Welcome to the Live Online Course - Middle Ages for Middle Grades!


This course is designed for grades 5 through 7.


The Middle Ages start at the decline of the Roman Empire and ends with explorations and discoveries. We will learn about the seerah of the Prophet (saws), castles and knights, and the early Islamic empires.

This book integrates Islamic concepts into global history and is packed with academic skills and 21st century skills. Additionally, the way information is presented caters to different learning styles, in accordance with our unique teaching methodology IDEALS (See more about this below).

The second book in Middle Grades is best suited for grades 5 through 7, although older students would similarly benefit from this program.

What do you learn in this course:


The Seerah of the Prophet (saws)
The geographical and historical context of the Seerah
The rise and fall of early Islamic empires
Timelining
How to read a scientific text and extract information out of it.

Skills we will cover:

Outlining
Summarizing
Note-taking
Concept Maps

You will learn to create stunning graphics such as:

Info-Posters
PowerPoint Presentations
Diagrams
Concept Maps


The Online Live Course – Middle Ages program includes the following: 


  • Live Lessons on Zoom
  • Location maps
  • Worksheets
  • Pages from History Intersections
  • Online Resources


All student pages will need to be downloaded and printed in color.


Should you prefer to have an actual book in hand, you can purchase a copy of the History intersections here and a copy of the student pages here!


Mondays & Wednesdays 12 pm PST

(11 am PST after November 3rd)


Live on Zoom

Starting September 3rd 2023


Hurry, we have limited spaces!

History Connections - Middle Ages

Middle Grades 

Book 2

This second book of History Connections Middle Ages covers the Middle Ages and integrates the seerah of the Prophet (saws) and the Islamic history. 

During the middle years (grade 5 through 8), students will cycle through the same historical periods and science topics as in the primary years, but they will learn how to make connections and study biographies. They will increasingly learn how to ask questions and extract information from a text. On top of that, middle graders will learn several note taking skills, and how to present the information from a text into a graphic. Information is offered, processed and represented in different formats. 

This book integrates Islamic concepts into global history and is packed with hands-on activities, visuals. Additionally, the way information is presented caters to different learning styles, in accordance with our unique teaching methodology IDEALS (See more about this below).

The second book is best suited for students grades 5 through 7, although older students would benefit from this program as well.




Curriculum


  Welcome!
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  Posters
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  Week 1: Barbarian Invasion & Fall of Rome
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  Week 2: Byzantine Empire
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  Week 3: Islam: The Beginning
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  Week 4: Trouble in Makkah & Year of Sorrow
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  Week 5: Night Journey & Migration
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  Week 6: Battles
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  Week 7: Peace Treaty & Inviting to Islam
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  Week 8: Rightly Guided Caliphs
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  Week 9: Umayyads
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  Week 10: Abbasids
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  Week 11: Vikings
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  Week 12: Anglo-Saxons & Charlemagne
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  Week 13: England & France
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  Week 14: Life in a Castle
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  Week 15: Life in Villages & Towns
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  Week 16: Power of Popes & Christianity
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  Week 17: The Seljuks
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  Week 18: The Crusades
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  week 19: Salahuddin & The Fight for Jerusalem
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  Week 20: Black Death & The Celts
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  Week 21: The War of the Roses
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  Week 22: Mongol Invaders
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  Week 23: The Mamluks
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  Week 24: Eastern European Kingdoms & Russians
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  Week 25: Al Andalus
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  Week 26: Al Murabitun
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  Week 27: West Africa
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  Week 28: India & SE Asia
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  Week 29: China & Japan
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  Week 30: Explorers & Sailors
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Elements in the lessons:


Research: Learning how to read and understand a scientific text is an important life-skill. It helps create life-long and independent learners. In the Research box of the weekly Task Card, the key words are listed. You are encouraged to find the topics in the encyclopedia by yourself, by using the content pages or the index pages. The keywords listed help you in finding the topics in the encyclopedia. 

Resources: We have listed the resources that will be used for the week in the resources section of the weekly Task Card. UILE stands for the Usborne Internet Linked History Encyclopedia, HI stands for History Intersections, 2nd edition and the Super Servants Stories are optional. 

Skill: The program covers a wide range of skills, including outlining, summarizing, note-taking and mind mapping. These skills are not only useful for the subject of history, but are life-skills to be used throughout a wide range of subjects, both academic as well as non-academic. The difficulty of the skills will be increased over several weeks, allowing you to become proficient through small incremental steps. 

Project: Every week, you will create a project: sometimes this is with pen and paper and sometimes this is with an online software. The purpose of the project is to show information you have found in a visual manner. 

Map: You will make a map by tracing a Location Map and following the instructions every week. The instructions will tell you what items should be marked and labeled on the map. The map should be made with colors and have as much details as possible. Every map should be labeled at the top with the topic of the week. The purpose of having you trace the map is recognition of topographical landmarks and elements such as mountain ranges, rivers, deserts, seas and oceans, and cities. By physically tracing a map, the information is integrated into your memory. Most Location Maps are traced more than once. 

Timeline: Timelining involves the placement of information in chronological order on a visual that represents the passage of time. Most timelines are linear, starting from one point and moving in one direction. Such timelines will give a good sense of the order events are happening in, and which events happen at the same time. However, a linear timeline does not show the different topographical area things happen in at the same time. Therefore, our timeline is circular: it is shaped like a slice of a tree trunk, with the rings showing its years. We have also divided the circular timeline in ‘slices’, like a pizza. Every slice represents a different area of the world. When data is added to the timeline, all events happening in the same rings are happening at the same time, and going from the center to the outer ring in each slice, will show the order events happened in for that particular area.  

Every week, you will write the chronological information found (and if applicable, the information in the boxes in the resources,) on the timeline in the topographical area the events took place in. Not only time matters, but also place. See instructions below on how to assemble the timeline.

World Wall Map: In order to have a sense where events on the traced map take place on a global scale, we will ask you to locate the traced map area on the World Wal Map. The World Wall Map is a complete world map without details.

History Connections

History in Context


Our history program is called History Connections, because learning history is all about connections: connections to the past, and connections to each other. Knowing what happened in the past helps us make sense of our present. Knowing how we fit into the larger global history, helps us connect to others. Knowing our heritage gives us a place to belong. Knowledge of history even gives us a basis to determine future actions. Currently, the world has become a global community, making global history all the more pressing. This program focusses on teaching 21st century skills, rather than rote memorization of facts, as this teaches students important skills to function in the modern society of the future.


Our History Connection series covers the ancients all the way up to the modern history and current issues. This series is intended for grade 1 through 8.

Every year students will take a chunk of this history. In the first book, students will cover from Creation to about 500 C.E. In the second book, they will cover from 500 C.E. until about 1650 C.E. The third era will cover from 1650 C.E. until the Industrial Revolution, approximately 1850 C.E. The last era, the Modern Era, will cover from 1850 C.E. until our current day.

All Eras have Islamic History integrated within global history, with more attention and time spend on important topics in the history of our Ummah.

The four books in this curriculum are consecutive, not only in chronological information but also in building skills.


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