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Module 1: Exam Review

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Module 1: Exam Review. 1.02 America’s Geography. A Globe is a three –dimensional model of the earth. Accurately shows the size and shapes of the continents , bodies of water, and geographical features. Limits of Globes Can’t see all the earth’s surface at once. Can’t see details. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Module 1: Exam Review
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Page 1: Module  1:  Exam Review

Module 1: Exam Review

Page 2: Module  1:  Exam Review

1.02 America’s Geography

A Globe is a three –dimensional model of the earth.

Accurately shows the size and shapes of the continents , bodies of water, and

geographical features.

Limits of Globes1. Can’t see all the earth’s surface at once.2. Can’t see details.3. Not portable.

Page 3: Module  1:  Exam Review

1.02 America’s Geography

A map is a representation or drawing of the earths surface.

Because a map is flat is distorts parts of the earth.

1. Maps are flat so you can see the whole worlds surface at once.

2. Maps show more details.3. Maps are portable.4. Maps can be used to see change

over time.

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1.02 America’s Geography

Global Positions System (GPS) gives you pin point location.

Page 5: Module  1:  Exam Review

Deciduous Forest

East of Great Plains to Atlantic Ocean

Wide variety of plants, trees & animals.

Fertile soil (good for farming).

1.02 America’s Geography

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Desert

Southwest United States

Harsh climate, little rain & wide range of temperatures.

Poor, sandy soil .

Few variety of plants and animals.

1.02 America’s Geography

Page 7: Module  1:  Exam Review

Grassland / Prairie

East of Rocky Mts. through Great Plains.

Fertile soil, good for farming.Wide variety of plants and

animals.

1.02 America’s Geography

Page 8: Module  1:  Exam Review

Alpine

High elevations in Rocky Mts. & central Alaska.

Harsh climate

Few species of plants/trees and animals.

1.02 America’s Geography

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Tundra

Located in northern Alaska and Canada.

Harsh climate

Plant growth only during summer (no trees).

Few species of animals.

1.02 America’s Geography

Page 10: Module  1:  Exam Review

1.02 America’s Geography• What is sustainable

forestry?• Sustainable forestry means

managing our forest resources to meet the needs we have today without interfering with our future generations' needs. Any management of the forest resource must include inventory and planning to provide the basis for evaluating and implementing the goals of the landowner.

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Quiz Time!• For which assignment would a map be most useful to you?• A: An assignment comparing the geographic features of the

Australian and Asian continents• B: An assignment exploring the trade routes of various companies

across continents and oceans• C: An assignment comparing the migration routes of several

immigrant groups from different countries• D: An assignment which explores the relationship between a

British settlement and the Native Americans living in the area

Page 12: Module  1:  Exam Review

The Correct Answer Is…

• D: An assignment which explores the relationship between a British settlement and the Native Americans living in the area

Page 13: Module  1:  Exam Review

Quiz Time!• For which assignment would a globe be most useful for you?• A: An assignment to detail population changes over time• B: An assignment requiring details about the location a group

of English settlements• C: An assignment comparing the geographic features of the

Australian and Asian continents• D: An assignment exploring the relationship between a French

settlement and the Native Americans living in the area

Page 14: Module  1:  Exam Review

The Correct Answer Is…

• C: An assignment comparing the geographic features of the Australian and Asian continents

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• Factors that motivated people to colonize in North America:• Religious Freedom • Scarcity of resources and overpopulation in Europe• Demand for labor is low in Europe• Indentured Servants agreed to work for someone else for a specific time

period in return for his passage to North America. • African slaves replace Indentured Servants as the demand for labor

increases.• Profits (gold) and adventure• Land• The head right system was designed to attract new people to the British

colony to help farm. Each colonist was given about 50 acres of land to settle. Wealthy European men gained a large amount of land this way. They sent indentured servants to collect the head right (land) and then keep the land for themselves.

1.03 Coming to America

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1.03 Coming to America• European Country: Spain

• Christopher Columbus’s tales of riches led to European colonization of the New World.

• Spain was the dominant European presence in the New World in the 1500s.

• The strength of the Spanish Armada made it difficult for other European powers to settle in the New World.

• One of the main motives for Spanish colonization was to find gold and other resources and send them back to Spain. To accomplish this, the Spanish set up colonies in Mexico, the Caribbean, and South America.

• For labor, many conquistadores enslaved Native Americans and treated them poorly. Spanish missionaries tried to convert the natives to Catholicism. In 1588, Britain defeated the Spanish Armada, which made colonization in the New World easier for other European powers.

Page 17: Module  1:  Exam Review

1.03 Coming to America• European Country: England (aka: Great

Britain)• After a failed attempt at Roanoke Island,

in what is now North Carolina, Jamestown, Virginia, became the first permanent British colony in 1607.

• Part of Jamestown’s success was due to the help of local tribes, like the Powhatan Confederacy, that helped the British grow their crops.

• Relations with the Native Americans soured when the settlers needed more land to grow tobacco and pushed many Native Americans off their land.

• Britain claimed all North American territory from Newfoundland to Florida.

• This was impossible to enforce due to the lack of permanent settlements. Other European nations colonized land previously claimed by the British, which led to fighting.

Page 18: Module  1:  Exam Review

1.03 Coming to America• European Country: France

• The French set up their first permanent settlement in North America in Quebec in 1608.

• Initially, the French focused on fishing, fur trading, and missionary work, converting Native Americans to Catholicism.

• They expanded their settlements into the Mississippi Valley region, which was partially claimed by the British.

• The French set up several forts to protect their profitable fur trade and their claims to the region.

• The French settlements grew slowly, so the Native Americans were not pushed off their land as they were in the British settlements.

• Unlike the Spanish, the French did not try to change the Indian customs, which led to a more peaceful coexistence between the French and the Native American tribes.

Page 19: Module  1:  Exam Review

1.03 Coming to America• European Country: The Netherlands (aka: The

Dutch)• The Dutch challenged British claims to the

area of present-day New York in 1609, and called it New Netherland.

• The Dutch rivaled England as the largest commercial power in Europe during the 1600s.

• The Dutch opened a post at Port Orange in 1624 to help with fur trading.

• They also negotiated the purchase of Manhattan Island from the Native Americans and called this settlement New Amsterdam.

• The English saw the Dutch as invaders on British land claims. In 1664, Britain sent 400 soldiers to New Amsterdam to force the Dutch out. Outnumbered and already weak from fighting with Native American tribes, the Dutch turned over their settlement to the British without a shot being fired.

Page 20: Module  1:  Exam Review

Quiz Time!• What was the main reason for the Dutch to have surrendered

New Amsterdam to the British?• A: War with the English in Europe• B: Lack of success with their farming practices• C: The Dutch were tired from fighting with the Native Americans

in the area• D: Trading with the French for land in warmer climates

Page 21: Module  1:  Exam Review

The Correct Answer Is…

• C: The Dutch were tired from fighting with the Native Americans in the area

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Quiz Time!• Which of the following best shows how some Europeans used

the headright system?• A: Europeans used the headright system to capture, buy, and sell

Egyptian slaves.• B: Europeans used the headright system to get indentured

servants to work the land.• C: Europeans sent indentured servants to the New World and

collected the headright for each servant.• D: Europeans developed new laws related to the headright

system that allowed them to own more land.

Page 23: Module  1:  Exam Review

The Correct Answer Is…

• C: Europeans sent indentured servants to the New World and collected the headright for each servant.

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1.04 Colonial Regions• New England Colonies: Massachusetts,

Rhode Island, Connecticut, and New Hampshire

• The search for religious freedom brought the Puritans and Pilgrims to America (New England).

• Community and religion was important, and small villages were common.

• New Englanders earned a profit from trading and fishing. Fisherman were called peterman.

• Even with rocky, infertile soil, some New Englanders had small farms. Families worked together to earn a living, and the slave population was very small because of the economy and the peoples religious beliefs.

• A relatively small number of people occupied New England, which had harsh winters.

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1.04 Colonial Regions• Middle Colonies: Pennsylvania,

Delaware, New York, and New Jersey • Often referred to as the “breadbasket

colonies,” the Middle colonies were home to a diverse group of European immigrants who enjoyed the respect for religious freedom made famous here by the Quakers.

• Family members and indentured servants harvested wheat, grain, and oats.

• The moderate weather and the fertile soil attracted many colonists to this region.

• Besides farmers, the natural resources of this area attracted metal workers.

• Deep rivers were also a characteristic of the Middle colonies.

Page 26: Module  1:  Exam Review

1.04 Colonial Regions• Southern Colonies: Virginia, North

Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, and Maryland

• Rich soil and a mild climate attracted many European colonists to the Southern colonies.

• Home to some of America’s earliest settlements, the area grew cash crops like tobacco, rice, and cotton.

• The Southern colonies coastline made it easy to export cash crops to England.

• African slaves and indentured servants were critical to the success of colonial farms as they were the backbone of the labor force.

• The search for wealth and power contributed to the development of the Southern colonies.

Page 27: Module  1:  Exam Review

1.04 Coming to America• William Penn

• Established the colony of Pennsylvania in 1681.

• He was a wealthy Englishman who presented a plan to King Charles to colonize land in America.

• William Penn was a Quaker and he saw the Pennsylvania as a “holy experiment,” a chance to put Quaker ideals and toleration into practice.

• As governor, William Penn wrote the Charter of Liberties, the state’s constitution, which allowed the colonists to elect representatives.

• He also made treaties with Native American tribes and encouraged settlers to come to Pennsylvania.

Page 28: Module  1:  Exam Review

1.04 Coming to America• William Bradford & the Pilgrims

• Established Massachusetts in 1620 after signing a peace treaty with the Native Americans living in the area.

• Unhappy with the Church of England, they chose separation from the government and religion of England.

• They called themselves “Pilgrims” because they set out on a pilgrimage or journey to be free.

• William Bradford was one of the original Plymouth leaders and one of its elected governors.

• Other important leaders from the New England colonies are Roger Williams and John Winthrop.

• Anne Hutchinson • Was the wife of a Massachusetts merchant and

a mother of 13 children. • Her belief that she could communicate directly

with God got her into trouble with the Puritan ministers who were also in charge of the government.

• Hutchinson was taken to court, convicted, and banished from Massachusetts in 1638.

• She helped establish a new colony in Rhode Island and is best known as an early champion of women’s rights and religious freedom.

Page 29: Module  1:  Exam Review

1.04 Coming to America• John Smith • Helped establish Jamestown

Virginia in 1607. • His experience as a soldier,

helped him to instill discipline in the colony and organized working groups for food gathering and farming.

• George Calvert of Maryland and John Oglethorpe of Georgia were also important leaders in the Southern colonies.

Page 30: Module  1:  Exam Review

Quiz Time!• What were the main products of the New England economy?• A: Ocean trade and fishing• B: Farming and metalworking• C: Skilled trades and fur trapping• D: Large-scale farming and trade with England

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The Correct Answer Is…

• A: Ocean trade and fishing

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Quiz Time!• What was the main reason the New England and Middle

colonies did not have many slaves?• A: People used only paid workers on their farms.• B: People did not want to pay the taxes on slaves.• C: People had no means of transporting or purchasing slaves.• D: People had smaller self-sufficient farms or worked in skilled

trades.

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The Correct Answer Is…

• D: People had smaller self-sufficient farms or worked in skilled trades.

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Quiz Time!• Which statement describes Anne Hutchinson?• A. Hutchinson helped spread Quaker ideals in the middle region.• B: Hutchinson was married to the first governor of Connecticut.• C: Hutchinson was convicted of the attempted murder of John

Smith.• D: Hutchinson was a champion of women’s rights and religious

freedom.

Page 35: Module  1:  Exam Review

The Correct Answer Is…

• D: Hutchinson was a champion of women’s rights and religious freedom.

Page 36: Module  1:  Exam Review

1.05 Economics & Slavery• What is colonial interdependence? • Domestic Interdependence

• Both the colonies and the colonists within a community were economically dependent on one another.

• International Interdependence• European countries also had an

economic relationship with their colonies. The English 13 colonies provide raw materials like cotton to England. Factories in England would use the cotton to produce cloth. Manufactured goods like cloth were then shipped back to the colonies to sell or traded to other European countries.

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1.05 Economics & Slavery• What impact did slaves have on

the economy?• Enslaved Africans were an important

part of the colonial economy.• State and local governments made

money on slavery by imposing taxes on all slave transactions and by collecting taxes from each plantation estate based upon the number of slaves living there.

• Why were slaves so important to the economy?• A large number of enslaved Africans

in the Southern colonies worked in the fields harvesting cash crops such as tobacco, cotton, and rice.

Page 38: Module  1:  Exam Review

1.05 Economics & Slavery• Why did many colonists support

slavery even though they knew it was wrong?• They depended on the transatlantic

slave trade (also called “triangular trade” from the three ports of trade: New England, Africa, and the Caribbean) to supply manual labor.

• Having proven themselves capable workers on sugar plantations in the Caribbean, enslaved Africans were a commodity that colonists bought and sold.

• Stripped of their rights and freedom, slaves were beaten, separated from their families, and worked continually.

• Because slaves were not paid, profits were higher.

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Quiz Time!• What was one of the main differences between slaves who

were considered artisans and slaves who worked in the fields?• A: Artisan slaves were only men.• B: Artisan slaves were paid a salary.• C: Artisan slaves were skilled workers.• D: Artisan slaves were treated better than the field slaves were.

Page 40: Module  1:  Exam Review

The Correct Answer Is…

• C: Artisan slaves were skilled workers.

Page 41: Module  1:  Exam Review

Quiz Time!• Which of the following best states the relationship between

the Colonies and European countries?• A: The colonies were responsible for providing workers for

European factories. The factories produced items for the New World.

• B: The colonies traded guns and ammunition with Europe for slaves. The slaves worked on colonial plantations.

• C: Europe distilled rum and sold it to the colonies for slaves. The colonies collected and sold slaves for raw materials.

• D: Europe countries relied on raw materials from the colonies. The colonies relied on manufactured goods from Europe.

Page 42: Module  1:  Exam Review

The Correct Answer Is…

• D: Europe countries relied on raw materials from the colonies. The colonies relied on manufactured goods from Europe.

Page 43: Module  1:  Exam Review

• What is a primary source vs. what is a secondary source? • A primary source is any source that was created at the time of the

historical period that you are investigating.• Why are Primary Source Documents Important?

• They give us insight into the lives of regular people.• Help us understand the culture of a period.

• A secondary source is created after the time period of the event or historical period.• A secondary source can be a biography, movie, or textbook.

1.06 The Historian’s Clues

Page 44: Module  1:  Exam Review

1.06 The Historian’s Clues

• How do you determine if a source is valid or invalid? • Who wrote the source and

why?• Did the author have first hand

experience of the matter? • How soon after the event(s)

was the source written?• Did/does the author have an

particular standpoint? • Did the author have an axe to

grind?• Who published the book or

article?• Does it contain references?• Does the it push a particular

view point?

Page 45: Module  1:  Exam Review

Quiz Time!• A primary source would be most useful for which type of

assignment?• A: The study of a culture at the time of an event• B: The summary of an event• C: The report offering different expert opinions on an event• D: A study focusing on 50 years after the event

Page 46: Module  1:  Exam Review

The Correct Answer Is…

• A: The study of a culture at the time of an event

Page 47: Module  1:  Exam Review

Quiz Time!• Which of the following groups are primary sources?• A: A diary, a cooking pan, and a recipe book• B: A book of historical fiction, a museum display, an encyclopedia

entry• C: A business contract, a summary of an industry's history, tax

records from the past• D: A bill of purchase for farm equipment, a picture of farm tools,

a landowner's record books

Page 48: Module  1:  Exam Review

The Correct Answer Is…

• A: A diary, a cooking pan, and a recipe book

Page 49: Module  1:  Exam Review

Quiz Time!• Which of the following resource would be the least valid for a

project on the Jamestown settlement? • A: A firsthand account from one of the British settlers• B: A firsthand account from one of the Native Americans present• C: A British newspaper article written shortly after the settlement

occurred• D: A summary of events posted on an anti-British website

Page 50: Module  1:  Exam Review

The Correct Answer Is…

• D: A summary of events posted on an anti-British website


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