Social 10-1
You wrote your Chapter 7 Test today, hopefully you'll get the results back this week. Please remember that you're writing your Unit 2 WRA I in the Blue Lab in the Library tomorrow, so please go there directly.
Social 20-1
We looked at the aftermath of the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor today. The focus was mainly on the internment of Japanese-Canadians in WWII. There's a PowerPoint lecture in your Social 20-1 coursebook that I recommend you read over, and I showed a documentary today called "Tides of War". The Chapter 5-6 Test is on Thursday, April 5th (tomorrow)CHAPTER 5-6 TEST STUDY GUIDE:
1. Study the following key concepts/key people/key events:- Archduke Franz Ferdinand
- Triple Alliance
- Triple Entente
- the Black Hand
- Gavrillo Princip
- Tsar Nicholas II
- Kaiser Wilhelm II
- Battle of Tannenberg
- the Schlieffen Plan
- Plan 17
- General von Moltke
- Battle of the Marne
- Alsace and Lorraine
- total war
- Battle of Verdun
- Battle of the Somme
- the Brusilov Offensive
- sinking of the Lusitania
- the Zimmermann Telegram
- Treaty of Brest-Litovsk
- General Ludendorff
- Friedrich Ebert
- Paris Peace Conference
- David Lloyd George
- Woodrow Wilson
- Fourteen Points
- Georges Clemenceau
- Vittorio Orlando
- League of Nations
- plebiscites
- reparations
- collective security
- war debts
- Treaty of Versailles
- "war guilt clause"
- "Manchurian Incident"
- Greater East Asian Co-Prosperity Sphere
- expansionism
- Hirohito
- Hideki Tojo
- Benito Mussolini
- Adolf Hitler
- Kristallnacht
- the Nuremberg Laws
- any of the key concepts or key events in the Interwar Years booklet is also testable material
2. Look at what I have emphasized in class (Causes of WWI, nature of WWI, armistice, Paris Peace Conference, Treaty of Versailles, the Interwar Years, rise of ultranationalism in Germany, Italy and Japan): this will be the emphasis of the test, there are several topics in your textbook Chapters 5-6 that WILL NOT be on this test, especially if it is event that occurs AFTER the events listed above (so things like Canada's role in Afghanistan, and Arctic sovereignty won't be on the test)
3. Focus your review on the following big concepts:
- MAIN Causes of World War I
- the nature of World War I (trench warfare, stalemate, total war)
- the Paris Peace Conference (national interests in negotiating the treaties)
- Woodrow Wilson's Fourteen Points (links on the blog, under Social 20-1 Links, CHECK IT OUT!!)
- the Treaty of Versailles (terms of the Treaty of Versailles: GARGLe)
- Hitler's violation of the Treaty of Versailles (chronology; order of events that violated the terms of the Treaty of Versailles)
- the Interwar Years (key events, study your Interwar Years notes from the Unit 2 study booklet)
- the League of Nations (FAILURe of the League of Nations)
- ultranationalism in Germany, Japan and Italy
- failure of collective security (League of Nations) in Manchuria, Abyssinia, and the Spanish Civil War
- appeasement of Adolf Hitler (Munich Conference, Neville Chamberlain, a foreign policy response to ultranationalism)
IB 30/35
It is very timely that we are talking about the U.S. civil rights movement right now, since today marks the 50th anniversary of the assassination of Martin Luther King. Please have a look at the YouTube video that I have posted below. I finished off the PowerPoint lecture today that I started yesterday, and even had time to give you an idea of how difficult literacy tests were by having you write one in 10 minutes that was used in Louisiana to deny African-Americans to right to register to vote. We'll start the PBS documentary series "Eyes on the Prize" tomorrow.
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