Spring Break
Review Assignment for APUSH
Welcome to your review
assignment over Spring Break. It’s not short, but I put some time into thinking
about what would be reasonable, helpful, and (hopefully) a little
interesting/thought-provoking/mind-boggling over Spring Break. CHOOSE ONE OF THE FOLLOWING TO COMPLETE.
Option
A: Women
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Option
B: The Jackson Era
(this option is a more broad overview)
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Read
&
Explore
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On Women 1950s Education
Film
What Betty Friedan Saw
Coming
Why I Want Women to Lean
In
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Party Time
Is this the Nastiest
Election Ever?
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Do
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1)
Using the
resources above, identify the vocabulary listed for each topic. Each
identification should explain not only what (or who) an item is, but its
significance during the time period and/or to the readings above.
2)
I chose each
of these topics because I think have relevance for today’s world, and also
the time period (1950s-1970s) that we are studying in this unit. Create a
timeline that illustrates this idea and meets the following requirements
(note: the actual format of this timeline is up to you—be creative!):
a.
Identifies
three themes connected to your readings above (example: state vs. federal
government OR role of minority women).
b.
Includes 12
examples of people, incidents, or ideas that reflect those themes. These examples should be drawn from all
three (Jacksonian era, mid-twentieth century, and today). These CAN be drawn from the vocabulary
lists, or they may be other examples that you choose.
c.
Clearly
shows which theme each example relates to and includes it in the appropriate
spot on the timeline.
3)
Reflection. Write a short (250 word reflection) on what you
learned from this assignment, focusing on how these resources differed from your
textbook’s representation of the topic.
In what ways were these readings and resources more or less helpful to
you?
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Vocab
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Indentured servitude
Anne Hutchinson
Abigail Adams
Cult of Domesticity
Amelia Bloomer
Catherine Beecher
Emma Willard
Lucy Stone
Margaret Fuller
Angelina Grimke
“Waves” of feminism
Utopian community
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Indian
Removal Act
Webster-Hayne
Debate
Nat
Turner’s Revolt
Force
Act
Specie
Circular
Gag
Resolution
Annexation
of
Treaty
of Guadalupe-Hidalgo
Populism
Know-Nothings
Universal
manhood suffrage
Romanticism
Transcendentalism
Second
Great Awakening
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GRADE: Successfully
completed extra credit assignments will earn up to four points extra
credit on their AP Practice Exam. (Note that this exam also counts as a final
exam grade). This will be the only opportunity for extra credit on this test.
DUE: Monday, April 8th
by 3 p.m. for all classes. Yes, this means even if I have you on B-day, you
need to walk by my classroom and turn in your assignment. Late assignments, for any reason, can only earn up to 2 points extra
credit and will not be taken after Wednesday, April 10th.
PS: A day, you have a normal reading to do over break, B day, it actually falls so that you have no reading. So take advantage of this time to rest, relax, and rejuvenate a bit--when you come back in April, the heat will be on in all AP classes and your teachers will be expecting your best!
Ms. Harris, the reading for Option B is missing pages 106 and 107, which I'm assuming contains info on Jackson dealing with the bank. Is there anything key we need from the reading itself, or can we just find the majority of the info we need to define Jackson's Bank Veto other places (like the textbook or online)? Thanks.
ReplyDeleteHey Alexis! Thanks for letting me know. I think you can probably use other resources. I will try to upload the missing pages today, but if I can't get to it in time just use your research skills!
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