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Abbott Lawrence Academy 2016-2017 Curriculum Map: Year at a Glance Subject: AP History Grade: 10 Unit Title Summer Unit Time Allocation (# 0f weeks based on 38 weeks in school year) Essential Questions (for unit) 3 weeks Is it possible for historians to be unbiased? 1. Class Protocols/ Procedures, Period 1 1491-1607 3 weeks 2. Period 2 1607-1754 3 weeks How do I succeed in AP US history? How does environment impact the development of civilization? When two powers meet, must there always be a conflict with a winner and loser? How do the settlers of a community impact its development? Core Text/Supplemental Learnings (include major references) America’s History Ch. 1, 2 A People’s History, Zinn, Ch. 1 and 2 America’s History Ch. 1, 2 cont’d A People’s History, Zinn, Ch. 1 and 2 cont’d Image: The Kincaid Site, Herb Roe America’s History Ch 3, 4 A People’s History, Zinn, Ch. 3 Examining bias- WWII propaganda posters Performance Tasks (How will you know that students have mastered the taught concepts) Comparative Essay- Howard Zinn vs. America’s History textbook Reading Quiz- Chapters 1+2 Binder Check Themes Chart- Students can take events from chapters 1-4 and place/defend what AP theme categories they fit into (such as Work, Exchange, Technology versus Politics and Power) Reading Quiz- Chapters 3+4 What are the warning signs of a coming revolution? City Upon a Hill, John Winthrop Letter of John Pory Themes, Primary Source Analysis Quiz What causes revolution? Edenton Ladies’ Tea Party Transatlantic Migration 15001760, Stanley Engerman and Kenneth Sokoloff p. 121 of textbook A Revival of Religious Fervor, 1744 by Thomas Prince AP DBQ Essay on periods 1 and 2 regarding Puritanism and the rise of American Exceptionalism Unit 1+ 2 Test- Multiple Choice and Short Answer Binder Checks (2) DBQ Primary Sources, Prompt from 1993 AP Exam 3. Period 3 1754-1800 4 weeks To what extent was the American Revolution a revolt against taxes? To what extent did the Declaration of Independence establish the foundation of American government? How successful were the America’s History Ch 5, 6, 7, 8 Reading Quiz- Chapters 5, 6, 7, 8 Zinn, Ch. 4 and 5 Project- Synthesizing how 1 AP theme (student choice) can be applied across 3 AP time periods (units 1 and 2) Declaration of Independence Articles of Confederation United States Constitution Binder Checks (2) Articles of Confederation in proving the US with a government? Could the constitution have been written without compromise? 4. Period 4 1800-1848 4 weeks Was a common American identity formed at the cost of minorities? America’s History Ch 9, 10, 11, 12 Speech by John A. Morris about railroad on July 4, 1828 Henry David Thoreau, Walden, or Life in the Woods, 1854 Reading Quiz- Chapters 9, 10, 11, 12 AP Long Essay on a period 4 prompt Binder Checks (2) Amsco Chapter 8 History Channel- Erie Canal video clip Eric Johnson Trail of Tears lyrics Kerri Washington Actor Portrayal of Sojourner Truth’s speech, Ain’t I A Woman? Video 5. Period 5 1844-1877 4 weeks How did American Exceptionalism influence US foreign policy? Excerpts from: - Molly Seawell, The Ladies’ Battle, 1911 -Jane Addams, The Annuals of the American Academy of Social and Political Science, November 1914 -Anna Howard Shaw, NAWSA Convention speech, 1913 -Doris Stevens, Jailed for Freedom, 1917 America’s History Ch 13, 14, 15, 16 Amsco chapters 14, 15 (p. 268318) Reading Quiz- Chapters 13, 14, 15, 16 Debate Simulation representing state representatives leading up to the Civil War Midterm 6. Period 6 1865- 1898 7. Period 7 1890-1945 4 weeks 4 weeks How did industrialization influence the United States, both socially and economically? What role did ethnocentrism play in making the US a world power? America’s History Ch 17, 18, 19, 20 Binder Checks (2) Reading Quiz- Chapters 17, 18, 19, 20 Amsco chapters 14, 15 (p. 268318) Research paper (Eng/Speech/History) America’s History Ch 21, 22, 23, 24 Binder Checks (2) Reading Quiz- Chapters 21, 22, 23, 24 Amsco Ch. 20-25 (p. 409-555) 8. Period 8 1945-1980 5 weeks How did the dropping of atomic bombs influence the US in world affairs? America’s History Ch 25, 26, 27, 28, 29 Propaganda Project- Student will create/justify a propaganda piece for either the Spanish American War, World War I, or World War II Binder Checks (2) Reading Quiz- 25, 26, 27, 28, 29 Chapters Amsco pgs. (Chapters 26-29), pages 557-649 9. Period 9 1980- Present 2 weeks How has media changed the way citizens view/participate in politics? America’s History Ch 30, 31 3 weeks How do I score a 5 on my AP exam? Binder Checks (3) Reading Quiz- Chapters 30, 31 AP Practice Exam Amsco (Ch. 30, 31), pages 653701 10. Test Review/Final Project AP practice exam on periods 1-8 Amsco APUSH Test Review (p. 702-728) Binder Checks (1) AP Exam Final Year Project AP presentation to Pre-AP World students about what it takes to succeed in AP History Abbott Lawrence Academy 2016-2017 Curriculum Map: Subject: AP US History Grade: 10 Period 1 1491-1607 (3 Weeks) Essential Questions How do I succeed in AP US history? How does environment impact the development of civilization? SWBAT sort current and historical events into APUSH themes. Learning Objectives for Unit SWBAT describe the similarities and differences among Native American societies and how geography affected their lifestyle. SWBAT compare and contrast European society with that of Native Americans, and articulate the impact of the Columbian Exchange. Performance tasks: Formative and Summative Comparative Essay- Students will write an essay comparing the first two chapters of Howard Zinn’s A People’s History of the United States and the America’s History textbook. Possible topics may be examining bias, topic, book coverage, and tone. Reading Quiz- Chapters 1+2 Binder Check AP Standards/ Lawrence Standards Language Objectives Academic Language The reading, speaking, writing, and listening skills will you teach, re-teach, or review so students will be able to explain and apply the content, skills, and/or procedures. The formallanguage skillsvocabulary, grammar, punctuation, syntax, disciplinespecific terminology, or rhetorical conventions—that allow students to acquire knowledge Content Objectives What students will know and be able to do at the end of the unit Texts and Supplemental Learnings CrossContent Connectio ns A1- A historical analysis of sources focuses on the interplay between the content of a source and the authorship, point of view, purposes, audience, and format or medium of that source, assessing the usefulness, reliability, and limitations of the source as historical evidence. SWBAT write a paragraph describing how two tribes differed from one another due to their geographic differences. C1- Historical thinking involves the ability to identify, compare, and evaluate multiple perspectives on a given historical event in order to draw conclusions about that event. SWBAT discuss the impact of the Columbian Exchange on North America and, in writing, compare its impact on both Europe and North America. SWBAT read and summarize the initial encounters of the Spanish and Native Americans and define/offer examples of the Columbian Exchange. 1.1 As native populations migrated and settled across the vast expanse of North America over time, they developed distinct and increasingly complex societies by adapting to and transforming their diverse environments. 1.2 Contact among Europeans, Native Americans, and Africans resulted in the Columbian Exchange and significant social, cultural, and political changes on both sides of the Atlantic Ocean. Comparison, Hypothesize, Source, Evidence, Claim, Reasoing, Pueblo, Navajo Sioux, Apache. Great Basin, Great Plains, Iroquois Confederacy of the Northeast; Creek, Chocktaw, or Cherokee of the Southeast, Northwest Passage, Caravel, sextant, joint-stock trading company, encomienda system, smallpox, caste, Mestizo, Zambo, mulatto, joint-stock companies SWBAT explain the relevance of the author’s point of view, author's purpose, audience, format or medium, and/or historical context as well as the interaction among these features to demonstrate understanding of the significance of a primary source. America’s History Ch. 1, 2 A People’s History, Zinn, Ch. 1 and 2 Image: The Kincaid Site, Herb Roe SWBAT compare diverse perspectives represented in primary and secondary sources in order to draw conclusions about one or more historical events. ELA- Julius Caesartheme of starting anew/contras t of Native Americans already being present, Europeans didn’t ‘discover’ the new world SWBAT compare two Native American tribes, and articulate how geography impacted their lifestyles. Using primary sources, SWBAT describe the initial interactions between the Spanish and Native Americans. SWBAT compare the similarities and differences of European and Native American societies. SWBAT summarize the impact of the Columbian Exchange on both North America and Europe/Africa. Abbott Lawrence Academy 2016-2017 Curriculum Map: Subject: AP US History Grade: 10 Period 2 1607- 1754 (3) Weeks Essential Questions To what extent was the American Revolution a revolt against taxes? To what extent did the Declaration of Independence establish the foundation of American government? How successful were the Articles of Confederation in proving the US with a government? Could the constitution have been written without compromise? SWBAT describe how different labor systems developed in North America and how different systems affected the lives of Americans and US society. Learning Objectives for Unit SWBAT explain how patterns of exchange, markets, and private enterprise have developed and analyze ways that governments have responded to economic issues. Performance tasks: Formative and Summative SWBAT explain how religious groups and ideas have affected American society and institutions . Themes Chart- Students can take events from chapters 1-4 and place/defend what AP theme categories they fit into (such as Work, Exchange, Technology versus Politics and Power) Reading Quiz- Chapters 3+4 Themes, Primary Source Analysis Quiz- students will be able to match both current and historical events or characters to AP themes AP DBQ Essay on periods 1 and 2 regarding Puritanism and the rise of American Exceptionalism Unit 1+ 2 Test- Multiple Choice and Short Answer Binder Checks (2) AP Standards/ Lawrence Standards Language Objectives Academic Language Content Objectives Texts and Supplemental Learnings Cross-Content Connections 2.1 Europeans developed a variety of colonization and migration patterns, influenced by different imperial goals, cultures, and the varied North American environments where they settled, and they competed with each other and American Indians for resources. 2.2 The British colonies participated in political, social, cultural, and economic exchanges with Great Britain that encouraged both stronger bonds with Britain and resistance to Britain’s control. Using a map, SWBAT write in colonial settlements, and using colony names, describe how geography impacted their development. SWBAT deliver an oral presentation, using vocabulary of historical events, to describe the tension arising between European powers. SWBAT use a graphic organizer to pair up European and Native American powers to demonstrate understanding of alliance systems. SWBAT draw a cause and effect model of British imposed taxes and legislation to colonial rebellion. Cause and Effect, Contextualization, proprietorship, Navigation Acts, Quakers, Dominion of New England, Glorious Revolution, Second Hundred Years’ War, tribalization, South Atlantic System, Middle Passage, salutary neglect, William Penn, John Locke, Enlightenment, Piety, natural rights, deism, consumer revolution, Benjamin Franklin, William Pitt, Isaac Newton SWBAT use a map in describing European settlements in North America, and describe how geography impacted their development. SWBAT to deliver a presentation on the tension arising between European powers in the New World as they competed for resources. SWBAT describe the alliances that formed between European powers both with each other and with Native American tribes. SWBAT use a timeline to argue the effect taxes and strong British oversight had on the development of colonial identity. SWBAT describe the impact the Navigation Act, Stamp Acts, and other British legislation had on colonial rebellion. America’s History Ch 3, 4 A People’s History, Zinn, Ch. 3 Examining bias- WWII propaganda posters City Upon a Hill, John Winthrop Letter of John Pory Physics/ChemSciences becoming more credible based on the Enlightenment and discoveries of scientists like Isaac Newton. ex. Newton/FranklinDiesim and the rise of scientific discovery ELA- Propaganda and Persuasion Advanced Honors Algebra II- Students will look at immigration trends to the US and identify/describe patterns of change. Students will also look at the population of Native Americans as compared to Europeans and hypothesize the correlation between the two populations. Abbott Lawrence Academy 2016-2017 Curriculum Map: Subject: AP US History Grade: 10 Period 3 1754-1800 (4) Weeks To what extent was the American Revolution a revolt against taxes? Essential Questions To what extent did the Declaration of Independence establish the foundation of American government? How successful were the Articles of Confederation in proving the US with a government? Could the constitution have been written without compromise? SWBAT explain how ideas about democracy, freedom, and individualism found expression in the development of cultural values, political institutions, and American identity. Learning Objectives for Unit SWBAT explain how interpretations of the Constitution and debates over rights, liberties, and definitions of citizenship have affected American values. politics, and society. Performance tasks: Formative and Summative SWBAT explain how different beliefs about the federal government’s role in US social and economic life have affected political debates and policies. Reading Quiz- Chapters 5, 6, 7, 8 Project- Synthesizing how 1 AP theme (student choice) can be applied across 3 AP time periods (units 1 and 2) Binder Checks (2) AP Standards/ Lawrence Standards Language Objectives Academic Language Content Objectives Texts and Supplemental Learnings Cross-Content Connections 3.1 British attempts to assert tighter control over its North American colonies and the colonial resolve to pursue selfgovernment led to a colonial independence movement and the Revolutionary War. 3.2 The American Revolution’s democratic and republican ideal inspired new experiments with different forms of government. 3.3 Migration within North America and competition over resources, boundaries, and trade intensified conflicts among peoples and nations. SWBAT annotate different types of propaganda and organize information from the source into different categories of the primary source graphic organizer. SWBAT annotate the Declaration of Independence and organize information from the source into different categories of the primary source graphic organizer. SWBAT verbally explain the demographics most protected by the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution, and with the use of classroom technology, highlight sections of text that explicitly leave out reference to other groups. SWBAT write a short essay describing two major disagreements between colonial leadership, and what the compromise included in order to satisfy both sides. Loyalists, Patriots, Rebels, Shays’s Rebellion, The Philadelphia Convention, The Virginia Plan, New Jersey Plan, The Great Compromise, Federalists, Antifederalists, SWBAT describe the beginnings of the print revolution and its impact on the American Revolution. SWBAT summarize the most important ideals contained in the Declaration of Independence and interpret their greater significance on American society. SWBAT describe the significance of the Constitutional Conventions and the compromises made in order to secure unity. SWBAT articulate the major disagreements among colonial leadership in crafting a unified front against the British. America’s History Ch 5, 6, 7, 8 Zinn, Ch. 4 and 5 Declaration of Independence Articles of Confederation United States Constitution Common Sense, Thomas Paine Speech and Composition- students will identify the use of rhetoric in political speeches and documents and well as explain the logical fallacies present in American leadership, such as, Thomas Jefferson owning slaves Abbott Lawrence Academy 2016-2017 Curriculum Map: Subject: AP US History Grade: 10 Unit 4 1800-1848 (4) Weeks Was a common American identity formed at the cost of minorities? Essential Questions Learning Objectives for Unit SWBAT explain to what extent did Thomas Jefferson’s presidency shape conceptions of national identity as expressed in the development of political institutions and cultural values. SWBAT describe how westward migration led to political and social conflicts (domestic, foreign, Native American) and the effects on Native Americans. SWBAT express how competing conceptions of national and regional identity express in the development of political institutions and cultural values after the war of 1812. Performance tasks: Formative and Summative SWBAT describe how geography and developments in transportation affect migration, the economy, and the development of different regions of North America. Long essay style question focusing on period 4 and how this time period drastically changed the outlook for migration into the US. Reading Quizzes for chapters 9, 10, 11, 12 Binder Checks (2) CC Standards/ Lawrence Standards Language Objectives Academic Language Content Objectives Texts and Supplementa l Learnings Cross-Content Connections 4.1 The United States began to develop a modern democracy and celebrated a new national culture, while Americans sought to define the nation’s democratic ideals and change their society and institutions to match them. 4.2 Innovations in technology, agriculture, and commerce powerfully accelerated the American economy, precipitating profound changes to U.S. society and to national and regional identities. 4.3 The U.S. interest in increasing foreign trade and expanding its national borders shaped the nation’s foreign policy and spurred government and private initiatives. SWBAT list (in writing) the causes of the Industrial and Market revolutions and verbally explain the impact of these changes on the economy. SWBAT read and annotate primary sources about the impact of the Market Revolution on ordinary Americans, and then compose a letter from the perspectives of someone living during that time comparing how their life was before and after the revolution. SWBAT create a graphic organizer and write in the perspectives of each side of the federal power debate. SW listen to their classmates and update this graphic organizer based on their arguments. SWBAT verbally debate the power of the federal government over states through the form of a debate, listening to and rebutting classmate arguments. Economy, Market, industrial, division of labor, mineralbased economy, mechanics, unions, labor theory of value, Market Revolution, Erie Canal, Middle class, Moral free agent, Temperance, Nativist movements, political machines, Consolidated government, nullification, Second Bank of the United States, Indian Removal Act of 1830, Trail of Tears, Classical liberalism, Laissez-faire, Whigs, Panic of 1837, Transcendentalis m, Utopia, Socialism, Underground railroad, Separate sphere, Seneca Falls Convention, Republican aristocracy, SWBAT identify and describe the causes and consequences of the Industrial and Market revolutions. SWBAT describe how the Market Revolution impacted how ordinary Americans lived. SWBAT describe the debate of the government’s role in the economy and connect this debate to present day arguments on the same issue. SWBAT identify and describe the three branches of the federal government, and the debate about federal power versus states’ rights. America’s History, Chapters 9-12 Speech by John A. Morris about railroad on July 4, 1828 Henry David Thoreau, Walden, or Life in the Woods, 1854 Amsco Chapter 8 (p. 150-173) History ChannelErie Canal video clip Eric Johnson Trail of Tears lyrics Kerri Washington Actor Portrayal of Sojourner Truth’s speech, Ain’t I A Woman? Excerpts from: Molly Seawell, The Ladies’ Battle, 1911 Jane Addams, The Annuals of the American Academy of Social and Political Science, November 1914 Anna Howard Shaw, NAWSA Convention speech, 1913 Doris Stevens, Jailed for Freedom, 1917 Advanced Honors Algebra IIgraphs studying the explosion of the economy based on the improvements in industry. Abbott Lawrence Academy 2016-2017 Curriculum Map: Subject: AP US History Grade: 10 Unit 5 1844-1877 (4) Weeks Essential Questions Learning Objectives for Unit How did American Exceptionalism influence US foreign policy? SWBAT describe the major aspects of domestic debates over US expansionism and how these debates shaped the formation of regional identities. How did conceptions of national and regional identity and of democratic ideals shape the debates over expansion and slavery, What role did the following factors play in bringing about civil war- political realignment, differing political beliefs, actions taken by abolitionist, arguments over economic policies, debates about interpretation of the Constitution, environmental factors, and migration to the US and the West How did the Civil War shape conceptions of national group, and regional identity? How did Reconstruction shape conceptions of national and regional identity? How did arguments over the meaning and interpretation shape the reconstruction. Performance tasks: Formative and Summative Reading Quiz- Chapters 13, 14, 15, 16 Debate Simulation representing state representatives leading up to the Civil War Midterm Binder Checks (2) CC Standards/ Lawrence Standards 5.1 The United States became more connected with the world, pursued an expansionist foreign policy in the Western Hemisphere, and emerged as the destination for many migrants from other countries. 5.2 Intensified by expansion and deepening regional divisions, debates over slavery and other economic, cultural, and political issues led the nation into civil war. 5.3 The Union victory in the Civil War and the contested reconstruction of the South settled the issues of slavery and secession, but left unresolved many questions about the power of the federal government and citizenship rights. Language Objectives Academic Language Content Objectives Texts and Supplementa l Learnings Cross-Content Connections Sectionalism, Thirteenth amendment, Manifest Destiny, conscience whigs, Wilmot Proviso, free-soil movement, squatter sovereignty, Compromise of 1850, Gadsden Purchase, Kansas-Nebraska Act, Bleeding Kansas, Crittenden Compromise, Total War, Habeas Corpus, King Cotton, Greenbacks, Emancipation Proclamation, Scorched-earth campaign, War Democrats/Peace Democrats, March to the Sea, Ten Percent Plan, Wade-Davis Bill, Black Codes, Civil Rights Act of 1866, Fourteenth Amendment, Reconstruction Act of 1867, Fifteenth Amendment, Women's’ Suffrage, Sharecropping, Scalawags/Carpet baggers, Civil Rights Act of 1875, Classical liberalism, Credit Mobilier, Slaughter-House Cases, SWBAT explain the two causes of the Mexican War, and in what ways that war brought about a growing sectional crisis during the 1850s. America’s History, Chapters 13-16 World History- students will be asked to think about trends across history and why countries often spread their geographic territory. We will then talk about the SWBAT explain how a desire for territorial expansion resulted in war, the creation of new markets, territory acquisition, and ideological conflicts. SWBAT explain how an expansionist foreign policy connected the United States to the world. SWBAT explain how westward expansion and expansionist foreign policies made America a destination for migration. SWBAT explain how the end of slavery shaped boundaries and led to conflicts. SWBAT to outline the attempts at political compromise over slavery as well as the reasons for their failure, Amsco chapters 14, 15 (p. 268318) ultimately leading to secession. SWBAT explain the reasons for Union victory over the Confederacy. SBWAT explain how the end of the Civil War altered the relationships between the states and the federal government as well as among the three branches of government. Abbott Lawrence Academy 2016-2017 Curriculum Map: Subject: AP US History Grade: 10 Unit 6 1865-1898 (4) Weeks Essential Questions Learning Objectives for Unit How did industrialization influence the United States, both socially and economically. SWBAT explain how different labor systems developed in North America and the United States, and explain their effects on workers’ lives and US society. Explain how patterns of exchange, markets, and private enterprises have developed and analyze ways that governments have responded to economic issues. SWBAT explain how different beliefs about the federal government’s role in US social and economic life have affected political debates and policies. Performance tasks: Formative and Summative SWBAT analyze causes of internal migration and patterns of settlement in what would become the United States, and explain how migration has affected American life. Reading Quiz- Chapters 17, 18, 19, 20 Research paper (Speech/History) Binder Checks (2) CC Standards/ Lawrence Standards Language Objectives Academic Language Content Objectives Texts and Supplementa l Learnings Cross-Content Connections 6.1 Technological advances, large-scale production methods, and the opening of new markets encouraged the rise of industrial capitalism in the United States. SBWAT Large scale industrial production accompanied by massive technological change, expanding international communicatio n networks, and ro-growth government policiesgenerated rapid economic development and business consolidation. Homestead Lockout, vertical integration, horizontal integration, trust, mass production, Chinese Exclusion Act, Great Railroad Strike of 1877, Granger Laws, Knights of Labor, Anarchism, Haymarket, Andrew CArnegie, John D.. Rockefeller, Samuel Gompers, Plessy v. Ferguson, National Park Service, National Association of Colored Women, National American Woman Suffrage Association, Social Darwinism, Social Gospel, Thomas Edison, John Muir, Booker T. Washington, Mark Twain, tenement, yellow journalism, muckrakers, political machine, progressivism, Hull House, Pure Food and Drug Act, Triangle Shirtwaist Fire, Jacob Riis, Jane Addams, Upton Sinclair, referendum, Gilded Age, Sherman Antitrust Act, free silver, National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, William Jennings Bryan, Theodore Roosevelt, W.E.B Du Bois, Eugene V. Debs SWBAT analyze the causes of large scale industrial production accompanied by massive technological change, expanding international communication networks, and growth of government policies- and how these changes generated rapid economic development and business consolidation. America’s History Ch 17, 18, 19, 20 Mark Twain- Adventures of Huckleberry Finn- As a Do Now activity, students will be asked to construct a KWL chart on what society was like in the deep South, like Mississippi.They will use characters from Huckleberry Finn as evidence. 6.2 The migrations that accompanied industrializatio n transformed both rural and urban areas of the United States and caused dramatic social and cultural changes. 6.3 The Gilded Age produced new cultural and intellectual movements, public reform efforts, and political debates over political and social policies. SWBAT read several primary sources outlining the views on the economy and labor, and how economic downturns highlighted strengths and weaknesses of the role of labor in the economic system. SWBAT compose letters of factory workers during the Gilded age describing the New systems of production and transportation and how it changed their everyday life both in the city and in the country. responses from farmers. SWBAT SWBAT identify and explain a variety of perspectives on the economy and labor developed during a time of financial downturns and panics. SWBAT explain the new systems of production and transportation and how they enabled consolidation within agriculture, causing farmers to react. SWBAT analyze data on international and internal migration and the increased urban populations, and explain how this influx fostered the growth of a new urban culture. SWBAT give examples of the how the growing numbers of of migrants moving Amsco chapters 14, 15 (p. 268318) Speech and CompositionStudents will be researching /drafting a topic of their choice about the Industrial Revolution. This research paper will overlap in both AP US History and Speech and Composition. compose journal entries in the role of A) a migrant describing what it's like to live in large US cities, such as New York or Chicago. B) of a migrant who moved to the West in search of land and economic opportunity. In writing, SWBAT describe new cultural and intellectual movements taking shape during the Gilded Age and the reasons for their formation. SWBAT analyze primary sources outlining the social changes in the period and in writing, describe how these political debates impacted citizenship, corruption, and relationships between business and government. to the West in search of land and economic opportunities provoked competition and violent conflict. SWBAT analyze the reasons for the new cultural and intellectual movements during the Gilded Age and how these changes caused social, political and economic tension. SWBAT explain the dramatic social changes in the period and how they inspired political debates over citizenship, corruption, and the proper relationships between business and government. Abbott Lawrence Academy 2016-2017 Curriculum Map: Subject: AP US History Grade: 10 Unit 7 1890-1945(4) Weeks Essential Questions What role did ethnocentrism play in making the US a world power? SWBAT explain how ideas about women’s rights and gender roles have affected society and politics. Learning Objectives for Unit SWBAT explain how and why political ideas, beliefs, institutions, party systems, and alignments have developed and changed. SWBAT explain how different group identities. including racial, ethnic, class and regional identities have emerged and changed over time. SBWAT analyze how ideas about national identity changed in response to US involvement in international conflicts and the growth of the United States. Performance tasks: Formative and Summative SWBAT analyze the reasons for, and results of, US diplomatic, economic, and military initiatives in North America and overseas. Reading Quiz- Chapters 21, 22, 23, 24 Propaganda Project- Student will create/justify a propaganda piece for either the Spanish American War, World War I, or World War II Binder Checks (2) CC Standards/ Lawrence Standards 7.1 Growth expanded opportunity, while economic instability led to new efforts to reform US society and its economic system. 7.2 Innovations in communicatio ns technology contributed to the growth of mass culture, while significant changes occurred in internal ad international migration patterns. 7.3 Participation in a series of global conflicts propelled the United States into a position of international power while renewing Language Objectives Academic Language Content Objectives Texts and Supplementa l Learnings Cross-Content Connections SWBAT verbally describe how the United States continued its transition from a rural, agricultural economy to an urban, industrial economy led by large companies. American exceptionalism, Remember the Maine, Teller Amendment, Insular Cases, Platt Amendment, Open Door Policy, Panama Canal, Roosevelt Corollary, Zimmermann telegram, War Industries Board, National War Labor Board, Committee on Public information, Sedition Act of 1918, Great Migration, Fourteen Points, League of Nations, Treaty of Versailles, Red Scare, Palmer Raids, Teapot Dome Scandal, Dollar Diplomacy, Prohibition, National Origins Act, Harlem Renaissance, panAfricanism, Lost Generation, consumer credit, flapper, SmootHawley Tariff, Hundred Days, fireside chats, Glass-Steagall SWBAT use a timeline to trace how the United States continued its transition from a rural, agricultural economy to an urban, industrial economy led by large companies. America’s History Ch 21, 22, 23, 24 Speech and CompositionStudents will view several speeches by leaders of Germany, Italy, the Soviet Union and, the United States and examine them for evidence of rhetoric. They will also use debate/speech strategy terms learned from Speech and Composition to describe these speeches. SWBAT read primary sources analyzing events during the Progressive Era including political corruption, economic instability, and social concerns. SWBAT read primary sources of those who struggled during the Great Depression, and analyze SWBAT analyze the reasons for the formation of Progressive Era of the early 20th century and provide examples of how Progressives responded to political corruption, economic instability, and social concerns by calling for greater government action and other political and social measures. SWBAT describe the different initiatives created during the 1930s and how policymakers Amsco Ch. 2025 (p. 409-555) domestic debates over the nation’s proper role in the world. the government response in creating a limited welfare state to assist people during this time. SWBAT use graphs to verbally explain how economic pressures, global events, and political developments caused sharp variations in the numbers, sources, experiences of both internal and international migration patterns. SWBAT take on roles as politicians in the In the late nineteenth century and early 20th century and verbally argue the reasons for acquiring new US territory and areas in the Pacific. SWBAT analyze primary sources describing the debates about the nation’s role in the world after WWI, as well as how to achieve national security and pursue American interests. SWBAT verbally articulate how US Act, Public Works Administration, Civilian Conservation Corps, Securities Exchange Commission, Wagner Act, welfare state, Social Security Act, classical liberalism, Works Progress Administration, Keynesian economics, dust bowl, Fascism, Nazi Party, RomeBerlin Axis, America First Committee, LendLease Act, Pearl HArbor, War Powers Act, Executive Order 8802, DD-Day, Holocaust, Manhattan Project responded to the mass unemployment and social upheavals of the Great Depression by transforming the US into a limited welfare state, redefining the goals and ideas of modern American liberalism. SWBAT describe the changes in popular culture in US society, and the impact that debates had on culture, public values, morals, and American national identity. SWBAT give reasons for the growth in economic pressures, changes in global events, and political developments and how these occurrences caused sharp variations in the numbers, sources, experiences of both internal and international migration patterns. SWBAT articulate the reasons for US territorial ambitions and how this led to the acquisitions in the Western hemisphere and the Pacific accompanied heightened public debates over America’s role in the world. SWBAT analyze the causes of World War I and how the US participation in World War II transformed American society, and in writing, argue how the US victory vaulted the country into an international leader. decision to join the war caused intense national debates of the US’ role in the world. SWBAT describe how US participation in World War II transformed American society, and explain how the victory of the United States and its allies over the Axis powers vaulted the US into position of global, political and military leadership. Abbott Lawrence Academy 2016-2017 Curriculum Map: Subject: AP US History Grade: 10 Unit 8 1945-1980 (5) Weeks Essential Questions Learning Objectives for Unit How did the dropping of atomic bombs influence the US in world affairs? SWBAT analyze the reasons for, and results of, US diplomatic, economic, and military initiatives in North America and overseas. SWBAT analyze how ideas about national identity changed in response to US involvement in international conflicts and the growth of the United States. Performance tasks: Formative and Summative Reading Quizzes- Chapters 25, 26, 27, 28, 29 (5) AP practice exam on periods 1-8 Binder Checks (3) CC Standards/ Lawrence Standards Language Objectives Academic Language Content Objectives Texts and Supplementa l Learnings Cross-Content Connections 8.1 The United States responded to an uncertain and unstable postwar world by asserting and working to maintain a position of global leadership, farreaching domestic and international consequences . A2 Evaluate the usefulness, reliability, and/or limitations of a primary source in answering particular historical questions. SWBAT compose a comparative essay about capitalist and communist society, and argue why governments with these two systems opposed one another. Yalta, , United Nations, Potsdam, containment, Truman doctrine, Marshall Plan, NATO, Warsaw, Bay of Pigs, Cuban Missile crisis, Joseph Stalin, Joseph McCarthy, Nikita Khrushchev, John F. Kennedy, Fidel Castro, Ho Chi Minh, International Monetary Fund, baby boom, Dwight D. Eisenhower, Jim Crow, Brown v. Board of Education, Montgomery Bus Boycott, Civil Rights Act of 1964, Voting Rights Act of 1965, Rosa Parks, Martin Luther King Jr. , Malcolm X, Great Society, Medicare, The Feminine Mystique, Tet Offensive Detente, Lyndon B. Johnson, Richard Nixon, Henry Kissinger, OPEC, Silent Spring, EPA, Watergate, Roe v. Wade, Rachel Carson, Jimmy Carter SWBAT summarize why United States policymakers were opposed to communism and how this dislike influenced use of military force, ideological warfare, and build an international security system. America’s History Ch 25, 26, 27, 28, 29 ELA- The Things They CarriedAs a Do Now, students will construct a KWL chart about Vietnam and what it was like to be there as a soldier. Students will be encouraged to use characters from The Things They Carried as evidence of their claims. 8.2 New movements for civil rights and liberal efforts to expand the role of government generated a range of political and cultural responses. C3 Situate historical events, developments, or processes within the broader regional, national, r global context in which they occurred in order to draw conclusions about their relative significance. 8.3 Postwar SWBAT create a written timeline of US federal policies during the Cold War and their effects on ordinary Americans. Seeking to fulfill Reconstructio n-era promises, civil rights activists and political leaders achieved some legal and political successes in ending segregation, although progress toward racial equality was slow. SWBAT verbally present a written project to the class about a Civil Rights leader and their contributions to the Civil Rights movement. . SWBAT construct a SWBAT outline the arguments for Cold War policies regarding the use of federal power in pursuing international and domestic goals and describe the costs of Americans in the loss of civil liberties. SWBAT provide evidence for the success and limitations of the Civil Rights movement in making progress toward racial equality. Additionally, SWBAT describe how these movements inspired other movements regarding social justice, identity, and the environment. SWBAT describe and critique the Liberalism movement through the lens of the left as well as the Conservative movement. SWBAT describe the rapid economic and Amsco pgs. (Chapters 2629), pages 557649 economic and demographic changes had far-reaching consequences of American society, politics and culture. graphic organizer describing the ideas associated with Liberalism and why it was politically unpopular with the left and conservative movement. social changes in American society and how these changes fostered a sense of optimism in postwar years. SWBAT summarize the new demographic and social developments that took place immediately following the Cold War, and how these changes caused anxiety and debate among Americans. SWBAT draft posters comparing life in the US and life in Europe immediately following WWII. SWBAT read several primary sources illuminating what is was like to be an immigrant post-WWII in the US, as well as describing the fears Americans had of Communists. Abbott Lawrence Academy 2016-2017 Curriculum Map: Subject: AP History Grade: 10 Unit 9 1980-Present (2) Weeks How has media changed the way citizens view/participate in politics? Essential Questions Learning Objectives for Unit SWBAT explain how different beliefs about the federal government’s role in US social and economic life have affected political debates and policies. Performance tasks: Formative and Summative SWBAT explain how patterns of exchange, markets, and private enterprise have developed, and analyze ways that governments have responded to economic issues. Reading Quizzes- Chapters 30, 31 (2) AP Practice Exam Binder Checks (1) CC Language Academic Content Texts and Cross-Content Standards/ Lawrence Standards Objectives Language Objectives Supplementa l Learnings Connections 9.1 A newly ascendant conservative movement achieved several political and policy goals during the 1980s and continued to strongly influence public discourse in the following decades. SWBAT summarize in writing the Conservative beliefs regarding the need for traditional social values and a reduced role for government and verbally describe how these beliefs turned into US policies in the 1980s. Hostage crisis, Reaganomics, HIV/AIDS, Sandinistas, IranContra Affair, Glasnost, Perestroika, Persian Gulf War, Barry Goldwater, Ronald Reagan, Milton Friedman, Sandra Day O’Connor, Mikhail Gorbachev, George H.W. Bush, Al Qaeda, Globalization, WTO, G8, NAFTA, WWW, Defense of Marriage Act, Planned Parenthood of Southeastern Pennsylvania v Casey, USA Patriot Act, Abu Ghraib prison, Tea Party, Osama Bin Laden, Bill Clinton, Monica Lewinsky, Saddam Hussein, Barack Obama SWBAT summarize the Conservative beliefs regarding the need for traditional social values and a reduced role for government and how these beliefs turned into US policies in the 1980s. America’s History Ch 30, 31 Advanced Honors Algebra IIStudents will evaluate data points and graphs to identify and express demographic trends regarding immigration, terrorism, and how media impacts politics. D2 Evaluate the relative significance of different causes and/or effects on historical events or processes, distinguishing between causation and correlation and showing awareness of historical contingency. 9.2 Moving into the 21st century, the nation experienced significant technological, economic, and demographic changes. 9.3 The end of the Cold War and new challenges to US leadership forced the nation to redefine its foreign policy and role in the world. SWBAT verbally identify and describe new developments in science and technology and in writing, describe how these innovations enhanced the economy and transformed society. SWBAT read data tables regarding US demographic changes, and verbally discuss trends they have identified with a partner. Students will then compare historical examples in writing and by constructing a graph to show how Americans reacted to demographic shifts. SWBAT compose a brief essay about what they want their SWBAT describe the impact of new developments in science and technology and how they enhanced the economy and transformed society. SWBAT construct graphs of the US population and demographic shifts that had significant cultural and political consequences. SWBAT compare presidential legacies, and describe how the Reagan administration promoted an interventionists foreign policy that continued in later administrations, even after the Cold War. SWBAT compile various media clips from news agencies following the attacks of 9/11 and describe how this event caused a shift in US foreign policy efforts, now focusing on fighting terrorism around the world. Amsco (Ch. 30, 31), pages 653701 legacy to be, and follow up by verbally identifying/co mparing other presidential legacies to that of Ronald Reagan. SWBAT verbally present to the class in groups on media coverage following the events of 9/11 and draft a brief essay describing how this event caused a shift in US foreign policy. Abbott Lawrence Academy 2016-2017 Curriculum Map: Subject: AP US History Grade: 10 Unit 10 Test Review/Final Project (3) Weeks How do I study for a year-long comprehensive exam? Essential Questions Learning Objectives for Unit Performance tasks: Formative and Summative CC Standards/ Lawrence Standards Language Objectives SWBAT articulate the necessary content and skill knowledge to achieve a passing score on the Pre-AP US history exam. Pre-AP Final Exam (modeled after AP exam) Final Year Project Academic Language Content Objectives Texts and Supplementa l Learnings Cross-Content Connections E1- Articulate a defensible claim about the past in the form of a clear and compelling thesis that evaluates the relative importance of multiple factors and recognizes disparate, diverse, or contradictory evidence or perspectives. E2- Develop and support a historical argument including in a written essay, through a close analysis of relevant and diverse historical evidence, framing the argument and evidence around the application of a specific historical thinking skills. SWBAT compose short answer responses responding to three-part prompts. SWBAT read several primary sources and compose an essay response examining author’s point of view, historical context, while leveraging their skills of historical argumentation . SWBAT apply their skills of multiple choice process of elimination, short answer compilation and document based question analysis to successfully complete the Advanced Placement exam. AMSCO Practice Test- (p. 702728) Collegeboard AP US 2015 Sample Exam and Answers Pre-AP World- Students will discuss how freshmen history skills will transfer to sophomore AP history classes. Students will describe the quality and quantity of work necessary to succeed in a course of this magnitude. Abbott Lawrence Academy 2016-2017 Curriculum Map: Subject: Grade: Unit 11 “Title” (#) Weeks Essential Questions Learning Objectives for Unit Performance tasks: Formative and Summative CC Language Academic Standards/ Objectives Language Lawrence Standards Content Objectives Texts and Supplementa l Learnings CrossContent Connections Abbott Lawrence Academy 2016-2017 Curriculum Map: Subject: Grade: Unit 12 “Title” (#) Weeks Essential Questions Learning Objectives for Unit Performance tasks: Formative and Summative CC Language Academic Standards/ Objectives Language Lawrence Content Objectives Texts and Supplementa l Learnings CrossContent Connections Standards Abbott Lawrence Academy 2016-2017 Curriculum Map: Subject: Grade: Unit 13 “Title” (#) Weeks Essential Questions Learning Objectives for Unit Performance tasks: Formative and Summative CC Language Academic Standards/ Objectives Language Lawrence Standards Content Objectives Texts and Supplemental Learnings CrossContent Connections Abbott Lawrence Academy 2016-2017 Curriculum Map: Subject: Grade: Unit 14 “Title” (#) Weeks Essential Questions Learning Objectives for Unit Performance tasks: Formative and Summative CC Language Academic Standards/ Objectives Language Lawrence Standards Content Objectives Texts and Supplemental Learnings CrossContent Connections