Period 5: TEACHER PLANNING TOOL. AP U.S. History Curriculum Framework Evidence Planner

Similar documents
Present PERIOD 5:

Period 3: TEACHER PLANNING TOOL. AP U.S. History Curriculum Framework Evidence Planner

This era corresponds to information in Unit 5 ( ), Unit 6 ( ) and Unit 7 ( )

Unit III Outline Organizing Principles

Livingston American School Quarterly Lesson Plan

Guided Reading & Analysis: Reconstruction, chapter 15- Reconstruction pp

Immigration and the Peopling of the United States

Period 3 Concept Outline,

By The People A History of the United States 1st Edition, AP Edition, 2015 Fraser

Reading/Note Taking Guide APUSH Period 3: (American Pageant Chapters 6 10)

causes of internal migration and patterns of settlement in what would become the United States, and explain how migration has affected American life.

Teachers have flexibility to use examples such as the following: Pontiac s Rebellion, Proclamation of 1763

III. The Concept Outline

Period 3 Content Outline,

Period 1: Period 2:

Grade Eight: US History Semester Two REVIEW PACKET. Student Final Exam Study Sheet

CHAPTER 15 - RECONSTRUCTION. APUSH Mr. Muller

APUSH RECONSTRUCTION REVIEWED!

Grade Eight: US History Semester Two REVIEW PACKET. Student Final Exam Study Sheet

Compilation of DBQs and FRQs from Italics that are underlined =not 100% aligned with the section it is written in

THEMATIC ESSENTIAL QUESTIONS BY UNIT

Related Thematic Learning Objectives. Concept Outline

Period 3: Give examples of colonial rivalry between Britain and France

Section 1 Guided Reading, pp Intro: The Civil War, page 268

7th Grade Social Studies GLEs

REVIEWED! APUSH PERIOD 5: KEY CONCEPT 5.3 3/29/17 MOBILIZING ECONOMIES & SOCIETIES FOR WAR: Why does the Union win the war?

Prentice Hall US History: Reconstruction to the Present 2010 Correlated to: Minnesota Academic Standards in History and Social Studies, (Grades 9-12)

Migration and Settlement (MIG)

FINAL EXAM (2018) STUDY GUIDE

Key Concept 7.1: Growth expanded opportunity, while economic instability led to new efforts to reform U.S. society and its economic system.

Period 3: 1754 to 1800 (French and Indian War Election of Jefferson)

Period 4 Content Outline,

COURSE INFORMATION FORM

Course Text. Course Description. Course Objectives. Course Prerequisites. Course Evaluation Criteria. StraighterLine USHIST101: US History I

WS/FCS Unit Planning Organizer

PERIOD 6: Teachers have flexibility to use examples such as the following: John D. Rockefeller, J. P. Morgan. Key Concept 6.

(WOR-3) (ID-7) (WXT-3) (WXT-5) (POL-3)

Period 1: This document was created by Isaias Torres

Examples (people, events, documents, concepts)

2. Transatlantic Encounters and Colonial Beginnings,

APUSH Period 6:

Question of the Day Schedule

Why did competing political parties develop during the 1790s?

Unit 5 Study Guide. 1. What did the Northwest Ordinance establish? Process for a territory to become a state

America Past and Present 9 th Edition, AP* Edition 2011

Somerville Schools 2017 CURRICULUM MAP WITH SCOPE AND SEQUENCE. Course: American History Subject Area: Social Studies Grade Level: 8

The AP U.S. History Curriculum Framework PERIOD 7:

America s History, Chapter 13, Expansion, War, and Sectional Crisis

X On record with the USOE.

X On record with the USOE.

X On record with the USOE.

A) Following the Civil War, government subsidies for transportation and communication systems helped open new markets in North America.

Unit Maps: Grade 8 Social Studies United States History from Age of Jackson to Reconstruction

WS/FCS Unit Planning Organizer

Guided Reading & Analysis: The Civil War, chapter 14- Civil War pp

Key Concept 7.1: Growth expanded opportunity, while economic instability led to new efforts to reform US society and its economic system.

PERIOD 6: This era corresponds to information in Unit 10 ( ) and Unit 11 ( )

Geography 8th Grade Social Studies Standard 1

AP U.S. History Essay Questions, 1994-present. Document-Based Questions

America: History of Our Nation, Survey Edition 2009 Correlated to: Michigan Grade Level Content Expectations for Social Studies for Grade 8 (Grade 8)

History 11-U.S. Colonial History Final Study Guide-Chronology. Hopi and Zuni tribes establish towns Columbus first voyage to New World 1492

American Cultures I. Unit 1: Beginnings of American History. Part 1 Roots of the American and European People. Competencies (Do)

Pre-AP American Cultures I

GRADE 8 United States History Growth and Development (to 1877)

FB/CCU U.S. HISTORY COURSE DESCRIPTION / LEARNING OBJECTIVES

Standards Content Skills/Competency Suggested Assessment Civics D: Summarize the basic

UNITED STATES HISTORY. Curriculum Framework

CONTENT STANDARD INDICATORS SKILLS ASSESSMENT VOCABULARY. Identify a man or woman who made a significant impact in the changing.

THE RECONSTRUCTION ERA

Politics and Power (POL)

Grade Eight. Integrated United States History INTEGRATED * UNITED STATES HISTORY, ORGANIZED BY ERA (USHG)

I. Conservative beliefs regarding the need for traditional social values and a reduced role for government advanced in U.S. politics after 1980.

U.S. History Final Exam - Review Guide Semester 1

PERIOD 8: Teachers have flexibility to use examples such as the following: development of hydrogen bomb, massive retaliation, space race

D. Slavery, Civil War and Reconstruction

COMPREHENSION AND CRITICAL THINKING

APUSH Exam Review Project

Common Core Standards Standards Content Skills/Competency Suggested Assessment

SOCIAL STUDIES Grade 8 Standard: History

Period 3: American Revolution Timeline: The French and Indian War (Seven Years War)

Eighth Grade Social Studies United States History Course Outline

AP US History Semester I Final Exam Study Guide

8 th grade American Studies sample test questions

WS/FCS Unit Planning Organizer

Advanced Placement United States History Curriculum Alignment Tyler George

Standards Skills Assessment Resources

Eighth Grade, page 1 rev. May 10, 2011

ERA: Three Worlds Meet (Beginnings to 1620) Content Statement Strand CPI Cumulative Progress Indicator

JEFFERSON COLLEGE COURSE SYLLABUS HST103 U.S. HISTORY I TO RECONSTRUCTION. 3 Credit Hours. Prepared by: Gabrielle Everett January 2009

SSUSH8 Explore the relationship

OHIO ACADEMIC CONTENT STANDARDS, BENCHMARKS & INDICATORS Grade-Level Indicators

AGS United States Government Michigan Grade 8 Grade Level Content Expectations

The Americans (Reconstruction to the 21st Century)

Title of Unit: Colonial Foundations of the American Nation. Content Area: US HISTORY I. Grade Level: 10, 11

American History: A Survey

2. COURSE DESIGNATION: 3. COURSE DESCRIPTIONS:

Revised February 23, 2017

Summer 2018 AP United States History II

Period 3: In a Nutshell. Key Concepts

Slavery and Sectionalism. The Political Crisis of

Transcription:

1491 1607 1607 1754 1754 1800 1800 1848 1844 1877 1865 1898 1890 1945 1945 1980 1980 Present TEACHER PLANNING TOOL Period 5: 1844 1877 As the nation expanded and its population grew, regional tensions, especially over slavery, led to a civil war the course and aftermath of which transformed American society. 50

5.1: The United States became more connected with the world as it pursued an expansionist foreign policy in the Western Hemisphere and emerged as the destination for many migrants from other countries. I. Enthusiasm for U.S. territorial expansion, fueled by economic and national security interests and supported by claims of U.S. racial and cultural superiority, resulted in war, the opening of new markets, acquisition of new territory, and increased ideological conflicts. A) The idea of Manifest Destiny, which asserted U.S. power in the Western Hemisphere and supported U.S. expansion westward, was built on a belief in white racial superiority and a sense of American cultural superiority, and helped to shape the era s political debates. B) The acquisition of new territory in the West and the U.S. victory in the Mexican-American War were accompanied by a heated controversy over allowing or forbidding slavery in newly acquired territories. ID-2: Assess the impact of Manifest Destiny, territorial expansion, the Civil War, and industrialization on popular beliefs about progress and the national destiny of the U.S. in the 19th century WXT-2: Analyze how innovations in markets, transportation, and technology affected the economy and the different regions of North America from the colonial period through the end of the Civil War WOR-5: Analyze the motives behind, and results of, economic, military, and diplomatic initiatives aimed at expanding U.S. power and territory in the Western Hemisphere in the years between independence and the Civil War WOR-6: Analyze the major aspects of domestic debates over U.S. expansionism in the 19th century and ENV-3: Analyze the role of environmental factors in contributing to regional economic and political identities in the 19th century, and how they affected conflicts such as the American Revolution and the Civil War ENV-4: Analyze how the search for economic resources affected social and political developments from the colonial period through Reconstruction 51

C) The desire for access to western resources led to the environmental transformation of the region, new economic activities, and increased settlement in areas forcibly taken from American Indians. D) U.S. interest in expanding trade led to economic, diplomatic, and cultural initiatives westward to Asia. ID-2: Assess the impact of Manifest Destiny, territorial expansion, the Civil War, and industrialization on popular beliefs about progress and the national destiny of the U.S. in the 19th century WXT-2: Analyze how innovations in markets, transportation, and technology affected the economy and the different regions of North America from the colonial period through the end of the Civil War WOR-5: Analyze the motives behind, and results of, economic, military, and diplomatic initiatives aimed at expanding U.S. power and territory in the Western Hemisphere in the years between independence and the Civil War WOR-6: Analyze the major aspects of domestic debates over U.S. expansionism in the 19th century and ENV-3: Analyze the role of environmental factors in contributing to regional economic and political identities in the 19th century, and how they affected conflicts such as the American Revolution and the Civil War ENV-4: Analyze how the search for economic resources affected social and political developments from the colonial period through Reconstruction 52

II. Westward expansion, migration to and within the United States, and the end of slavery reshaped North American boundaries and caused conflicts over American cultural identities, citizenship, and the question of extending and protecting rights for various groups of U.S. inhabitants. A) Substantial numbers of new international migrants who often lived in ethnic communities and retained their religion, language, and customs entered the country prior to the Civil War, giving rise to a major, often violent nativist movement that was strongly anti-catholic and aimed at limiting immigrants cultural influence and political and economic power. B) Asian, African American, and white peoples sought new economic opportunities or religious refuge in the West, efforts that were boosted during and after the Civil War with the passage of new legislation promoting national economic development. C) As the territorial boundaries of the United States expanded and the migrant population increased, U.S. government interaction and conflict with Hispanics and American Indians increased, altering these groups cultures and ways of life and raising questions about their status and legal rights. ID-6: Analyze how migration patterns to, and migration within, the United States have influenced the growth of racial and ethnic identities and conflicts over ethnic assimilation and distinctiveness WXT-6: Explain how arguments about market capitalism, the growth of corporate power, and government policies influenced economic policies from the late 18th centrury through PEO-2: Explain how changes in the numbers and sources of international migrants in the 19th and 20th centuries altered the ethnic and social makeup of the U.S. population PEO-5: Explain how free and forced migration to and within different parts of North America caused regional development, cultural diversity and blending, and political and social conflicts PEO-6: Analyze the role of both internal and international migration on changes to urban life, cultural developments, labor issues, and reform movements from the mid-19th century through the mid-20th century clashes and military conflicts of the 19th century and 53

5.2: Intensified by expansion and deepening regional divisions, debates over slavery and other economic, cultural, and political issues led the nation into civil war. I. The institution of slavery and its attendant ideological debates, along with regional economic and demographic changes, territorial expansion in the 1840s and 1850s, and cultural differences between the North and the South, all intensified sectionalism. A) The North s expanding economy and its increasing reliance on a free-labor manufacturing economy contrasted with the South s dependence on an economic system characterized by slave-based agriculture and slow population growth. B) Abolitionists, although a minority in the North, mounted a highly visible campaign against slavery, adopting strategies of resistance ranging from fierce arguments against the institution and assistance in helping slaves escape to willingness to use violence to achieve their goals. C) States rights, nullification, and racist stereotyping provided the foundation for the Southern defense of slavery as a positive good. ID-5: Analyze the role of economic, political, social, and ethnic factors on the formation of regional identities in what would become the United States from the colonial period POL-3: Explain how activist groups and reform movements, such as antebellum reformers, civil rights activists, and social conservatives, have caused changes to state institutions and U.S. society POL-5: Analyze how arguments over the meaning and interpretation of the Constitution have affected U.S. politics since 1787 clashes and military conflicts of the 19th century and CUL-2: Analyze how emerging conceptions of national identity and democratic ideals shaped value systems, gender roles, and cultural movements in the late 18th century and the 19th century CUL-6: Analyze the role of culture and the arts in 19th- and 20th-century movements for social and political change 54

II. Repeated attempts at political compromise failed to calm tensions over slavery and often made sectional tensions worse, breaking down the trust between sectional leaders and culminating in the bitter election of 1860, followed by the secession of southern states. A) National leaders made a variety of proposals to resolve the issue of slavery in the territories, including the Compromise of 1850, the Kansas Nebraska Act, and the Dred Scott decision, but these ultimately failed to reduce sectional conflict. B) The second party system ended when the issues of slavery and anti-immigrant nativism weakened loyalties to the two major parties and fostered the emergence of sectional parties, most notably the Republican Party in the North and the Midwest. C) Lincoln s election on a free soil platform in the election of 1860 led various Southern leaders to conclude that their states must secede from the Union, precipitating civil war. PEO-2: Explain how changes in the numbers and sources of international migrants in the 19th and 20th centuries altered the ethnic and social makeup of the U.S. population PEO-5: Explain how free and forced migration to and within different parts of North America caused regional development, cultural diversity and blending, and political and social conflicts clashes and military conflicts of the 19th century and ID-5: Analyze the role of economic, political, social, and ethnic factors on the formation of regional identities in what would become the United States from the colonial period 55

5.3: The Union victory in the Civil War and the contested Reconstruction of the South settled the issues of slavery and secession, but left unresolved many questions about the power of the federal government and citizenship rights. I. The North s greater manpower and industrial resources, its leadership, and the decision for emancipation eventually led to the Union military victory over the Confederacy in the devastating Civil War. A) Both the Union and the Confederacy mobilized their economies and societies to wage the war even while facing considerable home front opposition. B) Lincoln s decision to issue the Emancipation Proclamation changed the purpose of the war, enabling many African Americans to fight in the Union Army, and helping prevent the Confederacy from gaining full diplomatic support from European powers. POL-5: Analyze how arguments over the meaning and interpretation of the Constitution have affected U.S. politics since 1787 CUL-2: Analyze how emerging conceptions of national identity and democratic ideals shaped value systems, gender roles, and cultural movements in the late 18th century and the 19th century ENV-3: Analyze the role of environmental factors in contributing to regional economic and political identities in the 19th century, and how they affected conflicts such as the American Revolution and the Civil War C) Although Confederate leadership showed initiative and daring early in the war, the Union ultimately succeeded due to improved military leadership, more effective strategies, key victories, greater resources, and the wartime destruction of the South s environment and infrastructure. 56

II. The Civil War and Reconstruction altered power relationships between the states and the federal government and among the executive, legislative, and judicial branches, ending slavery and the notion of a divisible union, but leaving unresolved questions of relative power and largely unchanged social and economic patterns. A) The 13th Amendment abolished slavery, bringing about the war s most dramatic social and economic change, but the exploitative and soilintensive sharecropping system endured for several generations. B) Efforts by radical and moderate Republicans to reconstruct the defeated South changed the balance of power between Congress and the presidency and yielded some short-term successes, reuniting the union, opening up political opportunities and other leadership roles to former slaves, and temporarily rearranging the relationships between white and black people in the South. POL-5: Analyze how arguments over the meaning and interpretation of the Constitution have affected U.S. politics since 1787 clashes and military conflicts of the 19th century and ID-5: Analyze the role of economic, political, social, and ethnic factors on the formation of regional identities in what would become the United States from the colonial period 57

III. The constitutional changes of the Reconstruction period embodied a Northern idea of American identity and national purpose and led to conflicts over new definitions of citizenship, particularly regarding the rights of African Americans, women, and other minorities. A) Although citizenship, equal protection of the laws, and voting rights were granted to African Americans in the 14th and 15th Amendments, these rights were progressively stripped away through segregation, violence, Supreme Court decisions, and local political tactics. B) The women s rights movement was both emboldened and divided over the 14th and 15th Amendments to the Constitution. ID-2: Assess the impact of Manifest Destiny, territorial expansion, the Civil War, and industrialization on popular beliefs about progress and the national destiny of the U.S. in the 19th century clashes and military conflicts of the 19th century and C) The Civil War Amendments established judicial principles that were stalled for many decades but eventually became the basis for court decisions upholding civil rights. 58