Thursday, May 31, 2012

May 31

You wrote your Paper 2 on Authoritarian and Single-Party States today in class. For your IB Exam next year, you'll have to be able to write this type of essay in 45 minutes. After the Paper 2 exam, we started watching a video called "Understanding Canadian Government". We'll continue with this video on Monday. Enjoy your long weekend!
You wrote your Economics Final Exam today, and the results were very good! You'll learn how you did on Monday. For this weekend make sure that you keep studying Unit 3 material. Check the wiki for Unit 3 materials (PowerPoints and handouts). Also on the wiki please check out the section entitled Diploma Exam Review. I put a Social 30-1 Diploma Exam Study Guide there (it's about 9 pages) and a detailed chart that compares the old Social 30 essay prompts to the new Social 30-1 essay prompt. I have a theory that they are recycling old prompts for the quotes that appear in the new 30-1 prompts. It's worth a look anyway. You will be writing more "weekly quizzes" next week along with a Political Systems Exam and a Trial Diploma Exam.

The text-based source for the WRA II is written "in-house" by test-makers in Edmonton. In other words, they don't quote famous people like Aristotle, Kennedy, Gorbachev or Reagan. The text-based source would look something like this:

  • "Rights and freedoms are essential to a democracy; however, there may be times when a temporary suspension of rights and freedoms is necessary to guarantee the preservation of democracy."   (January 2010 WRA II essay prompt)
  • "No country should seek to extend its policy over any other country or people; rather, every country should be left free to pursue its own goals. Every country should be unrestricted, secure, and confident in pursuing these goals, regardless of the country’s size or strength." (January 2011, WRA II essay prompt)
  • "Society achieves its finest expression through the self-interest and freedom of individuals. When we adopt these principles, we will lessen the need for government to interfere in our lives." (January 2012, WRA II essay prompt)
Remember, the essay question itself NEVER changes from semester to semester, the text-based source does. The essay question is always: To what extent should we embrace the ideological perspectives in the source?

I will see you at the Graduation ceremony tomorrow, and the banquet as well. Please be safe on Friday!

Please bring a photo of yourself to class next week. I'm going to start making a keepsake book for my IB classes from year to year, so you get to be the first group in it! We'll take a class photo next week so I can put that in the book too.

Tuesday, May 29, 2012

May 29

We continued looking at the transition from classical liberalism to modern liberalism. We looked at the development of welfare capitalism, the welfare state and how the Great Depression contributed to the development of modern liberalism. We also reviewed the boom and bust cycle, Keynesian economics (demand-side economics) and supply economics and how they each respond to a recession. Make sure that you keep up with your review of the Unit 2 PowerPoints and handouts, which are all on the wiki. Tomorrow we'll be looking at a command economy, so if you want to get a bit ahead, make sure that you have reviewed the handouts dealing with the command economy and the Soviet economy in particular. On Thursday, you have your Economic Systems Exam, so here is the study guide:

This is a comprehensive exam that covers all of the major economic systems: market economy, mixed economy, and command economy. It is 70 multiple choice questions. This exam will be administered on Thursday, May 31st.
  • study the applicable PowerPoint presentations that I have been posted on the wiki under Unit 2
  • focus on the Soviet Union, and left-wing of economic spectrum (command economy
  • please see the summary notes from the Ideologies textbook: Chapter 7 (Private Enterprise) on the wiki
  • supply-side economics
  • boom and bust cycle/business cycle
  • laws of supply and demand, Adam Smith, invisible hand, market forces
    self-interest, consumer sovereignty, competition, private ownership, profit motive
  • basic economic problems/questions
  • advantages/disadvantages of the market economy
  • causes of the Great Depression
  • FDR and the New Deal
  • understand Democratic Socialism in Sweden (indicative planning, "cradle to the grave" economics)
  • characteristics of a mixed economy
  • nationalization
  • privatization
  • democratic socialism
  • welfare capitalism
  • Keynesian economics
  • the business cycle and fiscal and monetary policies (study all of the notes I gave you)
  • demand-side economics
  • neo-conservatives
  • monetarism
  • trickle down economics
  • supply-side economics
  • Thatcherism and Reaganomics
  • Milton Friedman
  • Friedrich Hayek
  • how Keynesian economics deals with a recession (remember "the percolator": increase circulation of money reducing taxes, increase government spending on "make work" projects, and reduce interest rates, which according to Keynesian economics is going increase demand for goods and services and lead to more money circulating in the economy)
  • how supply-side economics deals with a recession (remember "trickle down coffee maker": government should stimulate the goods and services sector of the economy by reducing corporate and personal taxes, eventually benefits will "trickle down" to the middle class and working class, make connections between supply-side economics and laissez faire economics/classical liberalism)
  • advantages and disadvantages of a mixed economy
  • neo-conservative criticism of government intervention
  • characteristics of a centrally planned economy
  • advantages and disadvantages of a centrally planned economy
  • Marx notes (sent by e-mail)
  • Lenin notes (sent by e-mail)
  • establishment of the Soviet Union
  • Soviet economic system (top-down decision-making process)
  • Lenin's War Communism and the New Economic Policy
  • "Stalin and the Modernization of Russia"
  • Stalin notes (on the wiki)
  • "Changes to Soviet Society After Stalin" notes (this bridges the gap between Stalin and Gorbachev, this is on the wiki)
  • Gorbachev to Collapse Notes (on the wiki)

I started examining American government today. I emphasized the structure of the presidential system, the terms of office for Senators, Congressmen and the President as well as the electoral college system. We'll continue this tomorrow and then transition into the Canadian government.

I'm going to give you a little advice for writing your Paper 2 on Thursday. Some of this advice applies to the actual Paper 2 Exam that you will be writing in May 2013. The actual Paper 2 Exam consists of five topics, we'll deal with three of them over the course of this semester, and next year. The topics that we cover are Topic 1: Causes, Practices and Effects of War, Topic 3: Authoritarian and Single-Party States, and Topic 5: The Cold War. We'll deal with Topic 1 and Topic 5 next year. The Paper 2 that you write on Thursday deals only with Authoritarian and Single-Party States. On the actual Paper 2 Exam, each of the five topics will have six questions, and you will have to answer two of them. For Thursday's Paper 2 you just have to answer one of the questions.

  • For each topic on the Paper 2 Exam, three out of the six questions will be 'named' questions. This means that in Topic 3, three of the questions will refer to particular states or leaders. (ex. Analyze the methods used by either Castro or Mao to maintain his position as the ruler of a single-party state.)
  • For each topic on the Paper 2 Exam, two out of the six will be 'open-ended' or general questions. This means you can choose any suitable example that you have studied. (ex. Examine how and why one leader of a single-party state was able to make a successful bid for power.)
  • For each topic on the Paper 2 Exam, one out of the six will ask about 'social, economic or gender issues'. (ex. Discuss the role and status of women in two single-party states, each chosen from a different region.)
Make sure that you know what your IB command terms mean. Please check your IB Skills Handbook for a list of IB command terms (ex. analyze, compare and contrast, discuss, evaluate, examine, to what extent)

For the upcoming Paper 2 on Thursday, make sure that you review Hitler and Stalin. I have posted information on Juan Peron, and I am still working Mao Zedong, but I may not have it up on the wiki in time for this exam. I will continue to post these case studies though.

The themes that you should study for Topic 3 are as follows:

Origins and nature of authoritarian and single-party states
This theme asks you to look at the rise to power of authoritarian and single-party state leaders or the emergence of authoritarian or single-party states. You need to consider what kind of circumstances made it possible for this to happen and what kinds of methods were used by the leader to take power.

Establishment of authoritarian and single-party states
This theme asks you to look at the leader or the state once power has been assumed and other political parties or groups have been suppressed. You need to consider how power is maintained, probably through the use of popular policies and/or terror.

Domestic policies and impact
This theme asks you to look at the way the state is actually structured and what kind of policies are carried out. You need to consider what kind of programme is put into practice and how economic and social policies are created and implemented. You will also need to know something about the role of women, attitudes towards religion and the kind of culture that developed inside the state.

Other pieces of advice:
  • choose your question carefully
  • on the actual Paper 2 Exam, you'll only have about 45 minutes to write each answer (remember you answer two questions for a 90 minute exam)
  • make sure that you do a quick plan for your essay (if it's a compare and contrast question, set up a chart with similarities that two leaders had in common, and their differences in the other column)
Do's:
  • Do read the question very carefully and make sure that you can answer it. If a specific time period is mentioned, do you have enough material to cover it all? If the question asks about social and economic policies, do you know enough about both?
  • Do answer the question that is asked on the exam paper and not a similar one you prepared earlier!
  • Do plan your answer and include this plan on your exam answer sheets.
  • Do begin with an introduction and always refer to the question in the introduction.
  • Do define any key words such as 'totalitarian' or 'authoritarian' if the question mentions these.
  • Do use a comparative structure if the question asks you to compare and contrast.
  • Do include DATES! When you are writing about why something happens, you will usually need to refer to what came before (cause and effect), and so knowing the order in which events happen is very important.
  • Do refer to the question in each paragraph, to make sure that your answer stays focused.
  • Do finish with a conclusion that sums up your arguments.
  • Do include some reference to different historical interpretations, if this is appropriate.
Don'ts:
  • Don't write down everything you know about a topic; you need to select only relevant material.
  • Don't leave out facts and dates. Your arguments need to be supported, so saying that Castro used guerrilla tactics to come to power is fine, but you need to support this statement with evidence of how he did this.
  • Don't just list what historians say about a topic; use historiography to support your arguments not replace them.
  • Don't use quotations to replace your arguments. If you use quotations, explain why and link them to your arguments.
  • Don't use 'I think ... ' or 'In my opinion ... ' but instead write, 'It is clear that..,' or 'Given the evidence. it can be seen that., .' Try to keep an 'academic' tone to your writing.
Introductions and conclusions - don't neglect these!

Introduction

There is no formula for a good introduction. While some students will state very clearly how they will structure their answers, others may simply give some relevant background and their thoughts on the question. Examiners will want to know that you have understood the question and have grasped its implications. Think of it as a 'first impression', leading the examiner to think 'Good, they are on the right track'. Also, if you are answering an 'openended' question that may, for example, ask about the rise to power of a leader, then you can state here what time period you will focus on. In the case of Nasser, for instance. would you begin in 1952 or 1948 or earlier? Also, are there terms that need to be defined? If so, it is a good idea to do this in the introduction.

Conclusion
Here is your chance to make a 'lasting impression'. You will need to summarize your arguments concisely, but not by repeating them one by one, this is tedious add much to the answer. If you have a nice quotation that is relevant (make sure it is!) and sums up your argument, then use it in the conclusion. It may spark the marker's interest and leave a good impression.

Friday, May 25, 2012

May 25

You wrote your Unit 1 Final Exam today, which took most of the class period. Over this weekend you should start looking at Unit 2 material. During a regular Social 30-1 course semester it takes a couple of months to complete it. You have a lot of work ahead of you! Please visit the Unit 2 section on the wiki, and go through the PowerPoints that I have placed there, in the order in which I have them on the wiki, which is as follows:
  • The Development of Classical Liberalism
  • Responding to Classical Liberalism
  • The Evolution of Modern Liberalism
  • 20th Century Rejections of Liberalism
There are also other handouts that I use in a regular Social 30-1 course in that section of the wiki as well. I will post the Unit 2 Prezi in this section of the wiki this weekend. You have an Economics Systems Exam on Thursday of next week. A study guide will be posted here on the blog.

We watched the film "Genocide" today in class, which took most of the period. Make sure that you look at the historiography of Stalin and Hitler that we have on the wiki this weekend. Please remember that you have a Paper 2 on Thursday of next week. Historiographical understanding is very important in both Paper 2 and Paper 3 essays. Don't just "name drop" historians in your essays! Understand the historical debate that has taken place regarding these dictator's rise to power, how they consolidated power, and their domestic and foreign policies. Make sure that you view the Paper 2 section on the wiki for other helpful tips.

Thursday, May 24, 2012

May 24

We finished watching "The Fatal Attraction of Adolf Hitler" today in class. We'll be putting a historiography of Hitler article up on the wiki tonight. I'm still working on some other case study articles for you on Peron and Castro as well. If you are a Diploma student, don't forget that you have a Extended Essay meeting tomorrow after school in Room 121.
If you haven't complete the computer tutorial in the D2L shell already, please make sure that you do so tonight!

You wrote a quiz for the first part of today's class. You'll get the results back tomorrow. Please remember that you have your Unit 1 Final Exam tomorrow. The study guide can be found here. With this exam it will force you to know only understand the key concepts and ideas of Unit 1, but also use your application and analysis skills too. I also gave you a package on how to write the WRA I and WRA II assignments that you need to be able to do for Part A of your Diploma Exam. I didn't get through the WRA II "Recipe for Success" handout. If you missed class today, get these handouts from me tomorrow. Read  over the "Recipe for Success" tonight, and ask me any questions that you might have tomorrow. You might also want to check out Student Writing Samples from past Diploma Exams to see how the assignments are marked, that can be found here (it's the January 2010 Part A of the Diploma). Here's January 2011 and here's the January 2012 version of Part A of the Diploma Exam.

Wednesday, May 23, 2012

May 23

I delivered a little bit of a PowerPoint presentation today on Adolf Hitler and Nazi Germany today. This PowerPoint presentation has already been posted on the wiki under Unit 7 Dictatorships. We then started watching the A & E Biography on Hitler called "The Fatal Attraction of Adolf Hitler". We will finish this video tomorrow in class.
We have about 12 class periods to push through the entire Social 30-1 curriculum. We will be working on at an accelerated pace that will require you to work, reading and studying outside of class time. I went through a PowerPoint lecture today called "Introducing Government". This PowerPoint presentation is already on the wiki under Social Studies 30-1 Unit 1. It is recommended that you print off a hard copy of this PowerPoint (4-6 slides per page) as well as the "Identity and Ideology" PowerPoint. If you have any questions about this second PowerPoint presentation please let me know tomorrow. There are also handouts in the Unit 1 section of the wiki on individualism and collectivism that you should look at as well. If you're still having issues keeping the various political and economic spectrums straight there is a PDF file from the Black Gold School District called Ideology Notes that is recommended reading.

You will have a quiz tomorrow on the economic and political spectrums tomorrow, as well as the principles of individualism and collectivism. On Friday, you will be writing your Unit 1 Final Exam. Please see the study guide below.

  • Study the Ideology Notes (Black Gold School District PDF file)
  • Study the 19th Century and 20th Century political spectrums
  • Study the political-economic grid
  • Know the values and ideas associated with the various ideologies
  • Study the Principles of Individualism and Collectivism
  • There will be questions that review material on communism and fascism (which you were taught last year)



Tuesday, May 22, 2012

May 22

We watched an A & E Biography video today called "Joseph Stalin: Red Terror", which took most of the class period. We'll start to transition into the rise of fascism and Hitler in Germany this week. I have updated the wiki as well. I've added a handout that compares communism and fascism. As well, I've posted a PowerPoint presentation on the wiki under Unit 7 Dictatorships on Adolf Hitler and the Nazi Party. I won't deliver this lecture in class, however it contains a tremendous amount of information and it is highly recommended that you print it off and study from it.

Here's a couple of announcements:

  • For Diploma students, there's an Extended Essay meeting this Friday (May 25th) after school in Room 121.
  • For all IB 20 students: Paper 2, Thursday May 31st in class.

Tuesday, May 15, 2012

May 15

We covered the Russian Revolution today by watching a video from the World Revolutions series. We also watched a video on Stalin's Five Year Plans and the modernization of Russia from the BBC 20th Century History series called "Stalin and the Modernization of Russia". I then started to continue with last week's PowerPoint presentation called "Joseph Stalin and the USSR". This PowerPoint has been posted on the IB 20 wiki under Unit 7 Dictatorships. It is STRONGLY recommended that you either print off a hard copy of this lecture (6 slides per page) or at least finish reading it and taking notes from it. It is extremely important! The material that we are covering now is on your IB 30/35 exams, specifically Paper 2 Topic 3: Authoritarian and Single-Party States. Next week, we'll watch an A & E Biography of Stalin before moving on to our next case study: Hitler's Nazi Germany.

Tuesday, May 08, 2012

May 8

I started a lecture on Stalin and the USSR which I will continue next week. Mr. Johnson has posted a reading on the wiki which will be due next time we meet. You can find in in the Unit 7 Dictatorships section on the IB 20 wiki. Please complete the work sections on page 7 and 9 in this reading booklet.

Tuesday, May 01, 2012

May 1

I continued right where I left off today with the 20th Century Political Spectrum. I went through the economic-political grid as well today, as well as lectured on other related topics related to non-democratic systems and totalitarianism. I will be posting copies of today's handouts on the wiki under Unit 7. If you missed class today, you should probably get the notes from a classmate, since this topic applies to your IB Exams net year (Paper 2 specifically) and your Alberta Diploma Exam next June.

Here is your class schedule for the coming weeks during IB Exams:
  • Monday, May 7th
  • Tuesday, May 8th
  • Tuesday, May 15th
  • Tuesday, May 22nd
Additionally, you will have a meeting about your Internal Assessment (IA) on Friday, May 11th at 10:50 a.m. , a regular Period 3. Also, you will have an Extended Essay (EE) meeting on Friday, May 18th after your Biology SL Paper 3 exam.