Social Studies: The Age of Exploration
Explorers, trade routes, and global change
Social Studies: The Age of Exploration
Explorers, trade routes, and global change
Social Studies - Grade 6-8
- 1
What does the term Age of Exploration mean in world history?
Think about exploration by sea between the 1400s and 1600s.
The Age of Exploration was a period when European countries sent sailors on long sea voyages to find new trade routes, claim land, and expand their power. - 2
List two reasons why European nations wanted to explore new sea routes in the 1400s and 1500s.
Trade and competition are both important ideas here.
European nations wanted new sea routes to reach Asian goods like spices and silk more directly and to gain wealth and power through trade and empire. - 3
Explain how improvements in navigation helped explorers travel farther from Europe.
Improvements in navigation, such as better maps, the compass, and the astrolabe, helped explorers find directions more accurately and travel longer distances with greater confidence. - 4
Why was Portugal an early leader in ocean exploration?
Consider geography and government support.
Portugal was an early leader in ocean exploration because it had skilled sailors, strong support from its rulers, and a location on the Atlantic Ocean that made sea travel important. - 5
What route did Vasco da Gama find, and why was it important?
Vasco da Gama found a sea route from Europe to India by sailing around the southern tip of Africa. This route was important because it opened direct trade between Europe and Asia by sea. - 6
Christopher Columbus sailed west in 1492. What was he trying to reach, and what happened instead?
He believed he had found a westward route to Asia.
Christopher Columbus was trying to reach Asia by sailing west across the Atlantic Ocean, but instead he arrived in the Americas. - 7
What was the Columbian Exchange?
The Columbian Exchange was the movement of plants, animals, goods, people, and diseases between the Americas, Europe, and Africa after contact began. - 8
Name one positive effect and one negative effect of the Columbian Exchange.
Think about both helpful exchanges and harmful consequences.
One positive effect of the Columbian Exchange was the spread of new crops, such as potatoes and corn, to different parts of the world. One negative effect was the spread of diseases that caused the deaths of many Indigenous people in the Americas. - 9
Why is Ferdinand Magellan's expedition important even though Magellan himself did not finish the trip?
Ferdinand Magellan's expedition is important because it completed the first circumnavigation of the Earth, proving that sailors could travel all the way around the world by sea. - 10
How did the Age of Exploration affect Indigenous peoples in the Americas?
Focus on the major consequences after European arrival.
The Age of Exploration affected Indigenous peoples through loss of land, violence, forced labor, and deadly diseases, although it also created new cultural exchanges in some places. - 11
What role did Spain play in the Age of Exploration?
Spain played a major role in the Age of Exploration by sponsoring voyages, claiming large areas in the Americas, and building a powerful empire based on wealth from land and resources. - 12
In two or three sentences, explain one long-term effect of the Age of Exploration on the modern world.
Think about trade, colonization, or global connections.
One long-term effect of the Age of Exploration is that it connected continents through global trade and cultural exchange. It also led to colonization, which shaped languages, borders, and societies that still exist today.