Monday, December 21, 2009

APUSH Winter Break Assignments

Hello, APUSHers:

While I am well aware of the upcoming break, nonetheless, we must forge onward in our quest.

Here are your break assignment(s). Please note that I am not expecting you to finish this in one day. Furthermore, I am hopeful that by this time you have created study groups, and are utilizing the people in class to help you work through the material. Above that, I would also suggest using this link to post information, and really cooperate!

1. Read, Highlight and Outline the following Chapter Notes from The American Pageant

2. READ Chapters 13 and 14 from the REVIEW BOOK. These are the handout packets that you were given in class.

3. Complete the Key Concepts and Terms from Chapter 14 of the REVIEW BOOK. I suggest you work with a partner to finish.

4. Complete the Civil War WebQuest. We will have some time in class when we return from the break to complete the WebQuest. It will be due on Tuesday January 5th.


Thursday, December 17, 2009

AP USH 12/17/09

1. If you are not finished with your Webquest, please continue working on this assignment. If you are fnished, CLICK HERE, and complete the multiple choice quiz. Please email your results to mtesler@wjps.org. Thanks! BTW...HERE's the RUBRIC for the WebQuest.

2. If you do not finish the webquest in class today, then you are responsible for finishing it for HW. If you are doing it on Google Docs, please invite me as a collaborator, at mtesler@wjps.org.

Sunday, December 13, 2009

HW Assignments Week of 12/14/09

Hello, APUSHers:

Here are the HW assignments for the week of 12/14

Please note that the REVENGE OF EXAMENITO MUCHO MAS GRANDE has been scheduled for this Friday. 100 questions. Take home exam.

Monday Night: Due TUESDAY 12/15- MOVIE NIGHT MONDAY! Please prepare the supplemental podcast/movie form. Also, I would like you, after watching the video, to prepare three (3) DISCUSSION questions that we can share in class on Tuesday.


Describes the institution and status of slavery just prior to the outbreak of the Civil War. Covering plantation life, the roles and responsibilities of both black and white women in society, and the ideological differences between North and South during the era, this enlightening program recognizes the religious, artistic, and cultural contributions of slave communities and families while exposing the dark underside of oppression and violence against enslaved black Americans. Noted scholars identify Nat Turner's slave rebellion and the work of abolitionist William Lloyd Garrison and his newspaper The Liberator as pivotal influences that changed attitudes about slave ownership and labor permanently, causing the first rumblings of regional discontent in America that eventually led to years of war and fighting.

Tuesday Night: Textbook Tuesday (see a pattern here?). Due 12/17.

3. CLICK HERE for the Manifest Destiny WebQuest, Please begin working on the webquest. The WebQuest must be finished NO LATER than THURSDAY!

Chapter 17 Audio Book

:

WEDNESDAY - GEM WEDNESDAY! - Go the Extra Mile! Get in depth!

READ - "We Take Nothing By Conquest, Thank God!"

THURSDAY - FINISH Manifest Destiny Webquest

FRIDAY - COMPLETE THE REVENGE OF EXAMENITO MUCHO MAS GRANDE!

Link will be posted to the blog on Friday after school for anyone who is absent.

Thursday, December 10, 2009

Period 8 Mini Quest

CLICK HERE. Download the DBQ.

Your mission.

1. Analyze each document. For each document, complete an APPARTS analysis.
2. Based on the documents, and your knowledge of the time period, brainstorm and create a thesis statement that evaluates the validity (assess the truth) of the statement:

"Reform movements in the US sought to preserve Democratic Ideals."

Don't just use the documents! Use your outside knowledge.

Tuesday, December 8, 2009

Period 8 Mini-Quest REVISED

OK...To fix up the confusion.

Roots of Reform


Social Reform

Abolitionism

Period 8 Mini-Quest

Graded as a Quiz! (Worth 1 Weighted Point)

Post your answers here!

Religion and Social Reform

Roots of Reform

From 1801 for years a blessed revival of religion spread through almost the entire inhabited parts of the West....The Presbyterians and Methodists in a great measure united in this work, met together, prayed together, and preached together....

They would erect their camps with logs or frame them, and cover them with clapboards or shingles. They would also erect a shed, sufficiently large to protect five thousand people from wind and rain, and cover it with boards or shingles; build a large stand, seat the shed, and here they would collect together from forty to fifty miles around, sometimes further than that. Ten, twenty, and sometimes thirty ministers of different denominations would come together and preach night and day, four or five days together....

A new exercise broke out among us, called the jerks, which was overwhelming in its effects upon the bodies and minds of the people. No matter whether they were saints or sinners, they would be taken under a warm song or sermon, and seized with a convulsive jerking all over, which they could not by any possibility avoid, and the more they resisted the more they jerked....I have seen more than five hundred persons jerking at one time in my large congregations....The first jerk or so, you would see their fine bonnets, caps, and combs fly; and so sudden would be the jerking of the head that their long loose hair would crack almost as loud as a wagoner's whip.

Peter Cartwright

1. Why did the early 19th century witness the first secular efforts in history to improve society through social reform?

2. What were the sources of the reform impulse?

3. Describe the basic characteristics of revivalistic religion?

4. Why do you think church membership increased rapidly during the early 19th century?


Social Reform

Reading 1:

The elementary schools throughout the state are irresponsible institutions, established by individuals, from mere motives of private speculation or gain, who are sometimes destitute of character, and frequently of the requisite attainments and abilities. From the circumstance of the schools being the absolute property of individuals, no supervision or effectual control can be exercised over them; hence, ignorance, inattention, and even immorality, prevail to a lamentable extent among their teachers.

Working Man's Advocate, 1830

Reading 2:

The scheme of Universal Equal Education at the expense, is virtually "Agrarianism." It would be a compulsory application of the means of the richer, for the direct use of the poorer classes; and so far an arbitrary division of property among them....One of the chief excitements to industry...is the hope of earning the means of educating their children respectably ...that incentive would be removed, and the scheme of state and equal education be a premium for comparative idleness, to be taken out of the pockets of the laborious and conscientious.

Philadelphia National Gazette, 1830

Reading 3:

I believe in the existence of a great, immortal, immutable principle of natural law...which proves the absolute right to an education of every human being that comes into the world; and which, of course, proves the correlative duty of every government to see that the means of that education are provided for all....

Massachusetts is parental in her government. More and more, as year after year rolls by, she seeks to substitute prevention for remedy, and rewards for penalties. She strives to make industry the antidote to poverty, and to counterwork the progress of vice and crime by the diffusion of knowledge and the culture of virtuous principles.

Horace Mann, 1846

Reading 4:

I proceed, gentlemen, briefly to call your attention to the present state of insane persons confined within this Commonwealth, in cages, closets, cellars, stalls, pens! Chained, naked, beaten with rods, and lashed into obedience....

I have seen many who, part of the year, are chained or caged. The use of cages all but universal....I encountered during the last three months many poor creatures wandering reckless and unprotected through the country.

Dorothea Dix, 1843

Reading 5:

The history of mankind is a history of repeated injuries and usurpations on the part of man toward woman, having in direct object the establishment of an absolute tyranny over her. To prove this, let facts be submitted to a candid world.

He has never permitted her to exercise her inalienable right to the elective franchise.
He has compelled her to submit to laws, in the formation of which she had no voice....
He has made her, if married, in the eyes of the law civilly dead.
He has taken from her all right in property, even to the wages she earns....
He has monopolized nearly all the profitable employment, and from those she is permitted to follow, she receives but a scanty remuneration.
He closes against her all the avenues to wealth and distinction, which he considers most honorable to himself....
He has denied her the facilities for obtaining a thorough education--all colleges being closed against her....
He has created a false public sentiment, by giving to the world a different code of morals for men and women, by which moral delinquencies which exclude women from society, are not only tolerated but deemed of little account in man....
He has endeavored, in every way that he could, to destroy her confidence in her own powers, to lessen her self-respect, and to make her willing to lead a dependent and abject life.

"Declaration of Sentiments and Resolutions" of the 1848 Seneca Falls, New York, Women's Rights Convention

Reading 6:

Intemperance is the sin of our land, and, with out boundless prosperity, is coming in upon us like a flood; and if anything shall defeat the hopes of the world, which hang upon our experiment of civil liberty, it is that river of fire, which is rolling through the land, destroying the vital air, and extending around an atmosphere of death.

Lyman Beecher, 1826

Reading 7:

We hold these truths to be self-evident; that all men are created temperate; that they are endowed by their Creator with certain natural and innocent desires; that among these are the appetite for cold water and the pursuit of happiness! that to secure the gratification of these propensities fountains and streams are gushing....

Manifesto of the Washington Total Abstinence Societies, 1841

Reading 8:

[How] will reformation and temperance be secured...? Never except through the instrumentality of the law. If it were possible to reason the drunkard into sobriety, it would not be possible to make the rumseller forego his filthy gains....The only logic he will comprehend, is some such ordinance...coming to him in the shape and with the voice of law--you shall not sell.

American Temperance Magazine, 1852

Reading 9:

We register our testimony, not only against all wars, whether offensive or defensive, but all preparations for war; against every naval ship, every arsenal, every fortification; against the militia system and a standing army; against all military chieftains and soldiers; against all monuments commemorative of victory over a fallen foe, all trophies won in battle, all celebrations in honor of military or naval exploits; against all appropriations for the defense of a nation by force and arms...every edict of government requiring of its subjects military service.

Declaration of Sentiments, Boston Peace Convention, 1838

Reading 10:

Under our system of isolated and separate households, with separate interests and separate pursuits, instead of association and combination among families, there is the most deplorable waste, which is one of the primary sources of the general poverty that exists; and discord, antagonism, selfishness, and an anti-social spirit are engendered. Woman is subjected to unremitting and slavish domestic duties...a dead rebuke to all pretensions to Democracy....A new social order [should] be established, based upon "Associated households"....

Albert Brisbane

1. What arguments were advanced in favor of public schools? How did opponents of public schools respond?

2. Describe the plight of the mentally ill in early l9th century America?

3. What disabilities to early l9th century American women live under according to pre-Civil War women's rights advocates?

4. Why did pre-Civil War temperance reformers consider drinking a cardinal sin?

5. Describe the aims of other pre-Civil War reformers.


Abolitionism

Reading 1:

Assenting to the "self-evident truth" maintained in the American Declaration of Independence, "that all men are created equal, and endowed by their Creator with certain inalienable rights"...I shall strenuously contend for the immediate enfranchisement of our slave population....

I am aware, that many object to the severity of my language; but is there not cause for severity? I will be as harsh as truth, and as uncompromising as justice....Tell a man whose house is on fire, to give a moderate alarm; tell him to moderately rescue his wife from the hands of the ravisher; tell the mother to gradually extricate her babe from the fire into which it has fallen;--but urge me not to use moderation in a cause like the present. I am in earnest--I will not equivocate--I will not excuse--I will not retreat a single inch--And I Will Be Heard.

William Lloyd Garrison

Reading 2:

That every American citizen, who detains a human being in involuntary bondage as his property is, according to Scripture, a man-stealer:

That the slaves ought instantly to be set free, and brought under the protection of the law....

That all those laws which are now in force, admitting the right of slavery, are therefore, before God, utterly null and void; being an audacious usurpation of the Divine prerogative, a daring infringement on the law of nature, a base overthrow of the very foundations of the social compact, a complete extinction of all the relations, endearments and obligations of mankind, and a presumptuous transgression of all the holy commandments; and that therefore they ought instantly to be abrogated.

American Anti-Slavery Society's Declaration of Sentiments

Reading 3:

It is not by argument that the abolitionists have produced the present unhappy excitement. Argument has not been the characteristic of their publications. Denunciations of slaveholding as man-stealing, robbery, piracy, and worse than murder; subsequent vituperation of slaveholders as knowingly guilty of the worst of crimes; passionate appeals to the feelings of the inhabitants of the northern States; gross exaggeration of the moral and physical condition of the slaves, have formed the staple of their addresses to the public....There is in this conduct such a strange want of adaptation of the means to the end which they profess to have in view, as to stagger the faith of most persons in the sincerity of their professions, who do not consider the extreme to which even good men may be carried, when they allow one subject to take exclusive possession of their minds.

Charles Hodge

1. Why was it not until the late eighteenth century that large numbers of individuals considered slavery to be morally wrong?

2. Why did abolitionists consider slavery to be wrong?

3. Are agitation and denunciation an effective way of opposing a social evil or do such methods simply breed resistance?

Saturday, December 5, 2009

HW Assignments & Important Events Week of 12/7/09

Hello, APUSHers:


Here are the HW assignments and important dates for the week of 12/7

Monday Night's Assignment:
1. Please complete the guided readings and Chapter ID's for Chapter 15.
2. Please complete, and take notes on the following Lectures
I will be doing a visual check for lecture notes in class on Tuesday. Be prepared for a possible quiz on Tuesday!

Tuesday: MOVIE NIGHT! Get your Popcorn ready! Click the link for the video. Don't forget to complete the video form. Due Thursday 12/10/09

Recounts the reformation period that inspired American artisans during the nineteenth century. The program focuses on the romantic ideals that stressed sensation and excitement, sentiments that characterized the 1820s. Interviews with historians discuss transcendentalism, Henry David Thoreau, Robert Owen, temperance, Fredrick Douglas, Sojourner Truth, and John Quincy Adams. Examining the life and works of William Lloyd Garrison, pioneer abolitionist, and Elizabeth Cady Stanton's Declaration of Sentiments, written during the Seneca Falls Convention of 1848, this engaging presentation outlines the incredible accomplishments made during an era of strong social reform.

Thursday 12/10/09: Due MONDAY 12/14/09

1. Read and Outline CHAPTER NOTES for Chapter 16. Click the link for the Chapter Notes. Visual Check of Outlines in class on Monday.
2. Read Chapter 16. Click on the link for Chapter 16. Here's a link to the audio file!
3. Complete ALL Guided Reading Questions and Chapter ID's.. Click the link for the workbook.

Be prepared for another GROUP QUIZ on FRIDAY 12/11/09 During 8th period. This time, 45 Questions! Multiple Choice, True and False, and Matching

Friday: See Thursday 12/10/09

Friday, December 4, 2009

HW Assignment Friday Dec. 4th

Due Date(s):
Index Cards: Monday Dec. 7th
Guided Readings and ID's: Tuesday December 8

1. Preview Chapter 15 by reading the chapter notes for Chapter 15. Highlight the chapter notes, and write a summary of them on ONE regular-sized INDEX CARD. Here's the link for the Chapter 15 Notes

2. READ CHAPTER 15. Click on the link to access the information for chapter 15.

3. Complete the guided reading questions, and Chapter ID's. Click here for the WORKBOOK and print out the applicable pages.

FYI - pp. 57-59 in the review packet I gave you at the beginning of the unit (it has the picture of the boat on it) does an AWESOME job of covering this info.

Oh, yeah...Here's the audio book.

Tuesday, December 1, 2009

Tuesday HW 12/1/09 and Wednesday Aca. Lab

Due 12/03/09

A Jackson Double Feature Click on the links to access the movies!

Don't forget to complete the Podcast/Movie Form. CLICK HERE for the form

The Unfinished Nation: Legacy of an Autocratic Ruler

Delves into the eventful presidency of Andrew Jackson and his successors. The beginning of the program describes the disillusioned relationship between Jackson and Native Americans in the southern and plains regions--notably Georgia--and the actions taken to push the tribes westward. The program contrasts Jackson’s professed support for Native American tribes with his agreement with the Removal Act, the Supreme Court v. Georgiaverdict, and the Trail of Tears. The profound effects of these events on Native American communities, including the Crees, Choctaws, and the Cherokee Nation, are explored. The election strategies of such political figures as Henry Clay, William Henry Harrison, Martin Van Buren, and John Tyler, paired with a discussion of the shifting face of the National Republican, Democratic-Republican, Jacksonian, and burgeoning Whig parties, illuminate the far-reaching impact of this compelling period in United States history.

The Unfinished Nation: He Brought the People with Him

Documents the period between 1812 and 1850 in America, focusing specifically on the presidency of Andrew Jackson. The program presents a well-rounded profile of Jackson from his early popularity as the “man of the people” to his bitter falling out with vice president John C. Calhoun. John Quincy Adams, Henry Clay, Martin Van Buren, and Daniel Webster and their role in Jackson's presidency are each introduced, while the impact of the Tariff Laws is traced to increasing discontent and the rumblings of war.

Wednesday Academic Lab - Complete the Jackson Packet! I will collect 12 papers at random during 8th period on Wednesday. They will be graded, and averaged. The average grade=class grade=your grade! Be ready, and make sure your team-mates are ready, too!

Sunday, November 22, 2009

HW Assignments: Week of 11/22

Hello, APUSHers:

Here are your HW assignments for the upcoming week. Even though we will not be meeting for class on Thursday and Friday, we must stay on pace, and keep up with our readings.

All assignments are due the following MONDAY 11/29.

1. OUTLINE Chapter NOTES on Chapters 13 and 14. CLICK HERE FOR CHAPTER 13, CLICK HERE FOR CHAPTER 14.

2. READ CHAPTERS 13 and 14 in The American Pageant. Here is the link to Chapter 13. Here is the link to Chapter 14.

3. Complete Chapter ID's and Guided Reading Questions for Chapters 13 and 14. Here is a link to the AP Workbook.


Sunday, November 15, 2009

HW Assignments Week of 11/16

Hello, APUSHers:

Here's the HW for this week.

MONDAY - Please complete your reading of Ch. 12, as well as guided reading questions 8-18. Please note that I will collect ALL of the guided reading questions on TUESDAY!

TUESDAY - MOVIE NIGHT!!! A DOUBLE FEATURE!!! Pick one or the other! Do BOTH, GO THE EXTRA MILE, and use it towards removing a missed HW.

Reconsiders the so-called Era of Good Feelings during the presidencies of James Madison and James Monroe, exploring the growing rift between Northerners and Southerners over the issue of slavery. This program tracks the aftermath of the United States' victory over England in the War of 1812, touching on economic and geographic expansion, improved transportation, and a national bank. Such bold moves would require a more powerful central government than Thomas Jefferson and the Constitution had envisioned, leading these outgoing young Americans to rethink former concepts of nationalism. This program examines expansion into not only western territories, but also into the North with its fur trade and the South with its slave plantations, a radical response to the invention of the cotton gin. Important documents emerging from Monroe’s presidency, notably the Monroe Doctrine and the Missouri Compromise, are also analyzed, as are the first rumblings of civil war.


Feature #2:
Explains how the beginning of the Industrial Revolution in the United States had a profound impact on the social structure of the country as well as its economic foundation. The program chronicles the changes in the makeup and behavior of the American family, the role of women, life on the farm, and the widening gap between the poor and wealthy in slave and free communities. Also discussing the distribution of wealth, the transportation revolution, urban centers, the emergence of the middle class, college and church life, and education in farming communities, the engaging presentation analyzes the mechanization of agriculture upon the introduction of the McCormick reaper and Eli Whitney's cotton gin.


Finish the War of 1812 Quest if you did not do so already. Quest and Movie Night assignments are due on THURSDAY!

THURSDAY - Complete the Marshall Court Mini-Quest we started in the Pub-Lab Today! (will be graded)! Will count as a 1/4 test (Weight is 1.0 points. Tests are 4.0)

FRIDAY - Just when you thought it was safe to go to class again...IT'S SON OF EXAMENITO MUCHO MAS GRANDE!!! 100 Question Take Home Exam! Covering 1783-1815 (Ch. 10, 11, 12).

Tuesday, November 10, 2009

Sunday, November 8, 2009

HW Assignments Week of 11/8

Hello, APUSHers:

Here are your assignments for the week.

MONDAY 11/8. Finish the Guided Reading Questions, and Chapter ID's for Tuesday. If you've already finished, please proceed to Tuesday night's assignments.

Tuesday Night 11/9 - Due Wed. 11/10

1. Please view, and listen to the following Lectures:

2. View, and take notes on all parts of the lectures. The notes should not simply be a rewriting of the lecture. To that end, your notes should be NO LONGER than ONE Handwritten Page per Lesson...YES...I said Handwritten!

3. Complete the Interactive Discussion on the Louisiana Purchase. After completing the discussion, write a thoughtful response to the question below. Your response should be a minimum of 100 words.

Was Jefferson authorized in making the Louisiana Purchase?


Wednesday Night: THE RETURN OF MOVIE NIGHT!!! Get your friends, get some popcorn!

Tonight's Feature...What happens when you and your BFF don't agree? What happens when those decisions affect a nation? See it all tonight on


Turn in your Podcast/Video Form on Friday!

Thursday 11/11 - Due Friday 12th, along with Wednesday's HW

PODCAST NIGHT!

Choose one (1) of the following. GO THE EXTRA MILE, and d0 both. You can use this GEM to take the place of a missing HW assignment (except Chapter readings).

The Louisiana Purchase Talking History's host, Bryan Le Beau, discusses how the reality of the Louisiana Purchase compares to Thomas Jefferson's vision of the United States as a land of cultivators of the earth and of slavery with Roger Kennedy, author of Mr. Jefferson's Lost Cause: Land, Farmers, Slavery and the Louisiana Purchase. Airdate: December 1, 2003.

Lewis and Clark William Clark called his expedition a "vast . . . enterprise." Two hundred years later, the scholarly investigation of Lewis and Clark is itself a vast undertaking. Talking History's Fred Nielsen is joined by James Ronda, the Barnard Chair professor in western history at the University of Tulsa. Ronda's books include Lewis and Clark among the Indians and Voyages of Discovery: Essays on the Lewis and Clark Expedition. Airdate: May 17, 2004.

Friday Night - Due MONDAY 11/15
1. PREVIEW Chapter 12 by reading the Chapter Notes.


2. REVIEW the War of 1812, by listening to the lecture.

Resource: CLICK HERE for the lecture.

3. Read Chapter 12, and complete the Chapter 12 GRQ's and ID's

Resources:
CLICK HERE for the audio version of the textbook



Sunday, November 1, 2009

HW Assignments Week of November 2nd

Hello, APUSHers:

In an effort to keep you organized, here are the HW assignments for the week.

Monday Night: Complete the reading, outline and guided reading questions for Chapter 10. Please click on the appropriate links for the Chapter 10 reading assignment. If you finished the Chapter 10 assignment, you can start Tuesday's Assignment. Please note that there will be a QUIZ Thursday on Chapter 10.

Tuesday Night (DUE THURSDAY 11/5): Complete the Constitution Quest.

CLICK HERE FOR THE LINK TO THE CONSTITUTION QUEST

For each section of the Constitution, you will be directed to answer a series of questions. The questions can be answered by clicking on the highlighted words.

It is suggested that while working on this assignment, you have two "tabs" open. One for the Interactive Constitution, and one for the questions.

Thursday: PODCAST NIGHT - Listen to the Podcast, and complete the Podcast Form. Due Friday 11/6. Click on the link below.

Talking History's Fred Nielsen is joined by Geoffrey Stone author of Perilous Times: Free Speech in wartime, from the Sedition Act to the War on Terrorism. Their discussion focuses on Stone's contention that the United States government tolerates opposition to its policies except in times of war, when dissention is met with punishment. Geoffrey Stone is a professor of history at the University of Chicago Law School. Airdate: June 5, 2006

Friday Night: Due Monday 11/9/09
1. Preview Chapter 11 by reading, and outlining Chapter Notes on an index card. Index Card is an "entrance ticket" to Class on Monday

2. Read Chapter 11, complete Chapter ID's and Guided Reading Questions. CLICK HERE FOR THE APUSH WORKBOOK.

Expect a QUIZ on Chapter 11 MONDAY!!!


Monday, October 26, 2009

In-Class Assignment - Critical Period Video Quest

Background Info: The 1780s are known as the "critical period" of American history. The country, saddled with a wholly inadequate framework of government, was faced by grave threats to its independence. On the domestic front the national government was on the verge of bankruptcy and the nation's currency was virtually worthless. The Continental Army officers threatened military action against Congress while armed mobs in Massachusetts closed courts and threatened a state armory. Contributing to the economic instability, states imposed heavy duties on neighboring states and enacted laws violating the rights of creditors. In foreign affairs, the young Republic was ill equipped to deal with North African pirates enslaved American sailors, In addition, Britain, in violation of the peace treaty ending the Revolution, refused to evacuate its forts on American soil.

Your mission: After clicking on the link below, you will view a series of video clips related to the Critical Period. After each clip are a series of questions. Using the clips, and your knowledge of Social Studies, answer the questions in as detailed a manner as possible.

CLICK HERE TO GET STARTED WITH THE VIDEO QUEST

Textbook and Workbook

Hello, APUSHers:

In an effort to make your lives a little easier. I've created an online folder for the textbook, and the workbook (guided reading questions and Chapter ID's).

Here's a link for the folder.


Saturday, October 24, 2009

HW Assignments Week of October 26th

Hello, APUSHers:

I hope you are successfully completing Examenito Mucho Mas Grande. Good Luck to all.

Anyway...In an effort to keep you focused, and help you manage your time effectively, here are the week's assignments. Click the appropriate links for the HW resources.

Please pay careful attention to due dates and assignments. Please make sure that you put the date of the assignment and your name on the work that you turn in.

Monday Night 10/26. Due Date: 10/27
1. Watch and Listen to the Lectures:
3. Write your chapter notes outline on ONE (1) index card. I will be checking these on TUESDAY

Tuesday Night 10/27. Due Date: 10/29
Complete Chapter ID's and Guided Reading Questions (Click for the ID's and Q's)

Thursday Night. Due Date 10/30
PODCAST NIGHT! Get your friends, and gather round the computer for an interesting and engaging discussion! CLICK HERE FOR THE PODCAST. Click here for the podcast form.

Friday Night: Due Monday 11/2
1. Preview Ch. 10 by Highlighting and Outlining the Chapter Notes. Write your outline on an index card, which will be used as an "entrance ticket" to class on Monday.
3. Complete ID's and Guided Reading Questions. To make your lives a little more convenient, and with the help of Mr. Hengersterman from Ballston Spa HS, here's a complete ON-LINE Workbook for the Textbook.

I will post resources shortly. See you all on Monday.

Thursday, October 22, 2009

Tonight's HW 10/22

Hello, Everyone:

Here are the groups for tonight's HW assignment. Please note that you are only responsible for reading the article assigned to your group. Here's the link to the assignments

Group 1: Valentina, Frank Z, Joe C., Allen, Nelofar, Abigail, Gabrielle
Group 2: Maria V., Susan, Camilla, Elizabeth, Nisaa, Alyssa, Ashley, Sara
Group 3: Kathleen, Frank A., Charlie, Andrew, Luca, Aliyah, Sanam
Group 4: Kris, Ahsley D, David W., Fernando, Elana, Sebastian, Stacy
Group 5: Angela, Anthony, Spencer, Emma, Michelle

Group 1's: "A Revolution to Conserve"
2's: "Radicals vs. Conservatives"
3's: “The American Revolution as a Colonial War for Independence” by Thomas Barrow
4's: “Conflict and Consensus in the American Revolution” by Edmund Morgan
5's: “Women in the Revolution” by Mary Beth Norton


Thursday, October 15, 2009

APUSH Assignments Week of 10/19-10/24

Hello, APUSHers:

In an effort to help you budget your time effectively, and be prepared for the upcoming week, here's a listing of the assignments.

In the previous post, you received the information for Chapter 8. That is your assignment for this weekend. To review that assignment, click here.

Here are the assignments for the upcoming week.

Monday Night 10/19: Thomas Paine Podcast. Listen to the Podcast, and take notes. Complete the Supplemental Podcast Form. Click on the Thomas Paine link for the podcast!

Tuesday Night 10/20: MOVIE NIGHT! View, and take notes on The Unfinished Nation: Not Much of a War. Complete the Supplemental Podcast Form. and generate five (5) Discussion-Level questions. In other words, questions, that go beyond one sentence answers; those deep "teacher" questions that can spur a class to talk for hours on a single point!

Thursday: CONFLICT AND CONSENSUS Readings. Teams will be assigned specific readings. Based on the readings you are assigned you will complete the corresponding questions. Please note that you are only responsible for the questions and readings assigned to your team.

Friday: EXAMENITO MUCHO MAS GRANDE! Not for the Faint of Heart! Another group effort/take home. 100 Questions. Covering everything we've done so far! Details to Follow!

Wednesday, October 14, 2009

Tonight's HW Thursday October 15th Assignment #13

Hello, Everyone:

Here is your homework assignment for this evening, October 15th. The assignment is due on MONDAY.

1. Preview Chapter 8 by reading the Chapter Notes. Highlight the chapter notes. Take what you've highlighted, and rewrite that information on to an index card.

2. READ and OUTLINE Chapter 8 in The American Pageant.

3. Complete the Chapter ID's and Guided Reading Questions


Chapter 8 Resources.

Chapter 8: American Secedes from the Empire – Big Picture Themes

1. Nearly every advantage on paper went to Britain during the revolution. They had better troops, training, a much better navy, experienced generals, more money, better weapons and equipment.

2. The Americans had on their side heart and geography. America was very big and an ocean removed from England.

3. Perhaps due to necessity rather than plan, American employed a drawn-out strategy where the war dragged on for six years. America won by constantly withdrawing to the nation�s interior and moving on to fight another day.

4. Meanwhile, as the war waged, the Declaration of Independence was written, signed, and approved.

5. The Treaty of Paris 1783 legitimized the new nation.


Audio Version of Chapter 8 on iTunes. Download it, and listen to it on the bus!

Chapter 8 Notes. Print 'em out. Highlight, and outline on an index card.

Chapter 8 Reading The best thing to do, is print it out, and highlight it. Short on paper? Share the reading with a friend!

Chapter ID's and Guided Reading Questions

IDENTIFICATIONS:
Second Continental Congress
Hessians
Thomas Paine/Common Sense
George Washington
Marquis de Layfette
Baron Von Steuban
John Burgoyne
Benedict Arnold
Treaty of Paris, 1783
Battle of Trenton
Battles of Lexington and Concord
Battle of Saratoga
Battle of Yorktown
Articles of Confederation

GUIDED READING QUESTIONS:

Congress Drafts George Washington

Know: Second Continental Congress, George Washington

1. Why was George Washington chosen as general of the American army?

Bunker Hill and Hessian Hirelings

Know: Ethan Allen, Benedict Arnold, Fort Ticonderoga, Bunker Hill, Redcoats, Olive Branch Petition, Hessians

2. George III "slammed the door on all hope of reconciliation." How and why?

The Abortive Conquest of Canada

Know: Richard Montgomery

3. Did the fighting go well for Americans before July of 1776? Explain.

Thomas Paine Preaches Common Sense

4. Why was Common Sense important?

Paine and the Idea of "Republicanism"

Know: Republic, Natural Aristocracy

5. Why did Paine want a democratic republic?

Jefferson's "Explanation" of Independence

Know: Richard Henry Lee, Thomas Jefferson, Declaration of Independence, Natural Rights

6. What does the Declaration of Independence say?

Patriots and Loyalists

Know: Patrick Henry

7. What kinds of people were Loyalists?


Makers of America: The Loyalists

8. What happened to Loyalists after the war?


The Loyalist Exodus

9. What happened to Loyalists during the war?


Burgoyne's Blundering Invasion

Know: John Burgoyne, Benedict Arnold, Saratoga, Horatio Gates

10. Why did the Americans win the battle of Saratoga? Why was it significant?


Revolution in Diplomacy?

11. Why did the French help America win independence?

The Colonial War Becomes a Wider War

Know: Armed Neutrality

12. Why was foreign aid so important to the American cause?

Blow and Counterblow

Know: Nathaniel Greene, Charles Cornwallis

13. Would an American Patriot, reading news of the war in 1780, have been happy about the way the war was going? Explain.


The Land Frontier and the Sea Frontier

Know: Iroquois Confederacy, Fort Stanwix, George Rogers Clarke, John Paul Jones, Privateers

14. Was frontier fighting important in the outcome of the war?

Yorktown and the Final Curtain

Know: Charles Cornwallis, Yorktown

15. If the war did not end at Yorktown, then why was it important?

Peace at Paris

Know: Benjamin Franklin, John Adams, John Jay, Treaty of Paris

16. What did America gain and what did it concede in the Treaty of Paris?


A New Nation Legitimized

Know: Whigs

17 Did Americans get favorable terms in the Treaty of Paris? Explain.

Whose Revolution?

18. Which of the interpretations of the Revolution seems most true to you? Least true? Explain.