What history curriculum was taught in your country's grade school?
>fall of the roman empire
>french revolution
>battle of vimy
>world war 2
What history curriculum was taught in your country's grade school?
>fall of the roman empire
>french revolution
>battle of vimy
>world war 2
Something about crossing over the ice to Denmark
the same
but I was in PACE history, and I also took American History and French history as electives
Anything that involved the US.
US and latam history
>Ancient Egypt and Greece
>rome
>Feudalism
>Renaissance
>Thanksgiving and Pilgrims
>American Civil War
roman conquest of gaul > rome > frankish empire/francia > kingdom of france > crusades > 100 years war > renaissance > protestant reformation and wars of religion > french revolution
>Rise of Hitler
>Conflict in Northern Ireland
>Cold war
The bible.
Are you sure that you were taught these in grade school? The protestant reformation is quite an abstract concept for a grade schooler
t. Cleetus in Appalachia Elementary school
>Ancient Egypt and Greece
>rome
>Renaissance
>americas colonization
>french revolution
>south america revolution
>recent argentine history.
I was taught that Luther created protestantism and it caused a war. Nothing too complicated.
The best damn grade school in all of southern Macoupin county, Alabama.
Europeans study alot of history in their grade schools because it's ruched and simplified too much. They don't have long ass essays and analyze readings and shit
AND DEN GAWD CREATED DE ERD IN SEHBEN DAYS
>fall of the roman empire
germanic mexicans invaded rome
>french revolution
burgeoise became richer than nobility and the church and this is the only reason it happened
>battle of vimy
no idea what that is
>world war 2
hitler killed jews
I remember more classes of brazilian history than ww2
Not grade school but I remember being taught that the holy roman empire was a single country and basically rivaled france as a major power. I was already autistic at that point and I was pretty triggered
nvm
it was 50% world history and 50% brazilian history
the first 50% was
>Mesopotamia
>ancient egypt
>greece
>rome
>low and high middle ages, but more about the feudal system, not shit that happened
>french and industrial revolution
>wwi and wwii
>a bit of cold war
and I think we ignored the rest of the world from there. the rest we learned in geography
For the middle ages, we were just shown pic related and told standard nonsense about the evil wicked crusades and the poor innocent Muslims. I couldn't name a single medieval country until I researched it on my own.
They taught us that we won the winter war which we didn't, we just survived and killed more Russians
It's a good reason to be triggered
...
it skips to the bong colonialism and remove racial turning up point like the chink who started the war etc.
that bullshit we go taught jack shit here but ww1 and 2 and muh indians!
Greeks, Romans, Feudalism, French Revolution, Colonial Americas, WW2
Dropped out after that so idk
Was survival not the goal for Finland?
>Indus valley civ
>Early kingdoms of India
>Mughal kingdoms
>British occupation
>Nazi Germany and communist Russia
Yes, absolutely. It wasn't a war for victory but that's how it's taught. There's no way we could have won against Soviets, without Germany advancing first at least
Californian here. Mostly American and state history, we might have covered some world history though i cant remember. We also didnt learn history every year, some times it was just general social studies.
How prominent was propoganda in pho land?
We never got any of that. We only learned John Cabot-Cold War.
...
>theory of the first human that stayed in Malay Archipelago
>hinduism kingdoms
>buddhism kingdoms
>islamic kingdoms
>the fight between local kingdoms with portugal
>the fight between local kingdoms with spain
>dutch came
>the fight between local kingdoms with dutch
>the struggle to be independent from dutch
>japs came
>concept of the republic
>fighting with dutch who refused to acknowledge us
>fighting gommie
>some coup d'etat
Too many fights
>10,000 bc - modern day
i have no idea why but i never got any holocaust lessons taught in public schooling aside from 8th grade english class for a week. I know this is like a staple thing they do every year in school now
> he doesnt start his history with egypt and mesopotamia
We are taught that our country is created from the struggle of our ancestors.
This
I was homeschooled for most of Grade School but in HS we learned
>Black death
>prot reformation
>wars of religion
>initial European colonialism
>more wars of religion
>Westphalia
>the rise of absolutism
>French Revolution
>Napoleonic wars
>Congress of Vienna/Metternich
>1848, rise of socialism
>second age of imperialism
>German unification
>scramble for Africa
>rising German-British-French autism
>WWI
>Russian revolution
>League of Nations
>Soviet industrialization/Holodomor
>rise of fascism
>WWII
>post-war order/welfare state
>collapse of the welfare state
I only took European history classes.
didn't worth the struggle, thou
>germanic mexicans
Kill yourself
With this current (((government))), yeah I agree.
World history:
Early humans, Paleolithic, Neolithic
Origin of Western Civilization (Mesopotamia, Phoenicians, Ancient Greece, Roman Empire)
Medieval Europe, mostly Carolingian empire and Spain.
Important American civs (Maya, Aztec, Inca)
Renaissance and humanism
Imperial Spain
French Revolution and American Independence war
European Imperialism and Latin American independence
Industrial revolution
WWI
Russian Revolution
Inter-war period, great depression, rise of fascism in Europe
WWII
Cold War, Cuban Revolution, Vietnam War
Chilean history:
Chilean native peoples (mostly about the Mapuche)
Spanish conquest, war of arauco
Colonial period
Independence
Initial governments, formation of the republic during the 19th c.
War of the pacific (honestly half of the Chilean history we had in school was about this war and the Independence of Chile)
Mining boom period
Post-mining boom period (Great Depression, WWII)
Chile during the cold war
We didn't touch Allende/Pinochet/return of democracy, I studied in the early 00s and it was still a touchy subject.
>poor innocent Muslims
nobody does this
In Primary school (grade school)
>Ancient Egypt, mostly about the gods
>Renaissance, mostly Da Vinci
>Very briefly with the ANZACs
>Some Cold war stuff
In High School
>100 Years war
>Napoleonic wars
>Colonizing of Australia, some Ned Kelly
>ANZACs in WW1
>WW2
>More Cold war
It's pretty all over the place, a lot of shitty, heavily abridged american history, stuff about slavery and immigration, some things would go along with more broad topics(for example, the panama canal and social studies). It's actually weird to think about, I had forgotten just how weird my grade seemed to function, there were distinct "periods" for different topics but they were all the same room and teacher(except in the latter grades, where one class you might go to a different teacher) and I don't remember exactly how transitioning between topics or just teaching them itself went down. Anyway, whatever it was was disappointing, though I remember feeling very clever when I figured BC dates run "backwards" and why during some stupid ass Egyptian mummy project.
my school sure did
This is Texas' education
>6th grade World culture
>7th grade Texas history, but never got past the Texas Revolution, also were taught that Texas was not super involved in the Civil War.
>8th grade US History up until the civil war but first half of the year was a ton of colonist stuff, not a lot about indians though
>9th grade I took World Culture not sure what the normal class was
>10th grade World History cant remember jack shit of what i did
>11th is US history after the civil war all about race and new laws
>12th is government and economics
Literally 70% of the curriculum was about native Americans and the regions they lived in and how they lived
15% was about the fur trade companies and North America and how Canada came to be and shit
The last 15% was to briefly go over the Roman Empire the feudal system French/American revolution and ww1/2
The essentials (both world wars and the Cold War) are only taught in high school.
So a little bit of boring Aus shit like federation and literally like 1 million hours of fucking aboriginal shit.
Can you fuckers explain why the fuck my nationalistic Canadian friend believes that not only you fuckers were at verdun but that you made the largest contribution to it
Grade school as in elementary school? Or K-12?
Japanese history
>at ad 200~ planting rice which was a huge deal
>at 1400~ sengoku
>at 1800~ gaijin brought us tech and jesus and we didn't like jesus
>1900~1940s peaceful tech growth and peaceful war between Russia and peaceful war in china and sea cunts
>china and korea being butthurt because fake CCP and gook propaganda
World history
>been taught rome isn't important at all lmao
>greece is important but not to japan so not important
>napoleon did stuff
>whites making colonies everywhere while raping and killing them
>japan saved asia from whites and liberalise asian cunts
Something about an Austrian guy, who fucked up being an artist. Sad story tbqh.
Vimy ridge is no where near Verdun so it sounds like your friend is retarded
>Rome isn't important he says, as he types in the Roman script so that he may eagerly communicate with the descendants of the Roman Empire who still carryout many of the traditions of Rome, such as having conquered and raped your people, then forced our civilization and trade on you twice.