Students explore why European sailors began crossing the oceans from the 1400s, what they found, and what the consequences were for the people they encountered.
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Teach: exploration, voyage, indigenous, contact, conquest, consequence, perspective, discovery. The question about the word 'discovery' is linguistically and conceptually powerful.
Focus on the motivations for exploration before moving to the consequences.
Can students explain two motivations for exploration and two consequences for indigenous peoples? Do they understand that the same events look different from different perspectives?
No resources needed. Draw a rough world map in soil and trace one voyage route.
Students often celebrate exploration uncritically. Teaching the consequences for indigenous peoples corrects a one-sided narrative.
The Age of Exploration is the beginning of globalisation. It directly caused colonialism, the transatlantic slave trade, and the modern world economy. Teaching it requires multiple perspectives.
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