Wednesday, October 29, 2014

Wed Oct 29

Students looked at how things changed little despite the fact the 13-15th amendments were passed. The Reconstruction included the beginning of sharecropping and black codes which kept the cycle of a slavery like appearance in the South. Handouts will be posted tomorrow. As well as quickwrite on voter intimidation.

Quickwrite Question: Using the Picture with the gun to the head, how did whites(typically the KKK) in the South impact voting of blacks? Why do you think they even let this guy vote? What has the 15th amendment turned into?
Quickwrite Picture, Sharecropping, and Black Codes

Tuesday, October 28, 2014

10/28

Today we began Unit 3 "Like a Monet". Things looked good in America from a distance, but there were a lot of problems the closer you looked. We began by talking about the Reconstruction and how America was going to rebuild, re-establish the nation, and redefine the role of freed men in the South. All three issues were difficult and came with controversy. Students turn in notebook tomorrow. A checklist for what should be included can be found below

Start of Unit 3 Like a Monet
Reconstruction and Notebook 2 checklist

Monday, October 27, 2014

Monday Oct 27th

Today we began Unit 3 which will be called Like a Monet: Good from far away but ugly when you get up close. We began the unit by looking at the transcontinental railroad. This engineering wonder would help link the east and west and make America connected. It would allow for the advancement of people to the west, greater immigration, and more opportunity for people. Students watched an intro film on the train's building and importance.

Friday, October 24, 2014

Friday Oct 24

Students took the midterm exam mostly off Unit 2. They were able to turn in the study guide if they wanted for credit though it was just designed to help those who wanted to improve their grade, it was not required.

Thursday Oct 23

Students completed the school wide midterm assessment, they had any remaining time to review for tomorrow's test.

Thursday, October 23, 2014

Wed Oct 22

Today we finished Unit two by looking at the 3 amendments passed after the Civil War. The 13th 14th and 15th amendments were all designed to give blacks a better opportunity. It starts with ending slavery, but then gives them citizenship and finally allows voting rights.

We have the district quiz tomorrow and our UNIT 2 CHAPTER TEST FRIDAY.

Study Guide for test

Tuesday, October 21, 2014

Tues Oct 21

Depending on period we got a a little further in beginning of day and a little less toward end but we went over the Gettysburg address and why it was important. Lincoln gave a short and precise reason the war needed to be won. Soldiers at Gettysburg needed their life to have not been in vain. The cause they lived for needs to be completed in the Civil War. We also looked briefly through the final scene of Glory at the 54th regiment. They helped initially get support for using black soldiers in the war which for the first two years was basically avoided. Their courage and bravery paved the way for more soldiers to be respected, paid equally and used for the war.


amendments

Monday, October 20, 2014

Monday Oct 20th

Today we looked at the Civil War and what the strengths were of both sides. I also explained how the Emancipation Proclamation was more a gradual freeing of slaves and not an instant thing. It was a weapon of war however because as slaves were "confiscated" they were set free, often times joining the union army. It also gave more individuals in the North a moral reason to fight the war beyond just restoring the nation.

Gettysburg address
Notes

Friday, October 17, 2014

Friday 10/17

Today students finished the questions on Emancipation Proclamation from Wed. We also watched an episode from the history channel documentary The Story of Us on the Civil War. It gave a quick look at how the North despite having to go into the southern territory were able to win the war. It discussed the technological and industrial superiority of the North and how through trains, communication and massive productions they were able to defeat a South that could not keep up.

Thursday, October 16, 2014

Wed Oct 15th

We looked at the final cause of the Civil War, Abraham Lincoln becoming president. In the South few states even had him on the ballot, let alone voted for him. For the south it was the final straw for democracy being inefficient. Before Lincoln had done anything the south would secede and establish the Confederate States. Students had a quickwrite and because of PSAT's by many juniors we skipped discussing the war for the day. We did start looking at the Emancipation Proclamation (except 3rd period).

Quickwrite(and things to study at bottom), notes, and questions for every class but third

Tuesday, October 14, 2014

Tuesday Oct 14th

Students on the John Brown passage should have answered on their page(period 1 is the exception) How does the reaction to John Brown differ from the North to the South and how could it be a cause for war?

In class we also looked at Frederick Douglass speech in which he discussed the Fourth of July and George Fitzhugh's speech about why slavery isn't too bad. The big idea we are trying to get at is that the in the North the issue is all about Freedom and Independence, and how can we go on basically until that issue has been dealt with. In the south the debate is more that slavery is simply a job and not the worst one. They look at slavery in different eyes and it is much different to both. We finished class with looking at Dred Scott and his court case. Students are to do the questions on it and then using that knowledge apply it to Lincoln's "house divided against itself" speech. Homework attached.

Homework

Monday, October 13, 2014

Monday Oct 13

Today in class we went discussed John Brown and why he was such a polarizing figure. Though somewhat of a madman he became a terrorist to the south and a hero to the north. Steadfast in his goal to end slavery he was willing to use violence to further his cause. First in Kansas during "bleeding Kansas" and later at Harper's ferry. Notes are small so I will try to load the power point instead of the little pictures that students got in class.

John Brown

Friday, October 10, 2014

Friday Oct 10

Today we looked at more causes of the Civil War. For one literature had an important impact on the divide in America. Uncle Tom's cabin which would become an instant success opened the north to what happened under slavery. Despite being a fictional book it amazed many in the North and pushed for abolition. The nullification crisis was another split between the north and south, this one on tariffs. The south felt they were being taken advantage of at the expense of the North. Despite a solution and a compromise, we see a growing rift between the two parts of the United States.


Uncles Tom's Cabin, Nullification Crisis

Thursday, October 9, 2014

Thursday Oct 9th

 We began to look at the second half of our unit which is was titled From New Nation to Two Nations. The two nations part is what we will be focusing on as we look at how America was pulled into the Civil War. While slavery is the central issue it is deeper than that. Slavery was not abolished yet America would be in war. We talked about the first "snowball" that would begin the issue. (though there is a history that dates back far before this) was Eli Whitney's invention of the Cotton Gin. This gives rise to larger plantations and the need for additional slaves. We began the reading the following passages, each class got to a different point.

Start of Civil War packet

Wednesday, October 8, 2014

Wed Oct 8

Students finished journal entries that began yesterday. They also watched a clip from the history channel series the story of us that discusses those who moved to california and the gold rush as well as those who lived in and moved to texas.

Tuesday, October 7, 2014

Tuesday October 7th

Students had a quickwrite on Manifest Destiny and what the term means or looked like. Often times we have this idea that the land to the west was this God given land for us to take and that is why we got it. While we did take over the land we see that its not so much just because we feel like God had given it, but more that there was a purpose in going. Students looked at 3 individual groups of people and why they went to Utah, California and Texas. They began in class a journal assignment writing a 1st person account of what it would be like. The assignment and quickwrite are linked below.

Manifest Destiny quickwrite, maps and class assignment

Monday Oct 6th

In class we looked at the Indian Removal Act also known the trail of tears where America forced Native Americans off their land and out toward modern day Oklahoma. Over time we have been gone from thinking this was an acceptable and smart action to realizing it was wrong, unconstitutional and tragic. After a brief lecture students looked at textbook readings from 5 different time periods. As the textbooks evolve America's role is greater questioned. The reading is slightly difficult as the PDF came out sideways but the reading and questions are still there.

Trail of Tears

Sunday, October 5, 2014

Friday Oct 3rd

Students had a quickwrite on the Monroe Doctrine. It shows the Monroe Doctrine through a cartoon about chickens. Some chickens are labeled to help understand which nations are cooped up and which nations are running free under the American rooster.  After the students made a hypothesis on what they thought the Monroe doctrine was they were given small passages from it. America was slowly changing its isolationist policy established under Washington and taking a stance in global issues. While America didn't really have the strength to back up what it said, it stood up for Latin American nations being recolonized. America would hold on to this policy over time when issues arise in Latin America.

Quickwrite
Monroe Doctrine Excerpts and Questions

Thursday, October 2, 2014

Thursday October 2nd

Today we looked at both Jefferson and Madison's presidency and the big events the Louisiana Purchase and War of 1812. In Hamilton's letter we saw why there were critics of Jefferson's purchase.

Hamilton Letter
Notes

Wednesday, October 1, 2014

Wed October 1

The class finished and reviewed the questions from yesterday in class. Students should be able to clearly give a definition of what judicial review is and how it impacts America.

Tuesday, September 30, 2014

Tuesday Sept 30

In class we reviewed the reading that was started yesterday. In particular we looked at the Alien and Sedition Acts and whether the government should be able to make a law that seems Unconstitutional. While we do not know what they would have ruled at the time the law came to an end before an answer was given. It led however to two states Kentucky and Virginia to basically say they were not going to follow the law Congress had created. This idea of "nullification" takes place when a state basically says they are not going to follow the laws of the land. Similar to what Washington and Colorado have chosen to do over Marijuana recently. We don't really see anything happen to Virginia or Kentucky as well because the laws disappear after John Adams presidency, but leave us wondering who wins, America or a State? To end class we discussed the Marbury vs Madison court case. While overall the event was not really important, it leads the Supreme Court to decide the first case in history. Establishing the idea of judicial review, and forever changing the judicial branch. Questions below go to this topic. 
Use pages 118-119 to answer the following along with using the internet as needed. (this was not homework except for question # 6 but was what students were working on)
1. If the Supreme Court makes a ruling, who’s job is it to enforce it?
2. Why do you think in the last sentence it says, “That the entire country has with few exceptions obeyed.” Why would their be a few exceptions? What does that mean going back to question # 1
3. How did Marshall both stick it to Adams and also stick it to Jefferson?
4. Using your own language, explain what “Judicial Review" is.
5. How many times according to book has the Court had to remove or overrule an act of Congress because of Judicial Review?

6. Go on the web and find one article about whether last years "Obama-care" law is Constitutional. Summarize in 3 sentences why it is Constitutional, and then in 3 sentences why it would not be Constitutional

Monday, September 29, 2014

Monday Sept 29

Students began Unit 2 and created a title page for our new unit, "From New Nation To Two Nations" Students had a quickwrite and notes found below. We discussed how the Whiskey rebellion showed off the New Power of the nation after America had regrouped from the Shay's rebellion. handouts will be uploaded tomorrow.


Warmup and Notes
Documents

Sunday, September 28, 2014

Friday Sept 26

Classes were extremely short today due to homecoming. Students watched an intro video to Unit 2 about Lewis and Clark's journey across America and the exploration of the frontier.

Thursday, September 25, 2014

Thursday Sept 25

Students took their Unit 1 exam today on America's Founding. Notebooks were also turned in.

Wednesday, September 24, 2014

Wed Sept 24

Students were given a Study Guide to use to review for the test. They also were given time to organize the notebook. The notebook should be put in the following order. Title Page, Quickwrites, Notes, Classwork Homework and Readings. Below is a list of things that should be included.
What should be in Notebook
Unit 1 Study Guide

Tuesday, September 23, 2014

Tuesday Sept 23

Class finished all new material that will be covered in Unit 1. The test will be on thursday. The class talked about many of the reasons the antifederalists and federalists clashed over the Constitution. Eventually it was ratified but only with the promise to create a bill of rights for the USA. Students began to finish or needed to finish for homework the following chart on the Bill of Rights. It can be found on page 96 in the textbook.

Bill of Rights

Monday, September 22, 2014

Monday Sept 22

The first quiz was reviewed together in class. The first exam for this year will be Thursday this week(at least expected date). After this students had a quickwrite 

What rights do you think Americans should have but don’t, or aren’t stated?  Not in California but in the United States. If you were going to come up with your own Bill of Rights what would be # 1 on the list? (not on the original) Why? 

We then began to discuss the differing viewpoints of both the federalists and antifederalists as they debated whether the Constitution should be ratified. The following reading was handed out. Period 1 and 2 should finish reading and answer the summary questions. Periods 3,4 and 5 will tomorrow. 


Federalist reading


W

Friday, September 19, 2014

Friday Sept 19

Students worked on what is in our Constitution. We covered an overview of all 7 articles. Students heard a brief lecture on separation of powers and why it works for our nation so well. Students had no homework.
Handout will be posted Monday.

Constitution reading and chart

Thursday Sept 18th

Students reviewed the work from Wed. We covered why the issues of the Constitution were so big and how the compromises ended up. Students also read about the Great Compromise and why it was the biggest decision made at the convention.
Great Compromise

Wednesday, September 17, 2014

Wed September 17th

 Students looked at some of the major issues of the Constitution through the eyes of their state. The reading and questions are below. Each student had to choose a original colony and try to see the Constitutional Convention through it's eyes.
Constitution Issues Reading
Questions for each state to answer

Tuesday, September 16, 2014

Tuesday Sept 16th

Students took our first quiz of the year. After the quiz was finished we quickly reviewed last nights homework getting to the Constitution. Shays' rebellion gave the new nation a fear that they felt needed to be addressed. At the same time Jefferson though addressed the idea that rebellions are necessary and that the government should have at least some fear to listen to the people. They would have to balance these ideas as they began to discuss altering the government. Students were broke into states and looked into the background of the state they would represent at the Constitutional Convention.

Monday, September 15, 2014

Monday September 15th

Quiz Tomorrow!!!-Quiz will be on what we have covered up until this point. From Puritans through the Declaration of Ind. Students should review notes as well as any readings and work we have done.

Today we looked at the end of the American Revolution and the beginning of this new nation. America's first government was not what we have today but the Articles of the Confederation. It was a good idea based mostly on trying to be exactly what Britain wasn't but had some problems. Shays' rebellion being one issue that caused a lot of fear about this new government. Handouts can be found below.

Shays' rebellion
Why the Articles of Confederation had problems.

Sunday, September 14, 2014

Friday Sept 12

On Friday we finished looking at the Declaration of Independence. One key idea was how the Enlightenment influenced Jefferson in what Americans desired. The document is the questions that students answered (4th and 5th period turned them in).

Dec. of Ind. questions

Thursday, September 11, 2014

9/11

We discussed 9/11 and its importance in America, both now and then. We also watched some tribute clips of the event.

Wednesday, September 10, 2014

Wed Sept 10

Clip from mini-series John Adams on decision to break free from Britain. We discussed what this meant for the nation as well as the individuals in the room.

Declaration of Independence mini lecture notes.
Declaration of Independence
We began looking at what "America's Creed" is and why this document is so powerful to our nation.

Tuesday, September 9, 2014

Tuesday Sept 9

Today we looked at the key arguments a "loyalist" would have made for not breaking free from Britain as well as the arguments Thomas Paine lays out in his pamphlet Common Sense. It was a dividing issue for the colonists in determining whether war was worth Independence.  Students were to finish questions from documents for homework.
loyalists vs common sense

Monday Sept 8th

The class reviewed the growing split between the British and Colonists. Then we looked at the final 3 major dividing issues of the 1770's; the Boston Massacre, Tea Party and Intolerable Acts. Students did a Quick write on Paul Revere's propaganda and how it was used to incite the colonies after the massacre.

Quick write and lecture

Sunday, September 7, 2014

Friday Sept 5th

We reviewed the conflicts behind the widening split reading. The Quickwrite was asking what the problems were between the British and Colonists after the French and Indian War had ended. We discussed what the Proclamation Line of 1763, Sugar Act and Stamp Act meant to the colonists. We also looked at the idea of "taxation without representation" and why it pushed the colonists to boycott the taxes placed upon them.

Sorry couldn't upload Stamp Act for those who were looking to print it off.

Thursday, September 4, 2014

Thursday Sept 4

Today in class we reviewed last nights homework and how the Enlightenment and Great Awakening were the start of a "snowball effect" towards the American Revolution. As the snowball rolls, it gets larger and larger; just as each problem between the Colonists and British will bring us closer to rebellion. Fore homework students read the beginning of The Widening Split and how the French and Indian War brought some issues to the colonies. Students read (or are finishing for homework) highlighting any conflicts they see happening in the colonies in the 3 years after the F & I war concludes.
Widening Split reading(2nd page comes first)

Lecture overview on Great Awakening and French and Indian War

Wednesday, September 3, 2014

Wed Sept 3rd

Today we reviewed how the Puritans viewed their mission coming to the new world as a "City on a Hill." What that means and how they would be the model society for the world. We also had a quick write (except 3rd period) dealing with Puritan principles of religion in America. The homework tonight is included at the bottom of the following slide which includes the quick write prompt.

Tuesday, September 2, 2014

Tuesday Sept 2

Welcome back from the break! Today we finished our posters on what The American Dream means to you. For those absent we used a blank sheet of white paper to put down the ideas, images, words or phrases that the American Dream means to you. Based off your upbringing and beliefs they may be different but many will weave together. Overall many of the beliefs we have today are the same ones that brought the first settlers, explorers and colonists to the Americas. We took a few notes at the end of the period on the beginning of settling in America. Those notes can be found below. There is no homework.
First Settlers notes.

Friday, August 29, 2014

Friday August 29th

Today we finished off our discussion on Michael Brown with a writing assignment. As we did with this story we will continue to analyze sources, put things in context, and try to determine how and why things happened in history. We also began to look at what the American Dream means today, and how it relates to those that originally came to the Americas and established this new nation. By Tuesday students  need to have a notebook.

Trying to define the American Dream

Thursday, August 28, 2014

Thursday August 28

Today we continued looking at the shooting in Ferguson, MO and the two sides of the evidence. We compared the eyewitness accounts of what happened to look at how the evidence is inconclusive. Your perception of things, your personal bias, your views of society, law enforcement, race all could influence your opinion on an event we don't have the full truth of. In history things are similar as well. We can see history a certain way based off of what we want to see and how we want to see it. Often times it is a blurry line that we must analyze to find what happened in history and why. There was no homework.

Wednesday, August 27, 2014

Wed August 27th

We looked today at sources and how they can or can not be reliable. As historians in the classroom we need to try to determine if every source is a good one, and what the other side of the story may be. We also began to look at the situation taking place in Ferguson, MO and how Michael Brown's killing sparked national debate. Also how different accounts or "primary sources" may not always match up.

Tuesday, August 26, 2014

Ferguson

Tuesday August 26, 2014

In class we began by looking at a modified citizenship test used by America in allowing people to become citizens. Interestingly to become a citizen our nation puts a primary emphasis on not Math or Science but our History and Government. We also began looking at analyzing sources and what makes them more or less reliable. The homework was to finish the source document. The document is enclosed below.

Sourcing Document

Friday, August 22, 2014

Here is an attached Syllabus. They need to be signed by a parent or guardian and returned by Friday, August 29th. Feel free to print a copy if you need to. Thank you

SYLLABUS

Thursday, August 21, 2014

Welcome to the 2014-2015 school year!!! This website will contain the material we will be covering in class. While not a substitute for the classroom it should be your first stop on any missed days. If you have anyone questions feel free to email me at the school address. kleduc@rusd.k12.ca.us