Introduction

AP World History: Modern study the cultural, economic, political, and social developments that have shaped the world from c. 1200 CE to the present through analyzing texts, visual sources, and other historical evidence and write essays expressing historical arguments.

Objectives
Systematize the core knowledge of the subject
Become familiar with most AP exam formats
Reduce pressure and study time
Improve scores effectively
Enhance independant thinking
Create a solid foundation for higher education
Characteristics
Quality teachers with extensive knowledge about students psychology
Teaching programs are based on international standards
Exclusive materials that closely follow the AP formats
Personalized teaching method according to student progress
Commitment on AP pass grade
AP exam registration support
Course content
Unit 1: The Global Tapestry
1.1 States in Africa, Afro-Eurasia, East Asia, Europe, South and Southeast Asia, and the Americas
1.2 Global and regional religions and belief systems
Unit 2: Networks of Exchange
2.1 The Silk Roads
2.2 The Mongol Empire
2.3 The Indian Ocean trading network
2.4 The trans-Saharan trade routes
2.5 The effects of cross-cultural interactions
Unit 3: Land-Based Empires
3.1 The development of the Manchu, Mughal, Ottoman, and Safavid empires
3.2 How rulers of empires maintained their power
3.3 Religious developments in empires
Unit 4: Transoceanic Interconnections
4.1 The influence of scientific learning and technological innovation
4.2 The Columbian Exchange
4.3 Development and expansion of maritime empires
4.4 Internal and external challenges to state power
4.5 Changes to social hierarchies linked to the spread of empires
Unit 5: Revolutions
5.1 The Enlightenment
5.2 Revolutions against existing governments and the birth of new nation-states
5.3 The Industrial Revolution
5.4 Trade policies
5.5 The development of industrial economies
Unit 6: Consequences of Industrialization
6.1 State expansion in the 18th and 19th centuries
6.2 Resistance to imperialism
6.3 The growth of the global economy
6.4 Economic imperialism
6.5 Causes and effects of new migration patterns
Unit 7: Global Conflict
7.1 Changes in the global political order after 1900
7.2 World War I: its causes and how it was fought
7.3 The interwar period
7.4 World War II: its causes and how it was fought
7.5 Mass atrocities after 1900
Unit 8: Cold War and Decolonization
8.1 The causes and effects of the Cold War
8.2 The spread of communism
8.3 How colonies in Asia and Africa achieved independence
8.4 The creation of new states after decolonization
8.5 The end of the Cold War
Unit 9: Globalization
9.1 Advances in technology and their effects
9.2 Disease
9.3 Environment
9.4 Economic change
9.5 Movements for reform
9.6 How globalization changed culture
9.7 New international institutions

Student achievement