Sunday, March 21, 2010

HW Assignments Week of 3/22/2010

Hello, Everyone:

Here are your assignments for the week. FYI, We are tentatively looking at a quiz/mini-test on Friday, on PROGRESSIVISM. Progressivism is covered in CHAPTER 17 of your textbook.
CLICK HERE for a Presentation with all of the info that you will need about Progressivism (certainly enough to pass the exam).

The assignments...

Monday Night: Due Tuesday!

If you haven't set up your account, please click HERE to set up your account with POWER MEDIA PLUS. You will need this account, as sometimes you will be asked to watch videos for this class at home. DON'T WORRY! IT'S FREE! Enter the following passcode (copy and paste works best) yPNvYtchCh - If for some reason, you can't set it up, please come see me during afterschool, and we can set up your account.


3. After you've watched the video, click here and print out the PODCAST SHEET. Don't worry about the "AP US History" heading. I use this sheet for all of my classes. Watch the video again, but this time, fill out the sheet as you're watching it.

Tuesday: Due Wednesday
1. CLICK HERE. Please watch, and listen to the lecture entitled "The Progressive Impulse."
2. Watch the lecture again. This time, while you're watching the lecture, complete the PODCAST SHEET (the same one you used for the movie!)
3. Using what you've learned from the lecture, the video, and other resources you might find helpful, please identify the following KEY TERMS (vocab) and NAMES (ppl)
  1. Progressive Movement (Or "progressivism")
  2. Muckraker
  3. Suffrage
  4. Susan B. Anthony
  5. Theodore Roosevelt
  6. The Jungle
  7. NAACP
  8. Woodrow Wilson
  9. Clayton Anti-Trust Act
  10. Federal Reserve System
  11. Square Deal
  12. Triangle Shirtwaist Fire
Wednesday: DUE THURSDAY

1. Using the lecture that you viewed last night for HW, your notes, and your knowledge of US History, answer the questions below. Each answer should contain some facts, and details, and should be between three (3) to five (5) sentences each. Please complete your assignments on looseleaf paper (in ink), or type on the computer.

  1. What were the problems the Progressives tried to fix?
  2. According to the Progressives, what caused these problems?
  3. Who were the MUCKRAKERS? What reasons might explain why they are so important?
  4. In your own words, describe a "political machine."
  5. Briefly explain how the "city manager" system worked?
  6. How did companies try to get around laws set up to protect workers?
  7. What was so important about the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory fire?
Thursday: Review for a QUIZ on Chapter 17 (Progressivism)

Friday: Begin working on your spring break assignment.
SPRING BREAK ASSIGNMENTS ARE DUE MONDAY!!! MONDAY!!! MONDAY!!!
Choose one of the following, or BOTH, if you need to make up assignments.

1. Progressive Era Web Quest Click the link for a GOOGLE DOCS folder with all of the stuff that you need for the assignment!

Tuesday, March 16, 2010

HW 3/17/2010

Hello, Everyone:

Here's tonight's HW assignment

THEMATIC ESSAY - DUE DATE 3/22/2010 - Will be graded as a 2.0 weighted quiz.

Theme: Change — Industrialization

During the 19th century, the United States experienced tremendous industrial
growth. This industrial growth resulted in many changes in American life.

Task:
Identify two changes in American life that resulted from industrial growth in the
United States and for each change

• Explain how industrialization contributed to this change
• Discuss one positive or one negative effect of this change on American life

You may use any appropriate change in American life that resulted from industrial growth.
Some suggestions you might wish to consider include increased immigration, new inventions
or technologies, growth of labor unions, growth of monopolies, growth of reform movements,
and increased urbanization.

You are not limited to these suggestions.

Guidelines:
In your essay, be sure to:

• Develop all aspects of the task
• Support the theme with relevant facts, examples, and details
• Use a logical and clear plan of organization, including an introduction and a conclusion that
are beyond a restatement of the theme

Rules:
1. Essays will be collected at the start of class on March 22.
2. Essays must be computer-printed, or neatly handwritten IN INK on looseleaf paper. Anything less will not be accepted; i.e. pencil, pages ripped from a composition notebook, spiral notebook pages.
3. Essays must be FINAL DRAFTS; spell-checked. In short, your absolute best work.


Sunday, March 14, 2010

Test Review Questions

Use these questions to help you review for the quiz!

1. How did industrialization affect the population of the US in the late 1800's?
2. What did the PROGRESSIVES want to achieve?
3. How did a) the Civil War, and b) the Railroads help lead to the industrial boom of the late 1800's?
4. Why did most immigrants settle in cities during the late 19th Century?
5. Who were Upton Sinclair, and Jacob Riis, and why are they important?
6. What were the goals of labor unions during the late 1800's, and why weren't they successful?
7. In your own words explain what a "monopoly" is.
8. Why were many of the business leaders of the late 19th Century called "Robber Barons?"
9. What were "pools" and how were they used by business leaders in the late 1800's?
10. What were "trusts" and how were they used by business leaders in the late 1800's?

Monday, March 08, 2010

HW Assignments Week of 3/8/2010

Hello, Everyone:

Here are the assignments for this upcoming week.

Monday Night - Movie Night
1. Choose ONE of the movies to watch, or if you want to GO THE EXTRA MILE, watch both. Complete the PODCAST VIDEO Review Sheet. Click on the link, and print it out. If you intend to do both, please print two review sheets.

The Unfinished Nation: A New Corporate Order

Investigates the major causes and implications for the Industrial Revolution. Set against the backdrop of social change and political dispute, the program discusses Thomas Edison, the light bulb, Eli Whitney, the cotton gin, J. P. Morgan, John Rockefeller, Andrew Carnegie, the railroad strike, the Knights of Labor Union, and the American Federation of Labor. Wrapping up with a look at the tremendous transformations in the quality of life for both skilled and unskilled workers during the revolution, the informative presentation addresses wage disputes, poverty, the creation of the working class, and child labor.

The Unfinished Nation: The Age of the City

Chronicles the rapid population growth in major cities in the United States during the late 1800s due to rapid immigration from Germany, Ireland, Italy, and Russia. The program examines immigrants’ assimilation into the United States and the public pressures they faced to abandon any sense of their “Old World identity.” Segments on the gender roles of immigrant men and women and growing differentiation between the upper and middle classes emphasizes immigration's ruffling of the American social fabric. Urban life--focusing specifically on tenement apartments in Chicago and Milwaukee, unemployment, and pollution--is compared to homes in the outlying suburbs, revealing the catalysts behind the development of departments of public health and such capitalistic enterprises as Sears and Roebuck. Play

Tuesday Night: Due Thursday
1. Read Chapter 15 in the Textbook
2. Copy Visual Summary on p. 478.
3. Answer "Terms and Names" on p. 478
4. Answer "Main Ideas" on p. 478

Thursday Night: Prepare for a QUIZ on Chapters 14 and 15 on Friday. A list of possible question topics to follow.

Friday, March 05, 2010

HW Friday 3/4/2010

R.U.S.H. Students:

HW this weekend:

1. REVIEW Chapter 14 in your textbook.
2. Listen to the following Lectures


Please take notes on the lectures on the following worksheet. CLICK HERE for the worksheet. You must complete ONE worksheet per lecture.