AP HUG Semester One Final Review Packet-Ch. 3

Similar documents
Immigrants 100 years ago

Chapter 3: Migration

Chapter 3: Migration

IMMIGRATION AND URBANIZATION

Chapter 3: Migration. most people migrate in search of three objectives: economic opportunity, cultural freedom, and environmental comfort

DO NOW. 1) Write a brief summary of your families immigration history to the USA

HUMAN GEOGRAPHY. By Brett Lucas

IMMIGRATION AND URBANIZATION

3/21/ Global Migration Patterns. 3.1 Global Migration Patterns. Distance of Migration. 3.1 Global Migration Patterns

IMMIGRANTS IN AMERICA

Chapter 3: Migration. The Cultural Landscape: An Introduction to Human Geography

Describe the migration patterns for each stage in Zelinsky s model. Stage 1 Stage 2 Stage 3 Stage 4

MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question.

Geographers generally divide the reasons for migration into push and pull factors.

LEGAL INSPECTION - DETAINEES

Migration PPT by Abe Goldman

Immigration defines North America. Immigration to the U.S. from the late 1800 s to Now

SWBAT. Explain why and how immigrants came to the US in the Gilded Age Describe the immigrant experience and contributions

Ellis Island Unit Grade 5 ELD

IMMIGRANT Llf.E. Date: Name:

Pre-visit Activity: Background Reading - The Immigration Process

Unit II Migration. Unit II Population and Migration 21

Principles of Cultural Geography

CHAPTER THREE. Key Issue One: Why do people migrate?

Key Issue 1: Where Are Migrants Distributed?

Great Migration. Largest mass movement in history = 23 mil immigrants arrived in America between

Becoming American History of Immigration Period 1

MIGRATION. Chapter 3 Key Issue 2. Textbook: p Vocabulary: #31-34

The Cultural Landscape by Rubenstein Chapter 3: Migration

Key Issue 1: Where Are Migrants Distributed?

Migration! Before we start: DO NOW IN YOUR NOTES. Why have and do people move across time and space?

An Introduction to Human Geography The Cultural Landscape, 8e James M. Rubenstein. Migration. PPT by Abe Goldman modified DKroegel

Introducing the Read-Aloud

A Flood of Immigrants

The Quincy copper mine in Hancock, Michigan. The Soudan iron mine in northern Minnesota

Reading History: The American Revolution Grade 4: Nonfiction, Unit 3

Migration Review CH. 3

Chapter 3 Lecture. Chapter 3 Migration. Tim Scharks Green River College Pearson Education, Inc.

IMMIGRATION & URBANIZATION

Pre-visit Activity: Background Reading - The Immigration Process

The Cultural Landscape Eleventh Edition

Analysis of Global Migration Patterns Part I: Push and Pull factors Adapted from Farhan

PLEASE DO NOT WRITE ON THIS EXAM BOOKLET

Migration. What is Migration? Movement. Chapter 3. Key Question: Cyclic Movement movement away from home for a short period.

10. Identify Wilbur Zelinsky s model, and briefly summarize what it says.

New Immigrants. Chapter 15 Section 1 Life at the Turn of the 20th Century Riddlebarger

2. In what stage of the demographic transition model are most LDC? a. First b. Second c. Third d. Fourth e. Fifth

IMMIGRANTS AND URBANIZATION AMERICA BECOMES A MELTING POT IN THE LATE 19 TH & EARLY 20 TH CENTURY

Test Examples. Vertical Integration

Terms and People new immigrant steerage Ellis Island Angel Island

Introducing the Read-Aloud

Chapter 3: Migration. General Characteristics Ravenstein s Laws Zelinsky s Migration Transition

AP Human Geography Ch 3: Migration Check Questions


NAME DATE PER Chapter Three Migration Study Guide: Key Issues 1 & 2 Key Issue 1: Where Are Migrants Distributed? (pgs 78-83)

Migration. Introducing

Section 1: The New Immigrants

AMERICA - NEIL DIAMOND

6th Immigration test. P a g e 1. Multiple Choice Identify the choice that best completes the statement or answers the question.

Immigrants and Urbanization: Immigration. Chapter 15, Section 1

Immigration and Discrimination. Effects of the Industrial Revolution

Immigration- The PUSH and PULL of US Immigrants More than 13.5 Million Immigrants came to the United States

Name. 2. How do people act when they meet a new person and are able to communicate with them?

10/20/2015. Chapter 3: Migration. Terms of Migration. Migration

Why were Immigrants drawn to the U. S.? Pull Factors

Starter task. Why have refugees come to Britain historically? Role play

Chapter 3. Migration

Coming Over. In the years around the turn of the century, immigration

THROUGH ELLIS ISLAND AND ANGEL ISLAND. How was life as an immigrant coming to the USA

Immigration Unit Vocabulary 1. Old Immigrants: Immigrants from Northern European countries.

2.1 SOCIETAL ISSUES & IMMIGRATION UNIT 2 PROGRESSIVE MOVEMENT SECTION 1 - INTRODUCTION. 1890s 1920s

The Immigrant Experience Ellis Island

Canada s early immigration history

In small groups work together to create lists of places you can think of that have highest populations. What continents are these countries located

4. Briefly describe role of each of the following in examining intervening obstacles and migration: a) physical geography

HWG Unit 2 SG 3. Modern Migration Pearson Education, Inc.

IMMIGRATION. Read-Aloud Plays. by Sarah Glasscock. New York Toronto London Auckland Sydney Mexico City New Delhi Hong Kong

Assessment: The Great Wave of Immigration

AP Human Geography Mr. Horas Chapter 3: Migration (pages )

Ellis Island Web-quest

CHAPTER 6: WHERE AND WHY PEOPLE MOVE

Multiple Choice: Circle the letter of the answer that best answers the question.

Name: 8 th Grade U.S. History. STAAR Review. Colonization

Immigrant Experience Story 1

Under the Gaze of Lady Liberty A Homecoming for an Immigrant s Grandson

Population and Migration. Chapters 2 and 3 Test Review

Reasons to Immigrate:

Unit 4 Changing America at the Turn of the Century Study Guide Name:

Immigration. January 19th & 20th

IMMIGRANTS AND URBANIZATION AMERICA BECOMES A MELTING POT IN THE LATE 19 TH & EARLY 20 TH CENTURY

Lesson A. People and Places 7. A. Complete the sentences with the correct form of the words in the box.

The New Immigrants. Reading Skill

New York) and also Boston and later Chicago.

Rebekkah s Journey A World War II Refugee Story

Slide 1. Slide 2. Slide 3. Chapter 3: Migration. Key Question. What is migration? Field Note: Risking Lives for Remittances

MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question.

Welcome to Class! February 8, 2018

Chapter Introduction Section 1 Immigration Section 2 Urbanization. Click on a hyperlink to view the corresponding slides.

10A. Introducing the Read-Aloud. Essential Background Information or Terms. Vocabulary Preview. 10 minutes. 5 minutes

Taken from the Port City: gallery within the Museum s flagship exhibition, New York At Its Core.

Transcription:

AP HUG Semester One Final Review Packet-Ch. 3 1 point Which of the following is NOT an example of migration? a. A refugee moving to a new country to escape persecution b. A slave from Africa being forced to live in the American South c. Going on vacation to the south of France d. Moving from Chicago to Pekin, Illinois to get away from the city Explain your answer: Read the following excerpts and answer the questions:!!!! My name is Seymour Rechtzeit and I was born in Lódz, Poland, in 1912. My family is Jewish, and I first began singing in our temple. By the time I was four, I was called wunderkind,or wonder child in English. Soon I was singing in concerts all over Poland. My family decided that I should come to America, where there would be more opportunities for me. World War I had just ended, and it was a bad time in Europe. I had an uncle in America, and he sent two tickets for my father and me. The rest of my family stayed in Poland. The plan was that my father and I would make enough money to bring them to America, too. In Danzig, now known as "Gdansk," we boarded a ship called The Lapland. It was 1920, and I was on my way to America. Riding on a big boat across the Atlantic Ocean may sound like fun, but it wasn't. The two-week trip was miserable! Our room was in steerage, way down in the bottom of the boat. It was lined with bunks, one on top of the other. It was uncomfortable and crowded. I went up on deck all the time, just to have room to move around. We hit many bad storms at sea. It rained hard, and I was wet and shivering. By the time we sailed into New York Harbor past the Statue of Liberty, I had a very bad cold. Still, I was up on deck, in my good white suit, cheering along with everyone else at the awesome sight of the statue. Back then, immigrants had to pass a medical examination to be allowed to enter the country. Many people were sent back to where they came from. I was eight years old and I was ill. I didn't know what was going to happen to me in America. At Ellis Island, my father, who was not sick, had to leave the ship. He stood in long lines and officials asked him lots of questions about where he came from, what he did for a living back in Poland, and what his plans were in America. All newcomers had to answer those questions. Only then could you leave Ellis Island and take a ferry to New York and finally set foot in America. When the doctor examined me, he discovered I had a cold. He said I could not go with my father. I cried and begged. I was terrified to be all alone in this strange place. I stayed on Ellis Island for a few days, until I was feeling better. I had no toys with me. I didn't know of such things. But there were other sick boys to keep me company. Some of them spoke Yiddish, my language. We ate in a huge dining room. The food was different it was American style. But it was good, especially the milk. There was a long gate that led to the boats that took people off the island, across New York Harbor, to the city. Every day, we boys would walk to the gate and look out over the water. We wanted to see America. It was like being in a jail. We felt sad and wondered if we would ever get through that gate and onto a boat for that final journey to our new country, the United States. My cold went away, and soon the officials told me that my father and uncle were coming to get me. As I stepped off the boat from Ellis Island, I felt a rush of joy. All around me were hundreds of families greeting their relatives, welcoming them to America. That was the beginning of my new life in New York. Right away I started singing in concerts and making money to help bring the rest of my family to America. I sang in school, too. I sang "My Country 'Tis of Thee" and "The Star-Spangled Banner." I learned quickly.

I became a child star of vaudeville. That's a kind of entertainment in which actors sing and tell stories. I was very popular because I was a kid. I traveled from place to place to entertain. In a few years I had made enough money to bring my mother, brothers, and sisters to America. But I faced a new problem. It was 1924, and not as many immigrants were being allowed into America. My family could not get permission to come. They were in Poland, and my father and I were in America. How would we be a family again? Fill in the blanks () Seymour is an emigrant of and an immigrated to. Because of his talent in music, Seymour s departure could be considered. The desire for more opportunities in the U.S. is an example of a factor. We can assumed the factor is that there were limited opportunities in Poland. The size of the Atlantic Ocean, the difficulty of the travel, and the medical examination could be considered an. That Seymour already had relatives in the U.S. that he was joining is an example of. In 1924, the U.S. passed the Act which set that limited the amount of immigrants from and Europe in favor of immigrants from and Europe. Intraregional Migration in US (1 point) After industrialization, most people moved from areas to areas. As the cities increased in size, middle and upper class people began to seek more room, better schools, and a safer environment in the. Currently, because of technology and transportation many people are moving from areas back to the areas in search of a quieter life and slower pace. This is called. Circle whether each of the following is a push or pull factor AND what type of push/pull factor (2 points): The Irish potato famine was the result of diseased potatoes. A Chinese immigrant choosing Chicago as your destination because it has a Chinatown. A refugee fleeing Egypt because she is Christian and they are persecuting her because of her religion. A young man from India moving to the U.S. to work in the rising computer industry. A steel mill worker moving to Birmingham, Alabama because the steel mill closed in Chicago.

Net Migration in Britain 1991-2009 What is net migration? What years saw a net out-migration? What years saw the highest net inmigration? What can you infer about the economy and/or immigration policy during the years of highest and lowest immigration? True/False: In the space to the left of the statement, write whether or not it is true or false. If it is false, correctt the underlined word so that it is true. According to Ravenstein s theory... Most people migrate for economic reasons. Correct: Most long distance migrants are young, single males. Correct: Most migrants relocate a long-distance away. Correct: According to Zelinsky s theory...! In stage one, people migrate a lot to search for food. Correct: People migrate the most in stage four. Correct: People migrate from rural to urban areas in stage two. Correct: People are most likely to migrate if they are in stage three. Correct: People are most likely to migrate TO a stage four country. Correct:

Use the maps on this page to identify the type of migration from the places listed below. 1 point San José to Colón Puntarenas to Goltito Puerto Limón to San José Maps of the regions of Costa Rica

Migration in the 1700s What were the first two groups to arrive in America in large numbers (non-native)? Which of the following best explains why they stayed along the far East coast of the United States? a. They planned to return to Europe after finding gold b. They had difficulty moving beyond the mountains c. They were connected to Europe and Africa through trade d. Both a and d e. Both b and c Explain your answer: What two reasons caused them to move into the interior? a. transportation and cheap land b. gold and relationships with Indians c. cheap land and relationships with Indians d. gold and railroads e. none of the above Explain your answer: 1 point Explain how European migration has led to the diffusion of art, architecture, religion, language, etc. What problems has this caused?

What event cause the huge large move in the center of population between 1850 and 1860? After 1950, what direction did the center of population start to move other than west? Explain this movement.

This image highlights the purpose of the 1921/1924 immigration quotas. Who would the quota favor and who does is try to discourage from entering the US? Which of the following best represents the commonality between Russia, Brazil, and Indonesia in terms of interregional migration within those countries? a. Each country has such a low population density that there is no need for internal migration b. Every country is Communist and the government moves the people closer to the resources. c. Every country tries to use various forms of incentives (mandatory or optional) to encourage people to migrate d. Every country moved its capital in order to get its people to move from the most densely populated regions to the least densely populated regions. Explain your answer:

What is a guest worker? How do they help both the country they are leaving and the country where they go to work? How do Americans and Europeans feel about immigrants and guest workers? Explain What is the difference between a refugee and an economic migrant? What is the message of this cartoon?