Tuesday, September 16, 2014

September 16


You wrote your Unit 1 WRA II Essay today. You had the entire period to complete it, and hopefully I'll be reading some quality essays. Your Unit 1 Final Exam is tomorrow, please see the study guide below. I also recommend going through the Unit 1 Review Prezi, you can find this prezi at the bottom of the Unit 1 page on the wiki.




The Unit 1 Final is a 55 question multiple choice test. It will be written on Wednesday, September 17th. Make sure that you study the following:
  • Chapter 1 and 2 Key Terms (please see the Chapter 1-2 Test Study Guide for a list of terms
  • Study the Ideology Notes (Black Gold School District PDF file, on the Social 30-1 wiki, and in your study booklets, pages 12-17)
  • Review Hobbes, Locke and Rousseau (view of the nature of human beings, how society should be organized, people's role in society; notes on page 3 of your study booklet)
  • Study the 19th Century Political Spectrum
  • Study the 20th Century Political spectrum
  • Study the political-economic grid
  • Know the values and ideas associated with the various ideologies (on the 19th century and 20th century spectrums)
  • Study the Individualism and Collectivism booklet that is in your study booklets (pages 4-7)
  • you need to be able to apply your knowledge and understanding of these concepts/ideas
  • there are a lot of source-based questions on this exam! (there are references to Nazi Germany, the USSR)


You watched a video from the U.S. History series called "The Era of Colonization". While you were watching this video, you should have been taking notes on the topics covered. If you missed today's class, you need to get these notes from a classmate. I also wen through some mnemonic devices to remember the Thirteen Colonies: Never Make Cynthia Run (New England colonies), New Pennies New Dimes (Mid-Atlantic or Middle colonies), My Vehicle Needs Some Gas (Southern colonies). I also assigned you duotangs with some supplementary material from the textbook The United States and Its People. The pages in the duotang cover the colonial period of American history. I also assigned you a colony to research for your Thirteen Colonies presentations. Please come to Room 111 tomorrow, and we'll go down to the Library together to start the research on your assigned colony. Please make sure that you acquaint yourself with the information that students need to take down to complete their charts.
This is a short week (it's a system-wide PD day on Friday), so we're going to revisit our current issues topic on Thursday, namely the U.S. foreign policy response to ISIS. Please look for news articles, political cartoons on the topic. For example, I found the following cartoon:




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