Wednesday, April 30, 2014

April 30


I showed part of the award-winning documentary "The Corporation". As you watched this part of the video, you were to answer the questions on the film study sheet. I did a homework check on your Chapter 11 questions. One week from today (Wednesday, May 7th), you will be writing your Chapter 10-11 Test. Please see the study guide for the Chapter 10-11 Test.


This quiz has a matching section and a long answer section. Please make sure that you review Chapters 10 and 11. Please review your answers to questions/activities from your Unit 3 worksheet, as well as the key terms (from Chapter 10-11 and from the PowerPoint presentations).

Please review the following two PowerPoint presentations:

  • "Foundations of Economic Globalization"
  • "Expansion of Economic Globalization"

You should know these key terms really well:
  • Bretton Woods Agreement
  • international monetary system
  • fixed exchange rate
  • gold standard
  • floating exchange rate
  • World Bank
  • International Monetary Fund (IMF)
  • centrally planned economy
  • free market economy
  • recession
  • John Maynard Keynes
  • Friedrich Hayek
  • Milton Friedman
  • totalitarian
  • General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT)
  • tariff
  • World Trade Organization (WTO)
  • Free Trade Agreement (FTA)
  • North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA)
You should also be able to answer the following questions:
  • What is economic globalization?
  • How did 20th century world events shape contemporary economic globalization?
  • What factors laid the foundations of contemporary global economics?
  • What were the major global institutions that were created at the Bretton Woods Agreement?
  • What are the major differences between the ideas of John Maynard Keynes and Friedrich Hayek?
  • What factors contribute to expanding globalization?
  • How do international agreements and organizations contribute to expanding globalization?
  • How do transnational corporations contribute to expanding globalization?
  • How do communication technologies contribute to expanding globalization?
  • What are the benefits of the WTO system?
  • What are some criticisms of the WTO?


I gave you some time to work with your four options group debate on the War of 1812, and then we proceeded with the debate. I thought it was a spirited debate, with some really witty points being made. I do really appreciate you staying in a little into the lunch break so we could hear all of the closing remarks. We will look at Andrew Jackson's presidency tomorrow.



We finished off "9/11: The Day that changed the World" today. I also showed you a CBC News in Review from September 2011. You should have copied down what I wrote up on the board today as well.

Tuesday, April 29, 2014

April 29


I showed you part of the documentary "9/11: Day that Changed the World" today. We should be able to finish this documentary tomorrow. This week, we will be covering Social 30-1 material related to crisis situations and what impact that has on civil rights and civil liberties.
 


I wrote out notes on the board today covering American political parties after George Washington's farewell address. As you should have seen, some of the political parties that emerged after Washington finished his second term, didn't last long (the Federalists), the Democratic-Republicans went through many changes over the years, but are the origins of the modern Democratic Party. The Republican Party emerged in 1856, and successfully elected their presidential candidate, Abraham Lincoln in 1860. Many of the topics that I covered in the lecture will be covered in Grade 12. We will talk about the Whigs, the Know-Nothing Party (the American Party), and the Free-Soil Party when we discuss American expansionism in the weeks to come.

I then gave you class time to prepare for your four options debate which will be happening tomorrow. I will give you some class time tomorrow to get yourselves organized in your teams before we proceed with the debate.




We finished off watching what we needed to from the documentary "Life + Debt", by watching the section on the "free zones". We also looked at "Dilemmas of Global Trade".

Monday, April 28, 2014

April 28


I showed you a video from the United States History series that covered U.S. Politics from 1980 to 2000 (the Reagan to the Clinton administrations). While you watched the video, you should have taken notes. I talked a little bit about the 2000 U.S. Presidential election today as well. We're getting into Social 30-1 material tomorrow when we start talking about illiberalism and the USA PATRIOT Act.

I showed you a video today called "Life + Debt", which is a good case study of Jamaica's increasing foreign debt, and impacts of economic policies from the IMF, the World Bank, the WTO, and the Inter-American Development Bank. We looked at the impact on the Jamaican produce industry, the dairy industry, the banana industry and the impact of the "free zones". We'll Please remember that your WTO charts are due tomorrow, and your Chapter 11 Questions are due on Wednesday.


We finished off the War of 1812 documentary today and then you wrote your Unit 6 Quiz afterwards. Your War of 1812 Website Assignment is due tomorrow.

Friday, April 25, 2014

April 25



I finished off the lecture of George H.W. Bush administration and then I moved to cover the Bill Clinton administration. This would be a great weekend to do some IB History review. You should edit pages on the Collaborative Notes section of the wiki for the American Presidents that we've been studying lately.



I gave you back your Unit 2 WRA I three source analysis assignments today. I will be going through these assignments on Monday in tutorial (starting at 8:15), you are strongly encouraged to attend tutorial. I went through a PowerPoint lecture today called "Expansion of Economic Globalization" today. I also gave you a booklet on the WTO today as well. You must make an advantages and disadvantages chart on the WTO, make it a detailed chart too. The WTO chart is due on Tuesday. Your Chapter 11 Questions are due on Wednesday.



You wrote a current events quiz today. We continued watching the PBS documentary on the War of 1812, we didn't finish it, so hopefully we'll be able to finish it on Monday. You do have a homework assignment this weekend (although it is due on Tuesday): please go to the IB 20 wiki this weekend, go to the Unit 6: Nation Building and Challenges section. Please complete the War of 1812 Website Assignment for Tuesday, April 29th. Please remember that you have your Unit 6 Quiz on Monday. This quiz has a matching section and an OPVL analysis section.

Thursday, April 24, 2014

April 24


I finished off the PowerPoint lecture "Forging the New Republic", and then we started the PBS documentary on the War of 1812. We'll be able to finish off the documentary tomorrow. Make sure that you read everyday from the War of 1812 booklet in preparation for the four options debate on the War of 1812 that we'll be having on Wednesday. Please remember that you'll be writing a Unit 6 Quiz on Monday that will have a matching section and an OPVL document analysis section.



I lectured a bit today about John Maynard Keynes, Friedrich Hayek, and Milton Friedman. I also taught you about the boom and bust cycle and the Keynesian economic response to the various stages of the boom and bust cycle. Your Chapter 11 Key Terms are due tomorrow.


We finished off the HBO documentary "Reagan" today, and then I began discussing the George H.W. Bush administration. We'll continue with the Bush administration tomorrow. Read my lips: no new taxes!

Wednesday, April 23, 2014

April 23


We completed our debate today on "BIRT the 21st century will belong to China". We'll continue with Unit 3 material tomorrow.



I continued the PowerPoint lecture called "Forging the New Republic". I should be able to finish off this lecture tomorrow. We'll start a documentary on the War of 1812 tomorrow. I gave you the War of 1812 reading package that you'll need for our four options debate on the War of 1812 next Wednesday. Your Latin American revolutionary leaders Facebook assignment is due tomorrow.



I finished off the PowerPoint on Ronald Reagan, and then started showing you the HBO documentary "Reagan". We'll finish off the documentary tomorrow, and then transition into the George H.W. Bush administration.

Tuesday, April 22, 2014

April 22

Sorry for the later post tonight...

We looked at America in the 1970s, specifically the presidencies of Gerald Ford and Jimmy Carter. I also started a lecture on Ronald Reagan, which I'll finish off tomorrow. We'll start a documentary on the Reagan presidency tomorrow too.

I started a new lecture today called "Forging the New Republic", which I will split up over three days. This PowerPoint presentation is already on the IB 20 wiki under Unit 6: Nation-Building and Challenges. I also talked a little bit about the election of 1800, and I showed you a short YouTube video that used quotes that John Adams and Thomas Jefferson said about each other, and re-imagining the quotes as material for attack ads.



Tomorrow, I'll talk a little bit about the Jefferson presidency and the emergence of political parties.

You wrote your Unit 2 Final Exam today. You'll get the results back tomorrow (please remind me to share them with you). You have your debate tomorrow on the following topic: "BIRT the 21st century will belong to China."

Thursday, April 17, 2014

April 17


You wrote your Unit 5 Test on the French Revolution and Napoleonic Age today, it took the entire period. Your Facebook assignment for your assigned Latin American revolutionary leader is due on Thursday, April 24th.



Most of today's class was spent preparing for next Wednesday's debate on the following topic: "Be it resolved that the 21st century will belong to China". You were split into the affirmative (PROP) and negative (OPP) sides in this debate. You had some time organize your thoughts and ideas, and take in some of the topics that I suggested you examine. I'll include some links to topics raised in class today in this post. To get a closer look at any of the infographics belowright click on the image and open in a new window.

Useful links to prepare for the debate:


 




Please remember that you have your Unit 2 Final Exam on Tuesday, April 22nd, please see the study guide here (scroll down to find it).



You wrote your Paper 3 on the U.S. Civil Rights Movement today in class. Please remember that you have Nixon assignment due on Tuesday, April 22nd.

Wednesday, April 16, 2014

April 16


You watched a video from the "China Rises" series today called "Getting Rich". As you watched the documentary you were to complete the film study sheet. You had a little bit of time to work on your Chapter 10 Questions for the remainder of class. Your Chapter 10 Questions are due tomorrow. Please remember that you have your Unit 2 Final Exam on Tuesday, April 22nd, please see the study guide here (scroll down to find it).



You had the entire class period to work on fake Facebook page for your assigned Latin American revolutionary leader. This assignment is due on Thursday, April 24th.

Please remember that you have your Unit 5 Test (The French Revolution and Napoleonic Age)tomorrow, please see the study guide here (scroll down to find it).


I finished with my lecture on the Nixon administration today. I also gave you an assignment that has four parts to it on the Nixon administration (and partly the LBJ administration as well) that is due on April 22nd. Please remember that you are writing your Paper 3 on the U.S. Civil Rights Movement tomorrow, please check out the comments/changes that I made to your group task pages on the IB 30/35 wiki.

Tuesday, April 15, 2014

April 15



We finished watching the PBS documentary from the American Experience series called "1964" today. Please remember that your film study sheet answers for "1964" are due tomorrow.


I moved on to 1968 for the most part today (and beyond), because we started looking at the Nixon administration. I'll continue my lecture on Richard Nixon tomorrow. Please remember that you have your Paper 3 on the U.S. Civil Rights Movement on Thursday, April 17th. Please check out the past IB exam questions below. Please review your IB command terms!

Here are some possible questions from previous IB Exams:
  • What were the successes of the civil rights movement from 1950-1964 and how were those successes obtained?
  • What were the successes and failures of the civil rights movement between 1954 and 1964?
  • Explain the development of the civil rights movement in the 1950’s.
  • To what degree had it achieved its objectives by the time of the March on Washington in 1963?
  • How were the philosophies and tactics of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and Malcolm X different and what caused those differences?
  • Why had the civil rights movement come to dominate national attention by 1964?
  • What impact did the Black Power Movement have on the Civil Rights Movement?
  • Compare and contrast the strategies of Martin Luther King and Malcolm X.
  • What factors contributed to the urban riots post 1964?
  • The civil rights movement had achieved most of its basic goals by 1965. To what degree do agree with that statement?
  • Overall would you characterize the civil rights movement as a unified or dis-unified movement?
  • Evaluate the effectiveness of the NAACP’s strategy from 1950-1968.



I gave you some class time to work on some textbook work from your History of the Americas textbook. You were to read pages 38-47, and complete the chart of page 44 which asked you to draw comparisons between Simon Bolivar, Jose de San Martin and George Washington. I also introduced the fake Facebook page assignment, and the long-term "shadow research" assignment on Latin American countries. Please remember that you are writing your French Revolution and Napoleonic Age test (the Unit 5 Test) on Thursday, April 17th. Please see the study guide here (scroll down to find it).



I finished off the "Foundations of Economic Globalization" PowerPoint lecture today. I also showed you a short video called "Global Economic Issues". I gave you the Unit 3 Worksheet today, your Chapter 10 Key Terms are due tomorrow. I will only be taking in the key terms tomorrow, not your answers to the Chapter 10 questions. One week from today you will be writing your Unit 2 Final Exam. Please see the study guide for this exam below.


This final exam is entirely multiple choice format. There are 57 multiple choice questions. This Unit 2 Final Exam will be on Tuesday, April 22nd. Please make sure that you study your key terms from Unit 2 (Chapters 6-9), as well as the three PowerPoint presentations from this unit:
  • "Historical Globalization and Imperialism"
  • "Legacies of Historical Globalization"
  • "Legacies of Historical Globalization in Canada"
Key Concepts from Unit 2:
  • world views
  • historical globalization
  • cultural contact
  • depopulation
  • the Silk Road
  • international trade
  • mercantilism
  • capitalism
  • free market
  • entrepreneurs
  • Adam Smith
  • exploitation
  • communism
  • industrialization
  • Industrial Revolution
  • cottage industries
  • imperialism
  • "new" imperialism
  • "old" imperialism
  • colony
  • protectorate
  • sphere of influence
  • paternalistic
  • Confederation
  • residential schools
  • the Oka crisis
  • First Nations Policing Policy
  • legacy
  • ethnocentrism
  • Eurocentrism
  • Scramble for Africa
  • Leopold II
  • migration
  • displacement
  • British East India Company
  • Queen Elizabeth I
  • the Raj
  • Mohandas Gandhi
  • swadeshi
  • deindustrialization
  • colonization
  • the Hundred Associates
  • Hudson’s Bay Company
  • Rupert’s Land
  • North West Company
  • Seven Years’ War
  • Proclamation of 1763
  • Quebec Act of 1774
  • the Numbered Treaties
  • the Indian Act
  • Status Indian
  • Non-Status Indian
  • multiculturalism
  • specific claims
  • comprehensive claims

Monday, April 14, 2014

April 14


We started a documentary from the PBS series "American Experience: 1964" today. I gave you a film study sheet to go along with the video that you need to complete for Wednesday. We'll continue this documentary tomorrow. Please remember that you are writing a Paper 3 on the Civil Rights Movement unit on Thursday.

Here are some possible questions from previous IB Exams:
  • What were the successes of the civil rights movement from 1950-1964 and how were those successes obtained?
  • What were the successes and failures of the civil rights movement between 1954 and 1964?
  • Explain the development of the civil rights movement in the 1950’s.
  • To what degree had it achieved its objectives by the time of the March on Washington in 1963?
  • How were the philosophies and tactics of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and Malcolm X different and what caused those differences?
  • Why had the civil rights movement come to dominate national attention by 1964?
  • What impact did the Black Power Movement have on the Civil Rights Movement?
  • Compare and contrast the strategies of Martin Luther King and Malcolm X.
  • What factors contributed to the urban riots post 1964?
  • The civil rights movement had achieved most of its basic goals by 1965. To what degree do agree with that statement?
  • Overall would you characterize the civil rights movement as a unified or dis-unified movement?
  • Evaluate the effectiveness of the NAACP’s strategy from 1950-1968.



I continued with the "Foundations of Economic Globalization" PowerPoint lecture today, I should be able to finish that lecture off tomorrow. On April 22nd, you will be writing your Unit 2 Final Exam, I will post the study on the blog tomorrow.



We started looking at Latin American revolutions today. The PowerPoint presentation that I went through today is on the IB 20 wiki under Unit 4: Independence Movements. Please remember to bring your History of the Americas textbook to class tomorrow. Please remember that you're writing your Unit 5 Test on Thursday, please see the study guide here (scroll down to find it). I'll do a session on Paper 1 tomorrow in tutorial.


Friday, April 11, 2014

April 11


You should have continued to discuss the presidency of LBJ today. You were given a summary of LBJ's domestic and foreign policies and were asked to rate him as a president in the following categories: public persuasion, crisis leadership, economic management, moral authority, international relations, administrative skills, relations with Congress, vision/setting an agenda, pursued equal justice for all, performance within the context of times. If you want to see how LBJ compares to other U.S. Presidents, you should check out this assessment from C-SPAN.


You should have started Unit 3 material today, "Foundations of Economic Globalization". I'll continue this lecture with you on Monday.


You completed the four options debate today. Make sure that you go through the Haitian Revolution booklet this weekend, I will be taking it in from you on Monday. A student from the class of 2013 put together excellent companion notes to this booklet. You should be able to find these notes on the IB 20 wiki under Collaborative Notes.


2. Other study tips:
  • know the causes of the French Revolution (short term, long term, economic, political, social, intellectual)
  • know the structure of French society during the Old Regime
  • know Napoleon's domestic policy
  • know Napoleon's foreign policy (Continental System in particular)
  • know key battles in the Napoleonic Wars (results of the Battle of Trafalgar, Russian campaign, the Battle of Leipzig, and the Battle of Waterloo)
  • know chronology of key events in the French Revolution
  • know the chronology of key events in the Napoleonic Age
  • know the key players at the Congress of Vienna (country and representatives)
  • what were the major decisions of the Congress? what were the guiding principles at the Congress of Vienna
  • know the 19th century political spectrum (please see the graphic below; values and characteristics of the various positions on the spectrum; what groups are represented on the various positions on the spectrum?; what phases/accomplishments of the French Revolution are represented on the spectrum?)
3. Study the 19th century political spectrum (click on the graphic to enlarge it)

Thursday, April 10, 2014

April 10


You should have watched the following YouTube video from the Crash Course World History series on the Haitian Revolution.



Most of today's class should have been spent preparing for tomorrow's four option debate. You should have met with other members of your option to prepare opening statements, and your arguments and counter-arguments.

You wrote your Unit 2 WRA I three source analysis assignment today, and it should have taken about 65 minutes to write. In the remaining class time, you should have read Chapter 10 in Perspectives on Globalization.


You wrote your U.S. Civil Rights Movement Test today. Please remember that your edited group task pages on the wiki need to be completed today.

Wednesday, April 09, 2014

April 9


You finished watching "Where the Spirit Lives" today, and wrote a quiz afterwards. Please remember that you have your Unit 2 WRA I tomorrow. Hopefully, you made good use of the sample WRA I today.

You started the Haitian Revolution today in class. Make sure that you read the Haiti Revolution booklets extremely well. Tomorrow you will be preparing for a four options debate that will take place on Friday. Please use your classtime effectively!

You should have examined the presidency of Lyndon B. Johnson today. You'll return to looking at LBJ's presidency on Friday as well. Please remember that you are writing your U.S. Civil Rights Movement Test tomorrow, please see the study guide here.

Tuesday, April 08, 2014

April 8


You watched the A & E Biography of Malcolm X today. After the video you should have split into your seven task groups. Each task group must put together a detailed essay outline for their signed Paper 3 essay question and post their work on the IB 30/35 wiki under Collaborative Notes. Your group's page must be edited by Thursday. Please don't forget to include historiography. Please remember that you have your U.S. Civil Rights Movement Test on Thursday, please see the study guide here.

You watched the A & E Biography of Napoleon Bonaparte today. While you watched this video you could have been filling in any missing gaps in the Napoleon Bonaparte timeline that I gave you yesterday. You should have also finished off the "The Napoleonic Age" PowerPoint presentation that I started yesterday.

You should have handed in your Chapter 9 Key Terms and Questions today. You should have watched Part 1 of "Where the Spirit Lives" today. You'll finish off this film tomorrow, and you will write a quiz on it as well.

Monday, April 07, 2014

April 7


You watched the A & E Biography of Martin Luther King today, and while you were watching this video you should have been taking notes. I also gave you a reading package today that will help you the group tasks tomorrow. Please remember that you are writing your U.S. Civil Rights Movement Test on Thursday, please see the study guide here.

You wrote your Chapter 7 Test today, which some of you took the entire period to write. Your Chapter 9 Key Terms and Questions are due tomorrow. Please remember that you are writing your Unit 2 WRA I on Thursday.

We finished off "The French Revolution" video today. In Friday's post last week I told you that you needed to finish off the French Revolution PowerPoint presentation on your own. I moved on to Napoleon Bonaparte today. While I was going through the "Napoleonic Age" PowerPoint, you needed to take notes on the timeline sheet and chart that were provided. I also talked about the political spectrum today.

Friday, April 04, 2014

April 4


I did a homework check on Episode 5 of "Eyes on the Prize" and on your Civil Rights Movement Assignment at the beginning of class. We watched Episode 6 of "Eyes on the Prize". You can find the questions that you must answer on the IB 30/35 wiki under "Civil Rights and Social Movements". I will do a homework check on Episode 6 on Monday. We'll be watching an A & E Biography of Martin Luther King on Monday, and you will also get a reading package on Monday as well on the U.S. Civil Rights Movement. On Thursday, April 10th, you'll be writing your U.S. Civil Rights Movement Test. I'm posting some review tips below. As I said in class today, today marks the anniversary of the assassination of Martin Luther King. If you'd like to read up on the assassination of MLK, you can check out the following link. I'm also posting a link to the Boston Globe, because they did a really nice retrospective of King's "I Have a Dream Speech".
This test has multiple formats: there is a matching section, a short answer section, and 25 multiple choice questions. You will have the entire class period to write it.

  • study the "Civil Rights Movement" PowerPoint (you can find an electronic copy on the IB 30/35 wiki under Civil Rights and Social Movements in the Americas section)
  • know key individuals in the U.S. Civil Rights Movement (Martin Luther King, James Farmer, John Lewis, Malcolm X, Stokely Carmichael, etc.)
  • know key organizations in the movement (NAACP, SCLC, SNCC, CORE, Black Panthers, Nation of Islam, and key players)
  • know key events of the civil rights movement (chronology/sequence of events)
  • know federal government responses to the civil rights movement from the Truman administration to the Johnson administration


I finished off the "Legacies of Historical Globalization in Canada" PowerPoint presentation today. You can find a copy of this presentation on the Social 10-1 wiki under Unit 2 Presentations. Your Chapter 9 Key Terms and Questions are due on Tuesday. On Monday, April 7th, you will be writing your Chapter 7 Test, please see the study guide below.



This quiz will have three sections: a matching section, a multiple choice section, and a short answer section.

1. Key Terms for Chapter 7 Test:
  • historical globalization
  • the Silk Road
  • international trade
  • the Columbian exchange (the grand exchange)
  • mercantilism
  • capitalism
  • free market
  • Adam Smith
  • entrepreneur
  • communism
  • industrialization
  • the Industrial Revolution
  • cottage system
  • physiocrats
  • exploitation
  • imperialism
  • Eurocentrism
  • ethnocentrism
  • European imperialism
  • "old" imperialism
  • "new" imperialism
  • colony
  • protectorate
  • sphere of influence

2. Study the Questions for Inquiry from Chapter 7 (be able to answer these questions using case studies and examples that we have covered in class):

  • What were the beginnings of global trading networks?
  • What values are associated with capitalism?
  • Whose values did industrialization effect?
  • Why did England industrialize before other European powers?
  • What were some of the effects of the Industrial Revolution?
  • In what ways did imperialism benefit one people over another?

I collected Part A and C of your IA today. We didn't quite finish off History Channel's documentary "The French Revolution". I would recommend that you examine the rest of the "French Revolution" PowerPoint presentation from the IB 20 wiki. I probably won't have a chance to cover the rest of this lecture on Monday, since we have to move on to Napoleon next week.

Thursday, April 03, 2014

April 3


I continued my lecture on the French Revolution, which I should be able to finish off tomorrow. We started a documentary from the History Channel today called "The French Revolution". We'll try to finish off the documentary tomorrow as well. Be prepared for a current events quiz tomorrow. Please remember that Part A and Part C of your IA is due tomorrow.



I started a PowerPoint lecture called "The Legacies of Historical Globalization in Canada" today, which I'll finish off tomorrow. I gave you some time to work on your Chapter 8 Key Terms and Questions (or your Chapter 9 work). Your Chapter 8 Key Terms and Questions are due tomorrow. I did a homework check on "Tools of Exploitation" today. I gave back your Chapter 7 work today. Please remember that your Chapter 7 Test is on Monday, April 7th.


This quiz will have three sections: a matching section, a multiple choice section, and a short answer section.

1. Key Terms for Chapter 7 Test:
  • historical globalization
  • the Silk Road
  • international trade
  • the Columbian exchange (the grand exchange)
  • mercantilism
  • capitalism
  • free market
  • Adam Smith
  • entrepreneur
  • communism
  • industrialization
  • the Industrial Revolution
  • cottage system
  • physiocrats
  • exploitation
  • imperialism
  • Eurocentrism
  • ethnocentrism
  • European imperialism
  • "old" imperialism
  • "new" imperialism
  • colony
  • protectorate
  • sphere of influence

2. Study the Questions for Inquiry from Chapter 7 (be able to answer these questions using case studies and examples that we have covered in class):

  • What were the beginnings of global trading networks?
  • What values are associated with capitalism?
  • Whose values did industrialization effect?
  • Why did England industrialize before other European powers?
  • What were some of the effects of the Industrial Revolution?
  • In what ways did imperialism benefit one people over another?


We watched Episode 5 of Eyes on the Prize called "Mississippi: Is This America? (1962-1964)". I did a homework check on Episode 4 material, and returned some of the earlier Eyes on the Prize worksheets. Your Civil Rights Movement Assignment is due tomorrow.

Wednesday, April 02, 2014

April 2


I finished off "Tools of Exploitation" today, your film study for this sheet is due tomorrow. I also finished off the "Legacies of Historical Globalization" PowerPoint lecture today. You had some time to work on your Chapter 8 work. Your Chapter 8 Key Terms and Questions are due on Friday. Please remember that you have your Chapter 7 Test on Monday, April 7th.


This quiz will have three sections: a matching section, a multiple choice section, and a short answer section.

1. Key Terms for Chapter 7 Test:
  • historical globalization
  • the Silk Road
  • international trade
  • the Columbian exchange (the grand exchange)
  • mercantilism
  • capitalism
  • free market
  • Adam Smith
  • entrepreneur
  • communism
  • industrialization
  • the Industrial Revolution
  • cottage system
  • physiocrats
  • exploitation
  • imperialism
  • Eurocentrism
  • ethnocentrism
  • European imperialism
  • "old" imperialism
  • "new" imperialism
  • colony
  • protectorate
  • sphere of influence

2. Study the Questions for Inquiry from Chapter 7 (be able to answer these questions using case studies and examples that we have covered in class):

  • What were the beginnings of global trading networks?
  • What values are associated with capitalism?
  • Whose values did industrialization effect?
  • Why did England industrialize before other European powers?
  • What were some of the effects of the Industrial Revolution?
  • In what ways did imperialism benefit one people over another?

You wrote your American Revolution Quiz for about 30 minutes today. We then switched gears and began our examination of the French Revolution. I will continue with my lecture tomorrow.

I did a homework check on Episode 3 from Eyes on the Prize today. We watched Episode 4 "No Easy Walk (1961-963)". The Episode 4 questions are due tomorrow.

Tuesday, April 01, 2014

April 1


I played a little April Fool's joke on you about a current events quiz at the beginning of class, but be forewarned, we haven't had one in a while, and you're overdue. We watched Episode 3 of Eyes on Prize today, called "Ain't Scared of Your Jails (1960-1961)". This episode focused on youth involvement in the civil rights movement, including lunch counter sit-ins and the freedom rides. Please remember that your Civil Rights Assignment is due on Friday, April 4th.


Most of today's class was spent writing a Paper 1 on the Independence Movements unit. Tomorrow, you will be writing an American Revolution Quiz (30 multiple choice questions), and then we'll shift our focus back to Europe to cover the French Revolution.



I started a PowerPoint lecture called "Legacies of Historical Globalization", which I didn't finish, because we moved on to a documentary the PBS series the Africans. The episode that I showed was called "Tools of Exploitation". We will finish off the video and the film study sheet tomorrow, and we'll also finish off the PowerPoint lecture too. I did a homework check on the Chapter 7 Key Terms and Questions today. Please remember that you have your Chapter 7 Test on Monday, April 7th. Please see the study guide below.



This quiz will have three sections: a matching section, a multiple choice section, and a short answer section.

1. Key Terms for Chapter 7 Test:
  • historical globalization
  • the Silk Road
  • international trade
  • the Columbian exchange (the grand exchange)
  • mercantilism
  • capitalism
  • free market
  • Adam Smith
  • entrepreneur
  • communism
  • industrialization
  • the Industrial Revolution
  • cottage system
  • physiocrats
  • exploitation
  • imperialism
  • Eurocentrism
  • ethnocentrism
  • European imperialism
  • "old" imperialism
  • "new" imperialism
  • colony
  • protectorate
  • sphere of influence

2. Study the Questions for Inquiry from Chapter 7 (be able to answer these questions using case studies and examples that we have covered in class):

  • What were the beginnings of global trading networks?
  • What values are associated with capitalism?
  • Whose values did industrialization effect?
  • Why did England industrialize before other European powers?
  • What were some of the effects of the Industrial Revolution?
  • In what ways did imperialism benefit one people over another?