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Week One
Ice breakers and team building, pre-assessment, reading and note taking strategies -
Historical Inquiry
7.4.1.2.1
How do we study history?
What tools do we need? -
Indigenous Peoples
7.4.2.4.1 Pre European Contact -
Contact with Europeans: 1792-1861
7.4.4.18.1 War, Treaties and Conquest -
Technology and Westward Expansion: 1792-1861
7.4.4.18.2. What role did technology play the expanding American Nation? -
Antebellum Reform Movements
7.4.4.18.3 Abolition, Women's Rights, Labor Rights -
Politics of the North and the South
7.4.4.19.1 & 7.4.4.19.2. Causes and Civil War Policies 1850-1877 -
Civil War Battles and Reconstruction
7.4.4.19.2 & 7.4.4.19.3 The major conflicts and impacts of the war -
Industrialization
7.4.4.20.1 1870-1920 -
Economic Transformation
7.4.4.20.2 The turn of the 20th century -
Early 20th Century Reform Movements
7.4.4.20.3. 1870-1920 Reform Movements -
Racism
Segregation, Jim Crow, Reservation System, Chinese Exclusion -
Women and the Right to Vote
Civil Rights and Admendments -
International Relations
1879-1920 -
World War I: Causes and Politics
What led to War and Who Were the Key Players -
World War I: Battles and Outcome
Major battles -
Great Depression
Causes and Factors -
The Great Depression and Society
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World War II
Causes and Major Players -
World War II
Major Battles -
World War II
US response and involvement -
The Cold War
Causes and Non-military actions -
The Cold War
Military, Social and Political Effects -
Post War
Economics, Politics and Society -
Civil Rights
Civil Rights, Native American and Women's Rights Movements -
Globalization
Economics and Society -
Globalization
International Relations