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Advance Placement United States History Course Syllabus Course Description Advanced Placement United States History is a challenging course that is designed to provide a college-level experience and preparation for the AP Exam. An emphasis will be placed on essay writing, analysis of historical documents, mastering of content information, critical and evaluative cognitive skills, and aptitude in multiple-choice exams. Both chronological and thematic approaches are used to discuss and analyze the social, political, economic, and diplomatic aspects of United States history. Topics include life and thought in Pre-Columbian American, colonial America, revolutionary ideology, constitutional development, Jeffersonian and Jacksonian democracy, and nineteenth-century reform movements. Other topics include the Civil War and Reconstruction, Manifest Destiny, the Gilded Age, immigration, industrialism, Populism, Progressivism, World War I, the Jazz Age, the Great Depression, the New Deal, World War II, the Cold War, the post-Cold War era, and the United States at the beginning of the twenty-first century. This course fulfills the graduation requirement for American History. Passing the AP exam may result in college credit. You may also choose to take the SAT subject exam in U.S. History. Advanced Placement Exam Description The AP exam is given on Friday, May 08, 2015 at 8:00 A.M. and is approximately three hours and fifteen minutes long and has two parts – a 100 minute multiple choice/short-answer section and a 95-minute free response section. Each section is divided into two parts, as shown in the table below. Student performance on these four parts will be compiled and weighted to determine an AP exam score.
AP Exam For
At least one essay – in either the document-based question or long essay – examines long-term developments that span historical time periods. Coverage of the periods in the exam as a whole will reflect the approximate period weightings (page 4).
**There is a financial cost involved with taking the test. Fee waivers are limited and are available at a first come first serve basis to those who qualify.**
Section Question Type Number of Questions
Timing % of Total Exam Score
Part A: Multiple-choice questions
55 questions
55 minutes 40% I
(100 minutes) Part B: Short-answer questions
4 questions 45 minutes 20%
Part A: Document-based question (DBQ)
1 question 60 minutes 25% II
(95 minutes – only from 1607-
1980)
Part B: Long essay question
1 question (chosen from a pair)
35 minutes 15%
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In addition to the topics listed on the first page, this course will emphasize a series of key themes throughout the year. These themes have been determined by the College Board as essential to a comprehensive study of United States history. The themes in U.S. History encourage thought about the American past and to focus on change over time. Descriptions of each theme and its overarching questions are as follows: Thematic Learning Objectives in U.S. History:
Identity (ID) – The formation of both American national identity and group identities in U.S. history. Students should be able to explain how various identities, cultures, and values have been preserved or changed in different contexts of U.S. history, with special attention given to the formation of gender, class, racial, and ethnic identities. Students should be able to explain how these subidentities have interacted with each other and with larger conceptions of American national identity. o How and why have debates over American national identity changed over time? o How have gender, class, ethnic, religious, regional, and other group identities
changed in different eras? Work, Exchange, and Technology (WXT) – The development of American economies
based on agriculture, commerce, and manufacturing. Students should examine ways that different economic and labor systems, technological innovations, and government policies have shaped American society. Students should explore the lives of working people and the relationships among social classes, racial and ethnic groups, and men and women, including the availability of land and labor, national and international economic developments, and the role of government support and regulation. o How have changes in markets, transportation, and technology affected American
society from colonial times to the present day? o Why have different labor systems developed in British North America and the United
States, and how have they affected U.S. society? o How have debates over economic values and the role of government in the U.S.
economy affected politics, society, the economy, and the environment? Peopling (PEO) – This theme focuses on why and how the various people who moved
to, from, and within the United States adapted to the new social and physical environments. Students examine migration across borders and long distances, including the slave trade and internal migration, and how both newcomers and indigenous inhabitants transformed North America. The theme also illustrates how people responded when “boarders crossed them.” Students explore the ideas, beliefs, traditions, technologies, religions, and gender roles that migrants/immigrants and annexed peoples brought with them and the impact these factors had on both these peoples and on U.S. society. o Why have people migrated to, from and within North America? o How have changed in migration and population patterns affected American life?
Politics and Powers (POL) – Students should examine ongoing debates over the role of the state in the society and its potential as an active agent for change. This includes mechanisms for creating, implementing, or limiting participation in the political process and the resulting social effects, as well as the changing relationship among the branches of the federal government and among national, state, and local governments. Students should trace efforts to define or gain access to individual rights and citizenship and
APUSH Syllabus 2014-2015 Shar page 3 of 18
survey the evolutions of tensions between liberty and authority in different periods of U.S. history. o How and why have different political and social groups competed for influence over
society and government in what would become the United States? o How have Americans agreed on or argued over the values that guide the political
system as well as who is a part of the political process? America in the World (WOR) – In this theme, students should focus on the global
context in which the United States originated and developed as well as the influence of the United States on world affairs. Students should examine how various world actors (such as people, states, organizations, and companies) have competed for the territory and resources of the North American continent, influencing the development of both American and world societies and economies. Students should also investigate how American foreign policies and military actions have affected the rest of the world as well as social issues within the United States itself. o How have events in North America and the United States related to contemporary
developments in the rest of the world? o How have different factors influenced U.S. military, diplomatic, and economic
involvement in international affairs and foreign conflicts, both in North America and overseas?
Environment and Geography – Physical and Human (ENV) – This theme examines the roles of environment, geography, and climate in both constraining and shaping human actions. Students should analyze the interaction between the environment and Americans in their efforts to survive and thrive. Students should also explore efforts to interpret, preserve, manage, or exploit natural and man-made environments, as well as the historical contexts within which interactions with the environment have taken place. o How did interactions with natural environment shape the institutions and values of
various groups living on the North American continent? o How did economic and demographic changes affect the environment and lead to
debates over use and control of the environment and natural resources? Ideas, Beliefs, and Culture (CUL) – This theme explores the roles that ideas, beliefs,
social mores, and creative expressive have played in shaping the United States. Students should examine the development of aesthetic, moral, religious, scientific, and philosophical principles and consider how these principles have affected individual and group actions. Students should analyze the interactions between beliefs and communities, economic values, and political movements, including attempts to change American society to align it with specific ideals. o How and why have moral, philosophical, and cultural values changed in what would
become the United States? o How and why have changed in moral, philosophical, and cultural values affected U.S.
history?
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Historical Thinking Skills The AP U.S. History course seeks to apprentice students to the practice of history by explicitly stressing the development of historical thinking skills while learning about the past. Every AP Exam question will require a student to apply one of the historical thinking skills to one of the thematic learning objectives. Each of the four types of historical thinking skills below is defined and them followed by a state of the proficiency that students are expected to show in this skill on the AP Exam.
Skill Type Historical Thinking Skill
Proficient students should be able to…
1. Historical Causation
• Compare causes and/or effects, including between short- and long-term effects.
• Analyze and evaluate the interaction of multiple cause and/or effects.
• Assess historical contingency by distinguishing among coincidence, causation, and correlation, as well as critiquing existing interpretations of cause and effect.
2. Patterns of Continuity and Change Over Time
• Analyze and evaluate historical patterns of continuity and change over time.
• Connect patterns of continuity and change over time to larger historical processes or themes.
I. Chronological Reasoning
3. Periodization • Explain ways that historical events and processes can be organized within blocks of time.
• Analyze and evaluate competing models of periodization of U.S. history.
4. Comparison • Compare related historical developments and processes across place, time, and/or different societies or within one society.
• Explain and evaluate multiple and differing perspectives on a given historical phenomenon.
II. Comparison and
Contextualization
5. Contextualization
• Explain and evaluate ways in which specific historical phenomena, events, or processes connect to broader regional, national, or global processes occurring at the same time.
• Explain and evaluate ways in which a phenomenon, event, or process connects to other, similar historical phenomena across time and place.
III. Crafting Historical Arguments from Historical Evidence
6. Historical Argumentation
• Analyze commonly accepted historical arguments and explain how an argument has been constructed from historical evidence.
• Construct convincing interpretations through analysis of disparate, relevant historical evidence.
• Evaluate and synthesize conflicting historical evidence to construct persuasive historical arguments.
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7. Appropriate Use of Relevant Historical Evidence
• Analyze features of historical evidence such as audience, purpose, point of view, format, argument, limitations, and context germane to the evidence considered.
• Based on analysis and evaluation of historical evidence, make supportable inferences and draw appropriate conclusions.
8. Interpretation • Analyze diverse historical interpretations. • Evaluate how historians’ perspectives influence their
interpretations and how models of historical interpretation change over time.
IV. Historical Interpretation and Synthesis
9. Synthesis • Combine disparate, sometimes contradictory evidence from primary sources and secondary works in order to create a persuasive understanding of the past.
• Apply insights about the past to other historical contexts or circumstances, including the present.
Historical Periods The AP U.S. History course is structured around the investigation of course themes and key concepts in nine chronological periods. The following table shows the CollegeBoard’s weight for each time period:
Period Date Range Approximate Percentage of… Instructional
Time AP Exam
1 1491-1607 5% 5% 2 1607-1754 10% 3 1754-1800 12% 4 1800-1848 10% 5 1844-1877 13%
45%
6 1865-1898 13% 7 1890-1945 17% 8 1945-1980 15%
45%
9 1980-present 5% 5% Course Texts Kennedy, David M., Lizabeth Cohen, and Thomas Andrew Bailey. The American Pageant: a History of the American People. 14th ed., AP ed. Boston, MA: Wadsworth Cengage Learning, 2010. ISBN-10: 0-547-16662-1 ISBN-13:978-0-547-16662-9 Hoffman, Elizabeth C., Edward J. Blum, and Jon Gjerde, eds. Major Problems in American History, Volume I: To 1877, Documents and Essays, 3rd edition. Wadsworth/Cengage, 2011. ISBN-10: 0495915130 ISBN-13: 978-0495915133
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Hoffman, Elizabeth C., Edward J. Blum, and Jon Gjerde, eds. Major Problems in American History, Volume II: Since 1865, Documents and Essays, 3rd edition. Wadsworth/Cengage, 2012.ISBN-10: 1111343160 ISBN-13: 978-1111343163
Johnson, Michael P.. Reading the American past: Volume I: To 1877: selected historical documents. 5th ed. Boston: Bedford/St. Martin's, 2012. Print. ISBN-10: 0312564139 ISBN-13: 978-0312564131 Johnson, Michael P.. Reading the American past: Volume II: From 1865: selected historical documents. 5th ed. Boston: Bedford/St. Martin's, 2012. Print. ISBN-10: 0312563779 ISBN-13: 978-0312563776 Madaras, Larry, and James SoRelle. Taking Sides: Clashing Views in United States Hstory Volume 2 - Reconstruction to the Present. 15th ed. Vol. 2. New York: McGraw-Hill, 2013. Print. ISBN-10: 0312563779 ISBN-13: 978-0312563776 Newman, John J., and John M. Schmalbach. United States History: Preparing for the Advanced Placement Examination. New York, N.Y.: Amsco School Publications, 2010. ISBN 978-1-56765-660-2 Other Materials and Resources Other class materials include an assortment of power point presentations, videos, and handouts. The CollegeBoard Website http://apcentral.collegeboard.com My course Weebly Website http://www.mrsshar.weebly.com The American Pageant Textbook Site: contains chapter practice tests, flashcards, chronology exercises, chapter glossaries, maps & web links http://college.hmco.com/history/us/bailey/american_pageant/11e/students/index.html For Self-Grading Review Quizzes by Time Period: an incredible web site developed by a New York AP teacher: http://www.historyteacher.net/USQuizMainPage.htm Grading Scale: Grading Weight:
90-100% = A 80-89% = B 60-79% = C Below 60% = FAIL! You are on academic probation. Advisory, coaches, and parents are notified regarding tutoring. You will not receive credit towards high school
20% HW/Class work/Attendance/Quizzes/Accelerated Reading/Debate/Mock or Moot Trial/Website
80% A.P.U.S.H. Exam preparation: o Multiple Choice Questions: 40% of APUSH
prep (32% of total course grade) o Short-‐answer questions (20% of APUSH
prep (16% of total course grade) o Document-‐based questions 25% of APUSH
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graduation. You will not meet A-G requirements for four-year universities.
prep (20% of total course grade) o Long Essays 15% of APUSH prep (12% of
total course grade) APUSH Course Objectives Students must be able to use factual knowledge they have learned to critically analyze history. Students will prepare for and successfully pass the AP Exam. Various strategies will be used for this course. One of the strategies students will use is the acronym SPEDIG to analyze factual information and write their essays. SPEDIG is a strategy to remember aspects of the seven thematic learning objectives.
SOCIAL Identity (ID); Peopling (PEO), Beliefs, and Culture (CUL) POLITICAL Politics and Powers (POL) ECONOMIC Work and Exchange (WXT) DIPLOMATIC American in the World (WOR) INTELLECTUAL Technology (WXT); Ideas (CUL) GEOGRAPHY Environment and Geography – Physical and Human (ENV)
Thematic Learning Objectives (See pages 2&3).
Identity (ID) – Work, Exchange, and Technology (WXT) Peopling (PEO) – Politics and Powers (POL) America in the World (WOR) Environment and Geography – Physical and Human (ENV) Ideas, Beliefs, and Culture (CUL)
Students will also use the acronym S.O.A.P.P.S. to analyze documents. This will support the students’ skills in historical argumentation, and appropriate use of relevant historical evidence.
S What is the subject of the document? Summarize the main idea.
O What was the occasion? Where and when was it written? What is the historical context?
A Who was the intended audience? How would they have received the document?
P What was the purpose in writing the document? What did the writer hope to accomplish?
P Does the writer have a particular point of view? Why? Is there any obvious bias?
S Who is the speaker? How did their background and beliefs influence their writing?
Notes Students must outline chapters assigned for reading using the Cornell notes format.
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Reading Assignments, Exams, and Essays Reading Assignments must be completed prior to the class of the week. Reading assignments for each chapter include mandatory Cornell notes for each chapter. You must also complete a graphic organizer summarizing the main points of each unit using the acronym SPEDIG. At the conclusion of each unit, an assessment with a combination of multiple choice questions, short response questions, and/or Document Based Question Essay or Long Essay will follow. Students are expected to complete readings associated with Unit 1 and Unit 2 during the summer but there are no writing assignments during the summer.
Unit 1: Pre-Columbian America (Summer Reading + 1.5 Weeks)
(Time Period 1: 1491-1607) The American Pageant Chapters 1-2 (Two Chapters)
Thematic Learning Objectives: ID, WXT, PEO, POL, WOR, ENV, CUL
Week 1 & 2 (August 11 & August 18) - Class Overview, and class website. • Chapter 1 New World Beginnings (33,000 B.C.E.-‐1769 C.E.) -‐ Geology of the New World,
Pre-‐Columbian cultures, Europeans and Africans in the New World, early explorations, introduction of slavery, Spanish and French claims, the rise of mercantilism
• Chapter 2 The Planting of English America (1500-‐1733) -‐ English expansion, The Chesapeake and southern English colonies, ties with Caribbean economies, British mercantilism
Additional sources and assignments: Use S.O.A.P.P.S. to analyze the following documents and complete each activity that follows.
Reading the American past: Volume I: The Diario of Christopher Columbus’s First Voyage to America, 1492-1493
Reading the American past: Volume I: A Conquistador Arrives in Mexica, 1519-1520: Bernal Diáz del Castillo, The Conquest of New Spain, 1632
Reading the American past: Volume I: Cabeza de Vaca Describes His Captivity among Native Americans in Texas and the Southwest, 1528-1536
Map: Students create maps of the New World Thematic Learning Objectives: ENV How to Read Primary and Secondary Sources - Major Problems in American History,
Volume II: Since 1865, Documents and Essays Multiple Choice Exam with primary/secondary source analysis: photo of Algonquin Village,
The Oxford History of the American People by Samuel Eliot Morison, American Colonies by Alan Taylor
Short Answer Questions: Royal Order issued by the King of Spain and a portrait on the labor system for period 1. Thematic Learning Objectives: WOR, WXT
Activity: Spanish conquest in modern times: Trace the remnants of Spanish conquest by navigating the California Mission System and understanding the demographics of California: Historical Thinking Skill – Contextualization; Thematic Learning Objectives – ID, PEO
Time period summary – Create a graphic organize using SPEDIG. Make connections the thematic learning objectives. Use Historical Thinking Skill – Periodization
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Unit 2: Colonial America (Summer Reading +2.5 Weeks)
(Time Period 2: 1607-1754) The American Pageant Chapters 3-6 (Four Chapters)
Thematic Learning Objectives: ID, WXT, PEO, POL, WOR, ENV, CUL Week 3 & 4 (August 25 & September 1) - Review Unit 2.
• Chapter 3 Settling the Northern Colonies (1619-‐1700) -‐ New England and the Puritans, religious dissent, colonial politics and conflict with British authority, the middle colonies
• Chapter 4 American Life in the 17th Century (1607-‐1692) – Life in tobacco and rice colonies, African-‐American culture, colonial family life, dissent in New England and the Witch trials
• Chapter 5 Colonial Society on the Eve of the Revolution (1700-‐1755) – Immigration and demographic change, the Atlantic economy, the Great Awakening, education and culture, colonial politics.
• Chapter 6 The Duel for North America (1608-‐1763) – New France, Colonial involvement in British imperial wars, consequences of the French and Indian War and the Proclamation of 1763
Additional sources and assignments: Use S.O.A.P.P.S. to analyze the following documents and complete each activity that follows.
Reading the American past: Volume I: Richard Frethorne Describes Indentured Servitude in Virginia
Reading the American past: Volume I: Bacon’s Rebellion: Nathaniel Bacon, Declaration Reading the American past: Volume I: Pedro Naranjo Describes Pueblo Revolt Reading the American past: Volume I: The Arbella Sermon – John Winthrop, A Model of
Christian Charity, 1630 Reading the American past: Volume I: Wampanoag Grivances at the Outset of King Philip’s
War – John Easton Reading the American past: Volume I: A Provincial Government Enacts Legislation – The
Laws of Pennsylvania, 1682 Reading the American past: Volume I: A Moravian Missionary Interviews Slaves in the West
Indies, 1767-1768 Maps: Students study a map of the 13 original colonies Multiple Choice Exam with primary/secondary source analysis: Photo of the New Netherland
Colony, and excerpts from Peter Fontaine, Alan Brinkley Short Answer Questions: Compare and contrast passages from George Alsop and Gottlieb
Mittelberger on the labor system; Benjamin Franklin’s Join or Die political cartoon, King George and the Colonial Rebels political cartoon Historical Thinking Skill – Historical Causation; Thematic Learning Objectives – ID, WXT, WOR
Pre-writing Strategies and Long Essay Response – Using your analysis of this time period, complete a graphic organizer to compare and contrast the British, French, and Spanish imperial goals in North American between 1580 and 1763. (2011B) Historical Thinking Skill – Historical Causation; Thematic Learning Objectives – ENV, CUL
Pre-writing Strategies and DBQ: Compare and contrast the Chesapeake and New England Colonies – Using your analysis of this time period, synthesize the new information you cite
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from the primary and secondary sources in the DBQ to complete a graphic organizer for the DBQ. Then, write a thesis with an introductory paragraph. (1993 DBQ analysis on excerpts, a map, and charts;) Historical Thinking Skill – Historical Causation, Synthesis; Thematic Learning Objectives – ID, WXT, PEO, ENV, CUL
Time period summary – Create a graphic organize using SPEDIG. Make connections the thematic learning objectives. Use Historical Thinking Skill – Periodization
Unit 3: The Road to Revolution (4 Weeks) (Time Period 3: 1754-1800)
The American Pageant Chapters 7-10 (Four Chapters) Thematic Learning Objectives: ID, POL, ENV, CUL
Week 5 (September 8) - The American Pageant Chapter 7
• Chapter 7 The Road to Revolution (1763-‐1775) -‐ Roots of revolution and the role of mercantilism, end of benign neglect, failure of diplomacy, conflicts leading to revolution
Week 6 (September 15) - The American Pageant Chapter 8 • Chapter 8 American Secedes from the Empire (1775-‐1783) -‐ The American Revolution,
wartime diplomacy, life on the home front, women and the war, the impact of the war on the institution of slavery, Treaty of Paris
Week 7 (September 22) - The American Pageant Chapter 9 • Chapter 9, The Confederation and the Constitution (1776-‐1790) -‐ The Articles of
Confederation and the Constitution, the role of the Enlightenment, slavery and religion in the political process, [CR1] wartime diplomacy
Week 8 (September 29) - The American Pageant Chapter 10 • Chapter 10, Launching the New Ship of State (1789-‐1800) – The first presidency, Early
national politics and economics, the Bill of Rights, diplomacy during the French Revolution, the making of the office of the presidency
Additional sources and assignments: Use S.O.A.P.P.S. to analyze the following documents and complete each activity that follows.
Reading the American past: Volume I: Mary Jemison Is Captured by Seneca Indians during the Seven Years’ War
Reading the American past: Volume I: A Boston Shoemaker Recalls British Arrogance and the Boston Tea Party
Reading the American past: Volume I: Edmund Burke Urges Reconciliation with the Colonies
DBQ: American Revolution Reading the American past: Volume I: Thomas Paine Common Sense Reading the American past: Volume I: Letters of John and Abigail Adams Declaration of Independence Reading the American past: Volume I: James Madison, Federalist Number Ten The Constitution of the United States Reading the American past: Volume I: Washington’s Farewell Address
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Multiple Choice Exam with primary/secondary source analysis: An Act for the Punishment for Certain Crimes Against the United States, The Proclamation of 1763, an excerpt from Jay’s Treaty
Short Answer Questions: Federalist #51 compared to “Cato,” Letter V Thematic Learning Objectives – POL
Long Essay Question: During the seventeenth and increasingly in the eighteenth century, British colonists in America charged Great Britain with violating the ideals of rule of law, self-government, and, ultimately, equality of rights. Yet the colonists themselves violated these ideals in their treatment of blacks, Native Americans and even poorer classes of white settlers. Assess the validity of this view. (1979) Historical Thinking Skill – Periodization, Comparison, Historical Argumentation; Thematic Learning Objectives – CUL, ID
DBQ 1985 Articles of Confederation Thematic Learning Objectives – POL Time period summary – Create a graphic organize using SPEDIG. Make connections the
thematic learning objectives. Use Historical Thinking Skill – Periodization
Unit 4: A New Republic and the Western Movement (4 Weeks) (Time Period 4: 1800-1848)
The American Pageant Chapters 11-15, & 17 (Six Chapters) Thematic Learning Objectives: ID; WXT, PEO, POL, WOR, ENV, CUL
Week 9 (October 6) - The American Pageant Chapter 11
• Chapter 11, Triumphs and Travails of Jeffersonian Democracy (1800-‐1812) - The “Revolution of 1800”, the Marshall Court, Louisiana Purchase, diplomacy of Jefferson and Madison, the Embargo Act, acceleration of expansion west.
Week 10 (October 13) - The American Pageant Chapter 12 • Chapter 12, The Second War for Independence/Nationalism (1812-1824) – The Invasion
of Canada, The War of 1812, The Treaty of Ghent, The Era of Good Feeling, The American System, the diplomacy of expansion, forging a new national identity
Week 11 (October 20) - The American Pageant Chapters 13 & 14 • Chapter 13, The Rise of a Mass Democracy (1824-‐1840) – Jacksonian democracy and
the Whigs, national policy toward American Indians, the era of the “common man,” expansion with the Texas revolution, slavery and sectionalism
• Chapter 14, Forging the National Economy (1790-‐1860)– Westward Expansion, The rise of the market economy, immigration and the increase in nativism, women in the workplace, the factory system, the transportation revolution
Week 12 (October 27) - The American Pageant Chapter 15 & 17 • Chapter 15, The Ferment of Reform and Culture (1790-‐1860) -‐ The Second Great
Awakening and the growth of reform, women’s roles in reform movements, creation of a national culture, advances in education and the sciences.
• Chapter 17, Manifest Destiny and its Legacy (1841-1848) - Expansion under Polk, Manifest Destiny, war with Mexico
Additional sources and assignments: Use S.O.A.P.P.S. to analyze the following documents and complete each activity that follows.
Marbury v. Madison
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Monroe Doctrine McCullock v. Maryland Seneca Falls Declaration of Sentiments and Resolutions Reading the American past: Volume I: That Woman is Man’s Equal Dred Scott v. Sanford Map: 50 states and state capitals Multiple Choice Exam with primary/secondary source analysis: excerpt from the
Missouri Compromise, map of the Indian Removal Act, The Declaration of Rights and Sentiments, Lincoln’s Spot Resolution
Short Answer Questions: Marshall’s Court Rulings and The National Bank Thematic Learning Objectives – POL, WXT
Long Essay Question: Analyze how western expansion contributed to growing sectional tensions between the North and South. Confine your answer to the period from 1800 to 1850. (2012) Thematic Learning Objectives – PEO, ENV, WXT
DBQ: 1998 Policies and Politics of Jefferson and Madison Thematic Learning Objectives – POL
Time period summary – Create a graphic organize using SPEDIG. Make connections the thematic learning objectives. Use Historical Thinking Skill – Periodization
Unit 5: Slavery, the Civil War, and Reconstruction (5 weeks) (Time Period 5: 1844-1877)
The American Pageant Chapters 16; 18-22 (Six Chapters) Thematic Learning Objectives: ID; WXT, PEO, POL, ENV, CUL
Week 13 (November 3) - The American Pageant Chapters 16
• Chapter 16, The South and the Slavery Controversy -‐ Cotton king, southern society and the impact of the plantation system, the rise of abolitionist movements
Week 14 (November 10) - The American Pageant Chapters 18 & 19 • Chapter 18, Renewing the Sectional Struggle - Popular sovereignty, the Compromise of
1850 and the Fugitive Slave Law, the economics of expansion • Chapter 19, Drifting Toward Disunion - Abolition in the 1850s, Dred Scott, the financial
panic of 1857, political crisis in the election of 1860, the coming of the Civil War Week 15 (November 17) - The American Pageant Chapter 20
• Chapter 20, Girding for War – Fort Sumter, Wartime diplomacy, economic changes in both the North and South, women and the war, issues of civil liberties in wartime
Week 16 (November 24) - The American Pageant Chapter 21 • Chapter 21, The Furnace of the Civil War -‐ The Peninsula Campaign, the “Anaconda,” the
war in the West, Sherman’s March, Appomattox, the Emancipation Proclamation, Antietam, the legacy of war in both the North and South
Week 17 (December 1) - The American Pageant Chapter 22 • American Pageant: Chapter 22, The Ordeal of Reconstruction – The South at war’s end,
the politics and economics of Reconstruction, experiences of freedmen, the rise of the Bourbon South and the fate of Reconstruction, impeachment politics and the balance of power, Black Codes
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Additional sources and assignments: Use S.O.A.P.P.S. to analyze the following documents and complete each activity that follows.
John C. Calhoun on the “Slavery Question” William Grayson, “The Hireling and the Slave” Abraham Lincoln’s First and Second Inaugural Address The Emancipation Proclamation The Gettysburg Address Louisiana Black Codes Reinstate Provisions of the Slave Era -‐ Major Problems in
American History, Volume II: Since 1865, Documents and Essays Elizabeth Cady Stanton Questions Abolitionist Support for Female Enfranchisement -
Major Problems in American History, Volume II: Since 1865, Documents and Essays Multiple Choice Exam with primary/secondary source analysis: map of the Free and
Slave states, political cartoon of the Cannon of Secession, excerpt from Baltimore and the Nineteenth of April, 1861, Lincoln’s Second Inaugural Address
Short Answer Questions: The Compromise of 1850, Declaration of the Immediate Causes that Compel South Carolina to Leave the Union Thematic Learning Objectives – PEO, POL, ENV
DBQ: 1974 – Lincoln and Slavery Thematic Learning Objectives – WXT, POL DBQ: 2009 Expansion of Slavery Pre-‐Civil Thematic Learning Objectives – WXT, ENV,
POL Debate: Did Reconstruction Fail as a Result of Racism? Use primary sources from this time period and secondary sources from Taking Sides: Clashing Views in United States History Volume 2 - Reconstruction to the Present Historical Thinking Skill – Historical Causation, Historical Argumentation, Synthesis; Thematic Learning Objectives - WXT, POL, CUL
Time period summary – Create a graphic organize using SPEDIG. Make connections the thematic learning objectives. Use Historical Thinking Skill – Periodization
Unit 6: The Gilded Age (5 weeks) (Time Period 6: 1865-1898)
The American Pageant Chapters 23-26 (Four Chapters) Thematic Learning Objectives: ID; WXT, PEO, POL, ENV, CUL
Week 18 (December 8) The American Pageant Chapters 23
• Chapter 23, Political Paralysis in the Gilded Age – Compromise of 1877 and the end of Reconstruction, Jim Crow laws, The rise of big business and the role of business in politics, class and ethnic conflict, Populism
Week 19 (December 15) - The American Pageant Chapter 24 • Chapter 24, Industry Comes of Age – The Railroad boom, Era of the Robber Barons, the
lives of the working classes and the growth of unionism, government and politics of regulation, the United States in the world economy
Week 20 (December 22) - The American Pageant Chapter 25 • Chapter 25, America Moves to the City – Urbanization, settlement homes, new waves of
immigration, renewed instances of nativism, cultural life in urban America, the “New Woman,” African-‐American push for expanded civil rights
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Week 21 (December 29) - The American Pageant Chapters 26 • Chapter 26, The Great West and the Agricultural Revolution – Conquest of the Native
Americans, the close of the frontier and its impact, mining and cattle frontiers, industrialization of agriculture and political dissent among farmers
Additional sources and assignments: Use S.O.A.P.P.S. to analyze the following documents and complete each activity that follows.
Walt Whitman, Democratic Vistas Andrew Carnegie, Wealth Rudyard Kipling, “The White Man’s Burden” Frederick J. Turner, The Significance of the Frontier in American History Samuel Gompers, “Letter on Labor in Industrial Society” Booker T. Washington, “Atlanta Exposition Address” William Jennings Bryan, “Cross of Gold” speech Alfred T. Mahan, The United States Looking Outward Theodore Roosevelt, “Corollary to the Monroe Doctrine” Multiple Choice Exam with primary/secondary source analysis: photo of New York in
1900, The Wabash Act, The Dawes Act, an excerpt by Thomas Campbell-Copeland on the Demands of the Farmer’s Alliance, a photo of Cotton on the levee in New Orleans (1898)
Long Essay Question: Compare and contrast the attitudes of THREE of the following toward the wealth that was created in the United States during the late nineteenth century: Andrew Carnegie; Horatio Alger; Ida M. Tarbell; Eugene V. Debs, Booker T. Washington (1994)
Short Answer Questions: The Chinese Exclusion Act, Compare and contrast The Robber Barons with the Gospel of Wealth Thematic Learning Objectives – CUL, ID, POL, WXT
DBQ: 1989 Contrasting Booker T. Washington and W.E.B. Du Bois Thematic Learning Objectives – WXT, CUL, ID
Time period summary – Create a graphic organize using SPEDIG. Make connections the thematic learning objectives. Use Historical Thinking Skill – Periodization
Unit 7: U.S. in War (6 weeks) (Time Period 7: 1890-1945)
The American Pageant Chapters 27- 35 (Nine Chapters) Thematic Learning Objectives: ID; WXT, PEO, POL,WOR
Week 22 (January 5) - The American Pageant Chapter 27
• Chapter 27, Empire and Expansion - American expansion overseas, a new age of imperialism, The Spanish-‐American War, Hawaii, Panama, the Open Door, America on the world stage
Week 23 (January 12) - The American Pageant Chapters 28 • Chapter 28, Progressivism and the Republican Roosevelt – The muckrakers and
campaigning against social injustice, Progressive reform and the trusts, demographics of urbanization and the resulting political impact, “Dollar Diplomacy,” environmental issues
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Week 24 (January 19) - The American Pageant Chapters 29 • Chapter 29, Wilsonian Progressivism at Home and Abroad – The New Freedom versus the
New Nationalism, Progressive economic reform: tariffs, banks, and trusts, diplomacy of neutrality
Week 25 (January 26) - The American Pageant Chapters 30 & 31 • Chapter 30, The War to End War -‐ War in Europe and war on the home front,
propaganda and civil liberties, the politics behind the making of the Treaty of Versailles and its rejection by the U.S. Senate., League of Nations
• Chapter 31, American Life in the Roaring Twenties – The KKK returns, The “Red Scare” and immigration issues, a mass-‐consumption economy, the Jazz Age and the Harlem Renaissance, traditionalism versus modernism
Week 26 (February 2) - The American Pageant Chapters 32 & 33 • Chapter 32, The Politics of Boom and Bust – Disarmament and isolationism in the 1920s,
foreign debt and diplomacy, the coming of the Great Depression • Chapter 33, The Great Depression and the New Deal -‐ FDR and “recovery, relief, reform,”
demographic changes associated with the Depression, cultural changes in the 1930s, the Supreme Court and the balance of political power in government
Week 27 (February 9) - The American Pageant Chapter 34 • Chapter 34, FDR and the Shadow of War -‐ Attempts at neutrality and isolation, Axis
Powers and aggression, diplomacy and economics of the prewar years, the move to war following Pearl Harbor
Week 28 (February 16) - The American Pageant Chapter 35 • Chapter 35, America in World War II -‐ The war in Europe and in the Far East, the home
front, Japanese internment, changes for women and minorities during the war, the decision to use the atomic bomb and its consequences
Additional sources and assignments: Use S.O.A.P.P.S. to analyze the following documents and complete each activity that follows.
Theodore Roosevelt, “The New Nationalism” Woodrow Wilson, The Old Order Changeth Woodrow Wilson, War Message to Congress Woodrow Wilson, The Fourteen Points Herbert Hoover, “Rugged Individualism” Franklin Roosevelt, First Inaugural Address N.L.R.B. versus Jones and Laughlin Steel Corporation Activity: Stock Market Game Historical Thinking Skill – Contextualization, Historical
Causation; Thematic Learning Objectives – WXT Multiple Choice Exam with primary/secondary source analysis: Laws of a factory, a
political cartoon on Victory Liberty Loans, The Atlantic Charter, a political cartoon on Social Security Bonds
Short Answer Questions: Henry Ford’s My Life and Work and a response from the wife of an assembly line worker; Political cartoon on the Jazz Age Thematic Learning Objectives – ID, WXT, CUL
Long Essay Question: Prior to American involvement in both the First and Second World Wars, the United States adopted an official policy of neutrality. Compare the policy and its modifications during the period 1914-17 to the policy and its modifications during 1939-41. (1982)
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DBQ: 1991 Wilson and the Treaty of Versailles Thematic Learning Objectives – POL, WOR
DBQ: 1997 Women’s Suffrage Movement Thematic Learning Objectives – ID, CUL, POL Debate: Did the New Deal Prolong the Great Depression? Use primary sources from this time period and secondary sources from Taking Sides: Clashing Views in United States History Volume 2 - Reconstruction to the Present. Historical Thinking Skill – Interpretation, Historical Argumentation, Synthesis; Thematic Learning Objectives – WXT, POL
Debate: Has the Women’s Movement of the 1970s Failed to Liberate American Women? Use primary sources from this time period and secondary sources from Taking Sides: Clashing Views in United States History Volume 2 - Reconstruction to the Present. Historical Thinking Skill – Patterns of Continuity and Change Over Time, Contextualization, Historical Argumentation, Synthesis; Thematic Learning Objectives – ID, CUL
Time period summary – Create a graphic organize using SPEDIG. Make connections the thematic learning objectives. Use Historical Thinking Skill – Periodization
Unit 8: The Cold War and the Making of Modern America (5 weeks) (Time Period 8: 1945-1980)
The American Pageant Chapters 36-39 Thematic Learning Objectives: ID, PEO, POL, WOR, CUL
Week 29 (February 23) - The American Pageant Chapters 36
• Chapter 36, The Cold War Begins - Postwar prosperity and the Baby Boom, The “Sunbelt” and the suburbs, communism and containment, diplomacy and the Marshall Plan, the Korean War, the Red Scare, the United States as a world power
Week 30 (March 2) - The American Pageant Chapter 37 • Chapter 37, The Eisenhower Era -‐ Consumer culture in the 1950s, the civil rights
revolution, McCarthyism, Cold War expansion, the space race, postwar literature and culture
Week 31 (March 9) - The American Pageant Chapters 38 • Chapter 38, The Stormy Sixties – John F. Kennedy, The Cold War continues, expansion of
the war in Vietnam, Bay of Pigs Invasion, the Cuban Missile Crisis, the civil rights revolution and evolution, Johnson and the Great Society, immigration and demographic changes
Week 32 (March 16) & Week 33 (March 23) - The American Pageant Chapters 39
• Chapter 39, The Stalemated Seventies -‐ Rise of conservatism, economic stagnation, Nixon and the Vietnam War, crisis over presidential power, environmental issues, feminism and the women’s movement, civil rights and affirmative action, foreign policy and the issue of oil, New policies toward China and the Soviet Union
Additional sources and assignments: Use S.O.A.P.P.S. to analyze the following documents and complete each activity that follows.
Franklin Roosevelt, The Quarantine speech
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Franklin Roosevelt, The Four Freedoms speech The Atlantic Charter George Kennan, Sources of Soviet Conduct William Faulkner, Acceptance Speech for the Nobel Prize Brown versus the Board of Education Dwight D. Eisenhower, Farwell Address Multiple Choice Exam with primary/secondary source analysis: Dwight Eisenhower’s
Farewell speech, Diagram and program of the March on Washington, postal stamps of the Cold War Space Race, Map of the expansion of Levittown, New York 1951.
Short Answer Questions: Joint Resolution, photo of the 1973 gas rations Thematic Learning Objectives – POL, WXT, WOR
Long Essay Question: How did the African American Civil Rights Movement of the 1950s and 1960s address the failures of Reconstruction? (2002)
DBQ: 1988 WWII Diplomacy - Atomic Bombing and Cold War tension Thematic Learning Objectives – WXT, WOR
DBQ: 1995 Civil Rights Movement Thematic Learning Objectives – ID, POL, CUL DBQ: 2011 Nixon Administration Thematic Learning Objectives – POL Time period summary – Create a graphic organize using SPEDIG. Make connections the
thematic learning objectives. Use Historical Thinking Skill – Periodization
Unit 9: Contemporary America (3 weeks) (Time Period 9: 1980-Present)
The American Pageant Chapters 40-42 Thematic Learning Objectives: ID, POL,WOR
Week 34 (March 30) - The American Pageant Chapter 40
• Chapter 40, The Resurgence of Conservatism - Reagan and the “New Right,” Reagan and the Soviets, Mikhail Gorbachev, the end of the Cold War, Reaganomics, politics and the Supreme Court, globalization, war and diplomacy in the Middle East
Week 35 (April 6) - The American Pageant Chapter 41 • Chapter 41, American Confronts the Post-‐Cold War Era - The Clinton era, post-‐Cold War
politics and foreign policy, the contested election of 2000, the attack on the World Trade Center and America post-‐9/11
Week 36 (April 13) - The American Pageant Chapter 42 • Chapter 42, The American People Face a New Century - Demographic changes, changes
in the family, immigration and related issues, a multicultural society, the high-‐tech economy, America in a global context
Additional sources and assignments: Use S.O.A.P.P.S. to analyze the following documents and complete each activity that follows.
John Kennedy, Inaugural Address Martin Luther King, Jr., Letter from a Birmingham Jail Martin Luther King, Jr., “I Have a Dream” speech Lyndon Johnson, “The Great Society” speech Lyndon Johnson, “The Power of the Media”
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Edward R, Murrow, “Television and Politics” Roe versus Wade Ronald Reagan, Inaugural Addresses 1981, 1985 Republican Contract with America Multiple Choice Exam with primary/secondary source analysis: Chart on the foreign-born
population through the recent census readings of 1990, 2000, and 2010, The Republican Contract with America (1994), map of the flight paths of September 11
Short Answer Questions: Chart of the U.S. Recession from 1981-1993 and its relation to Regan’s economic policy Thematic Learning Objectives – WXT, POL
Discussion: Federal intervention on local law enforcement agencies – Little Rock and now in Ferguson and New York Historical Thinking Skill – Contextualization; Thematic Learning Objectives – POL
Discussion: Security and War on Terrorism – 9/11, NSA and Edward Snowden, and ISIS/ISOL Historical Thinking Skill – Contextualization; Thematic Learning Objectives – WOR, POL
Time period summary – Create a graphic organize using SPEDIG. Make connections the thematic learning objectives. Use Historical Thinking Skill – Periodization
AP Exam Review (3 weeks) *Friday, May 8 at 8:00 A.M. – A.P.U.S.H. Exam (AP Exams May 4-15) ACT Exams: April 18, 2015 (Registration Deadline March 13; Late Deadline March 14-27) June 13, 2015 (Registration Deadline May 8; Late Deadline May 9-22) September 12, 2015 October 24, 2015 December 12, 2015? SAT Exams: March 14, 2015(Registration Deadline February 13; Late Deadline March 3) May 2, 2015 (Registration Deadline April 6; Late Deadline March 21) June 6, 2015 (Registration Deadline May 8; Late Deadline May 27)