Top Banner
42

Chapter 7: World War I and Its Aftermath

May 24, 2022

Download

Documents

dariahiddleston
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Chapter 7: World War I and Its Aftermath
Page 2: Chapter 7: World War I and Its Aftermath

Read the following pages in the course textbook to locate the

key vocabulary and answer the questions below.

Chapter 7: World War I and Its Aftermath Lesson 1: The U.S. Enters World War I (pp. 184-188)

C7,L1 KEY READING VOCABULARY:

a. militarism:

b. nationalism:

c. propaganda:

d. contraband:

C7,L1 KEY READING QUESTIONS:

1. How did militarism contribute to the beginning of WWI?

2. Why did the majority of Americans sympathize with the Allies

even before the U.S. entered the war?

3. What events motivated the U.S. to join the war?

01

Reading Assignment #1

Page 3: Chapter 7: World War I and Its Aftermath

Read the following pages in the course textbook to locate the

key vocabulary and answer the questions below.

Chapter 7: World War I and Its Aftermath Lesson 2: The Home Front (pp. 189-193)

C7,L2 KEY READING VOCABULARY:

a. victory garden:

b. espionage:

c. draft:

C7,L2 KEY READING QUESTIONS:

1. What did Congress do to prepare the U.S. economy for war?

2. How were progressive ideals used in preparing the U.S.

military for war?

3. What were the contributions of women and African-Americans on

the home front during the war?

4. How did government efforts to ensure public support for the

war effort lead to restrictions on civil liberties?

02

Reading Assignment #2

Page 4: Chapter 7: World War I and Its Aftermath

Read the following pages in the course textbook to locate the

key vocabulary and answer the questions below.

Chapter 7: World War I and Its Aftermath Lesson 3: A Bloody Conflict (pp. 194-199)

C7,L3 KEY READING VOCABULARY:

a. convoy:

b. armistice:

c. Fourteen Points:

d. national self-determination:

e. reparations:

C7,L3 KEY READING QUESTIONS:

1. How did new technologies increase the number of casualties?

2. Why was the arrival of U.S. troops crucial for Allied

victory?

3. How did ideas of national self-determination influence the

Treaty of Versailles? Which of Wilson’s Fourteen Points

wound up in the treaty?

03

Reading Assignment #3

Page 5: Chapter 7: World War I and Its Aftermath

Read the following pages in the course textbook to locate the

key vocabulary and answer the questions below.

Chapter 7: World War I and Its Aftermath Lesson 4: The War’s Impact (pp. 200-203)

C7,L4 KEY READING VOCABULARY:

a. cost of living:

b. deport:

c. general strike:

d. Red Scare:

C7,L4 KEY READING QUESTIONS:

1. What circumstances caused economic and racial unrest in 1919?

2. Why did many Americans come to fear Communists and other

radicals after the end of WWI?

3. Do you agree or disagree with A. Mitchell Palmer’s efforts to

prevent a “radical” revolution in the U.S. (Be sure to

support your answer with examples from the reading.)

04

Reading Assignment #4

Page 6: Chapter 7: World War I and Its Aftermath

Read the following pages in the course textbook to locate the

key vocabulary and answer the questions below.

Chapter 8: The Jazz Age Lesson 1: The Politics of the 1920s (pp. 208-211)

C8,L1 KEY READING VOCABULARY:

a. supply-side economics:

b. cooperative individualism:

c. isolationism:

C8,L1 KEY READING QUESTIONS:

1. Describe two major scandals that plagued the Harding

Administration.

2. What government policies helped the economy recover from the

post-war recession?

3. What initiatives did the U.S. take in the 1920s to help

ensure economic stability and peace in Europe?

05

Reading Assignment #5

Page 7: Chapter 7: World War I and Its Aftermath

Read the following pages in the course textbook to locate the

key vocabulary and answer the questions below.

Chapter 8: The Jazz Age Lesson 2: A Growing Economy (pp. 212-216)

C8,L2 KEY READING VOCABULARY:

a. mass production:

b. assembly line:

c. Model T:

d. disposable income:

e. consumer credit:

C8,L2 KEY READING QUESTIONS:

1. How did new industrial innovations such as assembly lines and

mass production affect the American worker and consumer?

2. How did changing attitudes about credit affect people’s daily

lives?

3. How did the growing nationwide availability of radio programs

affect Americans’ sense of their culture?

4. Why did farmers miss out on the prosperity of the 1920s?

06

Reading Assignment #6

Page 8: Chapter 7: World War I and Its Aftermath

Read the following pages in the course textbook to locate the

key vocabulary and answer the questions below.

Chapter 8: The Jazz Age Lesson 3: A Clash of Values (pp. 217-220)

C8,L3 KEY READING VOCABULARY:

a. nativism:

b. anarchist:

c. evolution:

d. creationism:

e. speakeasy:

C8,L3 KEY READING QUESTIONS:

1. How did the Sacco-Vanzetti case exemplify the rise of

nativism in the U.S.?

2. How did the National Origins Act help deal with the tensions

created by nativism?

3. Why do you think some Americans feared the “new morality”?

4. What political, social, and economic contributions did women

make to American society in the 1920s?

07

Reading Assignment #7

Page 9: Chapter 7: World War I and Its Aftermath

Read the following pages in the course textbook to locate the

key vocabulary and answer the questions below.

Chapter 8: The Jazz Age Lesson 4: Cultural Innovations (pp. 221-223)

C8,L4 KEY READING VOCABULARY:

a. bohemian:

b. mass media:

C8,L4 KEY READING QUESTIONS:

1. Why did many artists, poets, playwrights, and novelists move

to Paris in the 1920s?

2. Why did many Americans have more time for entertainment?

3. Why did new national pastimes emerge during the 1920s? What

were some of the most popular ways for Americans to spend

their leisure time?

4. How is today’s mass media similar to that of the 1920s?

08

Reading Assignment #8

Page 10: Chapter 7: World War I and Its Aftermath

Read the following pages in the course textbook to locate the

key vocabulary and answer the questions below.

Chapter 8: The Jazz Age Lesson 5: African-American Culture and Politics (pp. 224-227)

C8,L5 KEY READING VOCABULARY:

a. Harlem Renaissance:

b. jazz:

c. blues:

d. NAACP:

e. “Back to Africa” Movement:

C8,L5 KEY READING QUESTIONS:

1. What does the Harlem Renaissance reveal about African-

American culture during the 1920s? Why did blues emerge as

a main musical form of the Harlem Renaissance?

2. What impact did the Great Migration have on African

Americans’ political power?

3. How did African-American leaders differ in their approaches

to political actions during the 1920s?

09

Reading Assignment #9

Page 11: Chapter 7: World War I and Its Aftermath

Read the following pages in the course textbook to locate the

key vocabulary and answer the questions below.

Chapter 9: The Great Depression Begins Lesson 1: The Causes of the Great Depression (pp. 232-236)

C9,L1 KEY READING VOCABULARY:

a. stock market:

b. bull market:

c. speculation:

d. margin:

e. margin call:

f. bank run:

g. installment:

C9,L1 KEY READING QUESTIONS:

1. Using the chart on page #233, what generalization can you

make about the variation in highs and lows of the stock

market from 1920 to 1932?

2. How did speculation cause the stock market to crash in 1929?

3. What were three existing economic conditions that contributed

to the Great Depression? (Review the chart on page #235.)

10

Reading Assignment #10

Page 12: Chapter 7: World War I and Its Aftermath

Read the following pages in the course textbook to locate the

key vocabulary and answer the questions below.

Chapter 9: The Great Depression Begins Lesson 2: Life During the Great Depression (pp. 237-239)

C9,L2 KEY READING VOCABULARY:

a. bailiff:

b. hobo:

c. Dust Bowl:

d. “Okies”:

e. soap opera:

C9,L2 KEY READING QUESTIONS:

1. What changes to daily life occurred for people affected by

the economic hardships of the Great Depression?

2. Why did “Okies” migrate to California during the Depression?

What happened to them once they arrived?

3. How did the Great Depression impact the culture of the 1930s?

11

Reading Assignment #11

Page 13: Chapter 7: World War I and Its Aftermath

Read the following pages in the course textbook to locate the

key vocabulary and answer the questions below.

Chapter 9: The Great Depression Begins Lesson 3: Hoover’s Response to the Depression (pp. 240-243)

C9,L3 KEY READING VOCABULARY:

a. public works:

b. relief:

c. foreclose:

d. “Bonus Army”:

C9,L3 KEY READING QUESTIONS:

1. What three major initiatives did President Hoover take to

help the U.S. economy?

2. Why did citizens try to change government policy during the

Great Depression’s early years? How did they change it?

3. Between 1931 and 1932, what Federal Government programs and

acts were created to promote economic recovery? What was

each intended to do?

12

Reading Assignment #12

Page 14: Chapter 7: World War I and Its Aftermath

Read the following pages in the course textbook to locate the

key vocabulary and answer the questions below.

Chapter 10: Roosevelt and the New Deal Lesson 1: The First New Deal (pp. 248-254)

C10,L1 KEY READING VOCABULARY:

a. polio:

b. gold standard:

c. bank holiday:

d. “fireside chats”:

e. TVA:

C10,L1 KEY READING QUESTIONS:

1. What characteristics did FDR have that made him popular with

Americans?

2. Why did FDR broadcast “fireside chats”?

3. How did the government restore confidence in the banking

system?

4. How did New Deal legislation try to stabilize agriculture

and industry?

13

Reading Assignment #13

Page 15: Chapter 7: World War I and Its Aftermath

Read the following pages in the course textbook to locate the

key vocabulary and answer the questions below.

Chapter 10: Roosevelt and the New Deal Lesson 2: The Second New Deal (pp. 255-258)

C10,L2 KEY READING VOCABULARY:

a. deficit spending:

b. binding arbitration:

c. sit-down strike:

C10,L2 KEY READING QUESTIONS:

1. How did the political left’s criticism of the New Deal differ

from those of the political right?

2. What happens when the Federal Government starts a policy of

deficit spending?

3. What factors encouraged FDR to introduce the Second New Deal?

4. How did the Wagner Act and the Social Security Act affect

Americans?

14

Reading Assignment #14

Page 16: Chapter 7: World War I and Its Aftermath

Read the following pages in the course textbook to locate the

key vocabulary and answer the questions below.

Chapter 10: Roosevelt and the New Deal Lesson 3: The New Deal Coalition (pp. 259-261)

C10,L3 KEY READING VOCABULARY:

a. court-packing:

b. broker state:

c. safety net:

C10,L3 KEY READING QUESTIONS:

1. Why was the court-packing plan such a mistake for FDR?

2. Which groups were a part of the New Deal coalition?

3. What impact has New Deal legislation had on federal and state

governments?

15

Reading Assignment #15

Page 17: Chapter 7: World War I and Its Aftermath

Answer these questions about the causes of World War I:

A. Militarism – How did the arms race between the nations of

Europe cause WWI? What new weapons were introduced?

B. Imperialism – How did overseas expansion and a desire to

create empires cause WWI?

C. Nationalism – How did the love of one’s country cause WWI?

How did the desire of individual nationalities to create their

own country cause WWI?

continues on next page —>

16

Using the Guided Notes, class lectures/discussions, and reading

assignments, answer the following 20 Essential Questions. The

unit test will assess your mastery of each of these EQs.

EQ 3.01

Essential Questions (EQs)

Page 18: Chapter 7: World War I and Its Aftermath

EQ 3.01 continued...

Answer these questions about the causes of World War I:

D. Alliances – How did the alliance system cause WWI?

E. Assassination – How did the assassination of Archduke Franz

Ferdinand cause WWI? (Be sure to show the chain reaction that

happened following his murder.)

17

Essential Questions (EQs)

Page 19: Chapter 7: World War I and Its Aftermath

EQ 3.02

Explain these key battles/events of World War I:

A. First Battle of the Marne – Winner? Impact on war?

B. The Christmas Truce – Impact on war?

C. Second Battle of Ypres – Winner? Impact on war?

D. Gallipoli Campaign – Winner? Impact on war?

E. Battle of Verdun – Winner? Impact on war?

F. First Battle of the Somme – Winner? Impact on war?

G. Battle of the Meuse-Argonne – Winner? Impact on war?

18

Essential Questions (EQs)

Page 20: Chapter 7: World War I and Its Aftermath

EQ 3.03

Explain these key people of World War I:

A. Baron Manfred von Richthofen – Which side did he support? For

what is he known?

B. Kaiser Wilhelm II – Which side did he support? For what is he

known?

C. Archduke Franz Ferdinand – Which side did he support? For

what is he known?

D. Gavrilo Princip – Which side did he support? For what is he

known?

E. President Woodrow Wilson – Which side did he support? For

what is he known?

F. General John J. Pershing – Which side did he support? For

what is he known?

19

Essential Questions (EQs)

Page 21: Chapter 7: World War I and Its Aftermath

EQ 3.04

Explain these key people/events of the Russian Revolution:

A. Czar Nicholas II – Which side did he support? For what is he

known?

B. February Revolution – When? What happened? Impact on Russian

Revolution?

C. October Revolution – When? What happened? Impact on Russian

Revolution?

D. Bolshevik Party – Which side did this party support? Who led

this party?

E. Vladimir Lenin – Which side did he support? For what is he

known?

F. Leon Trotsky – Which side did he support? For what is he

known?

20

Essential Questions (EQs)

Page 22: Chapter 7: World War I and Its Aftermath

EQ 3.05

Answer these questions about the U.S. entering World War I:

A. What 2 key events pushed the U.S. into World War I?

B. How did these 2 key events sway U.S. public opinion in favor

of the Allies?

21

Essential Questions (EQs)

Page 23: Chapter 7: World War I and Its Aftermath

EQ 3.06

What impact did these items/events have on American society

during World War I?

A. Propaganda.

B. Liberty Bonds.

C. Espionage Act.

D. Sedition Act.

E. Schenck v. United States.

22

Essential Questions (EQs)

Page 24: Chapter 7: World War I and Its Aftermath

EQ 3.07

Answer these questions about the end of World War I:

A. What is the official date listed for the end of World War I?

B. Why was that exact date picked?

C. What was this date originally called?

D. In 1954, the original name for this date was changed. What is

now celebrated in commemoration of this date?

23

Essential Questions (EQs)

Page 25: Chapter 7: World War I and Its Aftermath

EQ 3.08

Answer these questions about the Treaty of Versailles:

A. What countries took part in drafting this treaty?

B. What were the 4 key parts of this treaty?

C. What were the Fourteen Points? What was the only “point” that

wound up getting included in the Treaty of Versailles?

D. Why do historians credit this treaty with helping to start

World War II?

E. Why didn’t the U.S. sign this treaty? What treaty did the

U.S. sign instead?

24

Essential Questions (EQs)

Page 26: Chapter 7: World War I and Its Aftermath

EQ 3.09

Answer these questions and explain why the title of “Roaring” is

no longer historically accurate when discussing the 1920s.

A. Why was the decade not as prosperous as it appeared on the

surface?

B. Why did the country choose to ignore many of its internal

problems following World War I?

C. How did the internal problems of the 1920s rise to the

surface in later decades?

25

Essential Questions (EQs)

Page 27: Chapter 7: World War I and Its Aftermath

EQ 3.10

What impact did these mass culture items have on revamping the

way in which Americans enjoyed their lives during the 1920s?

A. Automobiles.

B. Advertisements.

C. Radio.

D. “Talkies”.

E. The “Golden Age” of Sports.

26

Essential Questions (EQs)

Page 28: Chapter 7: World War I and Its Aftermath

EQ 3.11

Answer these questions about key celebrities/entertainers of the

“Roaring” Twenties:

A. Al Jolson – For what is he known?

B. Charlie Chaplin – For what is he known?

C. Harry Houdini – For what is he known?

D. Charles Lindbergh – For what is he known?

E. Amelia Earhart – For what is she known?

F. F. Scott Fitzgerald – For what is he known?

27

Essential Questions (EQs)

Page 29: Chapter 7: World War I and Its Aftermath

EQ 3.12

Answer these questions about the rebellious teenage flappers:

A. How did they dress and behave? Why was this “scandalous”?

B. What kind of music did they listen to?

C. Give 2 examples of the slang words they used. What did these

words mean?

28

Essential Questions (EQs)

Page 30: Chapter 7: World War I and Its Aftermath

EQ 3.13

Answer these questions about African-Americans during the 1920s:

A. From 1910-1930, 1.6 million African-Americans moved out of

the rural South and into the Northeast, Midwest, and West.

Why were they so willing to move during this “Great Migration”?

B. What was the Harlem Renaissance? What impact did it have on

African-Americans and on U.S. society?

C. What was the Jazz Age? Who were some key artists? What impact

did it have on the music industry?

D. Who was Marcus Garvey? What role did he play in the rise of

Black Nationalism in the 1920s?

29

Essential Questions (EQs)

Page 31: Chapter 7: World War I and Its Aftermath

EQ 3.14

Answer these questions about key Presidents from the “Roaring”

Twenties:

A. President Warren G. Harding – For which political party did

he serve? For what is he known?

B. President Calvin Coolidge – For which political party did he

serve? For what is he known?

C. President Herbert Hoover – For which political party did he

serve? For what is he known?

30

Essential Questions (EQs)

Page 32: Chapter 7: World War I and Its Aftermath

EQ 3.15

Answer these questions about political conflicts of the 1920s:

A. The Red Scare – What caused it? What roles did A. Mitchell

Palmer and J. Edgar Hoover play? How did the Red Scare of the

1920s plant the seeds for the Red Scare of the 1950s?

B. Sacco & Vanzetti – What caused this court case? Who were

Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti? What was the court’s

decision? Why did the verdict spark protest?

C. Ku Klux Klan (KKK) – Why was there a resurgence of the KKK

during the 1920s? Who were some of their “new” targets? How did

this hatred carry over into the KKK of the 1950s?

continues on next page —>

31

Essential Questions (EQs)

Page 33: Chapter 7: World War I and Its Aftermath

EQ 3.15 continued...

Answer these questions about political conflicts of the 1920s:

D. Scopes Monkey Trial – What caused this court case? Who were

John T. Scopes and Clarence Darrow? What was the court’s

decision? Why was the verdict later overturned?

E. Prohibition – What made people want Prohibition? Who were

the “Drys” and the “Wets”? Where did the Prohibition movement

begin? What Amendment started Prohibition? What Amendment ended

Prohibition? Why do historians consider Prohibition to be a

failure?

32

Essential Questions (EQs)

Page 34: Chapter 7: World War I and Its Aftermath

EQ 3.16

Answer these questions about the Great Depression:

A. When did it “start”?

B. When did it “end”?

C. What was it?

D. How did installment plans, buying on credit, and buying “on

margin” contribute to the Stock Market Crash in 1929?

33

Essential Questions (EQs)

Page 35: Chapter 7: World War I and Its Aftermath

EQ 3.17

Answer these questions about key people of the 1930s:

A. President Herbert Hoover – For what is he known?

B. President Franklin D. Roosevelt – For what is he known?

C. John Maynard Keynes – For what is he known?

D. James J. Braddock – For what is he known?

34

Essential Questions (EQs)

Page 36: Chapter 7: World War I and Its Aftermath

EQ 3.18

Answer these questions about key items/events of the Depression:

A. Hoovervilles – What were they? Why did they form?

B. The Bonus Army – What was it? What did this “army” want?

C. “Fireside Chats” – What were they? Why did FDR give them?

D. Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA) – What was it? What kind of

jobs did the TVA create?

E. The Dust Bowl – What caused it? What impact did it have on

farming in the U.S.?

35

Essential Questions (EQs)

Page 37: Chapter 7: World War I and Its Aftermath

EQ 3.19

Answer these questions about the New Deal:

A. What are 2 positive effects that FDR’s New Deal had on the

U.S.?

B. What are 2 negative effects that FDR’s New Deal had on the

U.S.?

26

Essential Questions (EQs)

Page 38: Chapter 7: World War I and Its Aftermath

EQ 3.20

Provide a 1 sentence summary for these economic terms:

A. Boycott.

B. Business Cycle (including: expansion, peak, contraction &

trough).

C. Capitalism (a.k.a. Free Enterprise & Market Economy).

D. Communism.

E. Consumer Price Index (CPI).

F. Deficit Spending.

G. Depression.

37

Essential Questions (EQs)

Page 39: Chapter 7: World War I and Its Aftermath

EQ 3.20 continued...

H. Embargo (including: civil & hostile).

I. Gold Standard (including: Silver Standard & Mixed Metal).

J. Gross Domestic Product (GDP).

K. Inflation (including deflation).

L. Interest Rate.

M. Laissez-faire.

N. Minimum Wage.

38

Essential Questions (EQs)

Page 40: Chapter 7: World War I and Its Aftermath

EQ 3.20 continued...

O. Monopoly (including: vertical integration & horizontal

consolidation).

P. National Debt.

Q. Socialism.

R. Standard of Living.

S. Stock Market (including: stock, Bull Market & Bear Market).

T. Strike.

39

Essential Questions (EQs)

Page 41: Chapter 7: World War I and Its Aftermath

EQ 3.20 continued...

U. Supply & Demand.

V. Supply-Side Economics (a.k.a. Trickle-Down Economics).

W. Tariff.

X. Taxation (including: income tax, sales tax & property tax).

Y. Unemployment Rate.

40

Essential Questions (EQs)

Page 42: Chapter 7: World War I and Its Aftermath

YOUR NAME PERIOD