive quizzes and text slides.

time-iconLesson duration is: 45 min

Items in this lesson

HISTORY
TEST (version A)
AGE 1 
Lesson 1.1, 1.2, 1.3, 1.4, 1.5, 1.6


Slide 1 - Slide

  1. Dictionary (E-NL) is allowed. NO google translate.
  2. You may use a calculator.
  3. Besides a dictionary, calculator and chromebook, your desk is empty:  no notebook, no notes and.....no phone!
  4. Only 1 tab is opened during the test. Use FULL SCREEN.
  5. Finished? Hand in your work and CLOSE your chromebook.
read the rules before you start
Good Luck!
This test has: 
20 mc questions, 11 drag&drop questions, 6 open questions
You can earn 76 points to get a "10"

Slide 2 - Slide

1.1 The First Humans

Slide 3 - Slide

According to the Out of Africa theory:




A
modern man migrated within Africa from south to north
B
mankind forms one human race
C
Europe populated Africa and Asia
D
only the northern species left the continent because of the Sahara Desert

Slide 4 - Quiz

The scientists who studied Lucy's remains concluded that Lucy was in fact a human.
Which discovery led to this conclusion?





A
Lucy used tools to hunt
B
Lucy walked on two legs
C
Lucy wore primitive clothes
D
Lucy was able to spreak

Slide 5 - Quiz

What is the main difference between an archeologist and a paleontologist?

Slide 6 - Open question

a. Who developed the 'Theory of Evolution'?
b. And what does it explain about how species survive over a long period of time?
Use the terms "change" and ''adapt'' in your answer.
(start your answers with "a:" and "b:")


Slide 7 - Open question

Adam & Eve
Lucy
Drag the characteristics to the correct box
science
no physical evidence
creation narrative
belief
physical evidence
religion
forbidden tree
evolution theory
facts
Hadar
age determined
age not 
established

Slide 8 - Drag question

1.2 Hunter-Gatherers

Slide 9 - Slide

Which statement about cave paintings is correct?





A
Cave paintings are written sources from prehistory
B
Cave paintings show that hunter-gathers lived in caves
C
Cave paintings are found by nomads
D
Cave paintings show scenes from prehistory

Slide 10 - Quiz

Look at the source. Why are these paintings an
important source to understand what prehistoric
people were thinking?






Source 1: Cave paintings from Lascaux, France
A
Because in prehistory people did not write things down.
B
Because these paintings are the only remains scientists found from prehistory.
C
Because they teach us something about hunting techniques of the hunter-gatherers.
D
Because these paintings clearly show how advanced prehistoric man was.

Slide 11 - Quiz

Read the source.
What can you conclude from the source?






Source: Scientific research: Ötzis voice
Free translation of: Nu.nl, march 10th 2016
A
Ötzi spoke a language we still speak today
B
Soon we shall be able to hear an exact replica of Ötzi's voice.
C
Ötzi's voice isn't a reliable source for historians.
D
Ötzi's vocal chords can be used to make the mummy talk again.

Slide 12 - Quiz

Why did hunter-gatherers have only few possessions?
A
because they did not have the skills to make more tools
B
because they did not need many possessions
C
because they had to carry everything when they travelled
D
because other groups would steal their possessions when they travelled

Slide 13 - Quiz

Look at the source.
Why did hunter-gatherers not have these objects?



pottery
A
Hunter-gatherers moved around a lot, so pottery would be too heavy to carry around.
B
Hunter-gatherers did not have fire yet, so they could not make pottery.
C
Gatherers needed pottery to store grain, while farmers did not have to store food.
D
Hunter-gatherers only used what they could find in nature and did not make anything.

Slide 14 - Quiz

Read the source.
Which cause is given for the
start of agriculture?
A
because of climate change
B
because people were forced to grow their own crops
C
because people stopped moving around
D
because fewer wild grains grew in the wild

Slide 15 - Quiz

1.3 Early Farmers

Slide 16 - Slide

Farming started in the Middle East because:






A
the area was flooded by rivers every year
B
there were large rivers
C
the first farmers lived there
D
hunter-gatherers collected most of their food there

Slide 17 - Quiz

What was the main reason for farmers to tame animals?
A
To use them for their own benefit
B
To protect them from predators
C
To study their behavior
D
To sell them for profit

Slide 18 - Quiz

What were farmers looking for when selecting animals for breeding?
A
Fast speed
B
Colorful fur
C
Useful characteristics
D
Large size

Slide 19 - Quiz

Where can we find the Funnel Beaker Culture?
A
above the rivers Maas and Rhine
B
in Greece
C
in Mesopotamia
D
in the Alps region

Slide 20 - Quiz

What was pottery used for?
A
Building houses
B
Storing grain and seeds
C
Transporting water
D
Cooking food

Slide 21 - Quiz

What is an example of new knowledge spread by farmers?
A
Pottery
B
Carpentry
C
Metalworking
D
Weaving

Slide 22 - Quiz

Farmers
Hunter-Gatherers
moving from place to place
finding grain, fruit and vegetables
hunting animals and fishing
small groups
only few possessions that can be carried
Farming was a big change in the way prehistoric man lived. So what changed exactly?
Drag each change  to the correct place in the table.

large groups
pottery
domesticating animals
growing your own crops
living in one place
(= settling)

Slide 23 - Drag question

Cause
Effect
1. Farming was invented in the Fertile Crescent
2. Farmers could not follow the animals that they hunted
3. Farmers wanted to store grain and seeds
4. Farming spread to new regions
Drag the correct effect (gevolg)  to the cause (oorzaak) that has been given.
Pottery is invented
Farming villages developed in Europe
People started living in a fixed place
People started domesticating animals

Slide 24 - Drag question

1.4 Time Matters

Slide 25 - Slide

Study the timeline below closely. The center is the year 1 AD. Drag the dates to the correct centuries (box 1 - 7). Three dates remain.
ps: box 1 = 3rd century BC, box 7 = 4th century AD.
256 AD
317 BC
317
67 AD
289 BC
410 
44 BC 
183 BC
410 AD
192 AD

Slide 26 - Drag question

29
111 BC
1409 BC
30 BC
1507 BC
36 BC
29 BC
67
40
74
68
57
3rd
1st AD
1st BC
14th BC
15th BC
2nd BC

Slide 27 - Drag question

No human can live for 300 years.
But some people have lived in 3 centuries.
Can you explain this? Give an example.

Slide 28 - Open question

1.5 The First Civilisation

Slide 29 - Slide

Which of the following does
NOT
belong to the five aspects of a civilisation?

language, writing, agriculture, law, art, religion

A
religion
B
writing
C
agriculture
D
art

Slide 30 - Quiz

Why did not everyone have to be a farmer in Mesopotamia?
A
People found out they were better at other jobs, such as making tools.
B
People didn’t like farming and chose other jobs.
C
The fertile land produced a lot of food, allowing some people to specialize in other jobs, such as potters.
D
The floods would ruin the harvest, so people had to other jobs in order to survive

Slide 31 - Quiz

Look at the image.
How does the image illustrate irrigation?
Start your answer by explaining the term "irrigation".

Slide 32 - Open question

4. Drag the texts to the correct pictures.

Because of heavy rainfall, the water level in the river rises. This causes it to overflow and cover the land.


When the water level drops, the river leaves silt. The farmers use this to make their land fertile. They store some of the water in pools.



The river is at a low point.
There is not enough fertile soil for crops to grow.


Slide 33 - Drag question

People die of famine
People  drown
Finish the cause and effect timetable. 
! pay attention to the arrows
Destroys fields and houses
Crops fail because of a drought
Water level is too low
Water level is too high

Slide 34 - Drag question

only in Sumer
only in Egypt
in both
Drag the texts to the correct boxes
pharaoh
highly developed civilisation
 ruled by a king
Euphrates and Tigris
every city had a king
arose around river(s)

Slide 35 - Drag question

1.6 Inventing Writing

Slide 36 - Slide

Which of the following sources is an existing, primary source?






A
One of Ötzi's axes
B
An image of Ötzi found on the Exploring Time website
C
A letter written by Ötzi
D
A story about Ötzi told by your teacher

Slide 37 - Quiz

Look at the source and read the caption in the hotspot.
Is this is a primary or a secondary source?
Explain your choice.
reconstruction of Ötzi

Slide 38 - Open question

source A
Photo, made in 1887, of the construction of the Eifel Tower,  Paris
source B
Reconstruction drawing of Ruthin Castle from the south-west as it may have appeared in the late medieval period. 
source C
front page Algemeen Handelsblad, May 10th, 1940.
source D
Book about the German invasion of the Netherlands in May 1940. Author: John Pregner. Published in 1978.
Drag the images to the correct box. You can click the image to enlarge. The green hotspot gives extra information.
Primary + written
Primary + non-written
Secondary + written
Secondary + non-written

Slide 39 - Drag question

Extra's

Slide 40 - Slide

The following three questions are about this source

Slide 41 - Slide

! A cause happens first, an effect happens after (cause-effect)

Open the text on the right.
The seven sentences (A-G) are in random order.

Choose the correct answer.
A
statement G is a cause of statement E
B
statement G is an effect of statement E

Slide 42 - Quiz

! A cause happens first, an effect happens after (cause-effect)

Open the text on the right.
The seven sentences (A-G) are in random order.

Choose the correct answer.
A
statement A is a cause of statement E
B
statement A is an effect of statement E

Slide 43 - Quiz

! A cause happens first, an effect happens after (cause-effect)

Open the text on the right.
The seven sentences (A-G) are in random order.

Choose the correct answer.
A
statement E is a cause of statement C
B
statement E is an effect of statement C

Slide 44 - Quiz

Nothing to see here. Move on....

Slide 45 - Slide

Timeline
Chronology question. Put the events in the correct order on the timeline.

around 8,000 years ago
around 250,000 years ago
around 15,000 years ago
around 12,000 years ago
around 7,300 years ago
around 4500 years ago
cave paintings Lascaux are made
beginning of agriculture in the Netherlands
beginning of agriculture in the Fertile Crescent
domestication of sheep and goats
Stonehenge is built
Beginning Out of Africa migration

Slide 46 - Drag question

Sources
Key words. Each of the 17 hotspot (paperclip) contains the definition of a key word. 
Drag 16 hotspot to the orange box under the keyword it describes. So 1 hotspot remains.
Civil Servant
Specialise
Iron age
Domestication
Fossils
Periods
Markets
Nomads
Millenium
Papyrus
Scribe
Tool
Culture
Pottery
Antiquity
remains from the past
remains of plants or animals that are preserved in stone
people who do not live in a fixed place
someone who works for the government
an object held in one hand to accomplish a task (for example: an axe)
tablet which was used to decipher Egyptian writing
plant, the stems of which were used to write on
tame animals for your own use
time period in history during which people invented writing and the first civilisations arose
an invention of farmers to store products
a period of a thousand years
a way of organising history into smaller timeframes
someone who writes as his job
things people think and do, such as religion, traditions, art, clothes and language
places where people come to barter their products
when someone becomes very good at one thing
the time when prehistoric man learned how to make objects of iron

Slide 47 - Drag question

congratulations

Slide 48 - Slide