IB 30/35
I showed you the Biography of Malcolm X today. We also did some document analysis as well.U.S. Civil Rights Movement Test Study Guide:
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
Social 10-1
I finished off the lecture on "The Foundations of Economic Globalization" today. I gave you the Unit 3 Worksheet today as well. Your Chapter 10 Key Terms are due tomorrow. One week from today, you'll be writing the Unit 2 Final Exam (please see the study guide below).
below.
Social 10-1 Unit 2 Final Exam Study Guide:
This final exam is entirely multiple choice format. There are 57 multiple choice questions. This Unit 2 Final Exam will be on Monday, April 18th. 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
Social 30-1
We examined the origins of the Cold War today. I delivered part of a PowerPoint presentation that covered the origins of the Cold War. I also paid special attention to the WWII conferences where the seeds of the Cold War were planted.
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