Tuesday, April 23, 2013

HW 4/23 & 4/25 Foner Ch. 22, Sec. 1-3


Read: Eric Foner, Chapter 22, Section 1packet distributed in class.
Task: Complete Cornell Notes for each section- 1 section worth 15 points total! Guidelines provided below 
Due: Tuesday, April 24, 2013

Due to a Junior Class Field Trip on Thursday, April 25, we will not have class. Homework due on Friday, April 26th, will be:

Read: Eric Foner, Chapter 22, Sections 2, 3packet distributed in class.
Task: Complete Cornell Notes for each section- 2 sections worth 30 points total! Guidelines provided below 
Due: Friday, April 25, 2013


Cornell Notes Guidelines:

1. Read FIRST, then decide which ideas to record in your Cornell Notes
2. The size of the space that I have provided for you should indicate to you how many or how few notes you should include.
3. This is where you should record details that support the heading. Your readings will be collected in class, so these notes will your primary reference for class discussions. 
4. As we progress through the year, you should get better and better at identifying which details are worth recording for later reference.
5. Generate your own Cornell Notes pages using the link on the side bar -->

Wednesday, April 17, 2013

HW Reading Ch. 21 Sections 5 & 6


Read: Eric Foner, Chapter 21, Sections 5 & 6packet distributed in class.
Task: Complete Cornell Notes for each section- 2 sections worth 30 points total! Guidelines provided below 
Due: Friday, April 19, 2013
* EXAM! Tuesday, 4/23 on the New Deal and Chapter 21

Cornell Notes Guidelines:

1. Read FIRST, then decide which ideas to record in your Cornell Notes
2. The size of the space that I have provided for you should indicate to you how many or how few notes you should include.
3. This is where you should record details that support the heading. Your readings will be collected in class, so these notes will your primary reference for class discussions. 
4. As we progress through the year, you should get better and better at identifying which details are worth recording for later reference.
5. Generate your own Cornell Notes pages using the link on the side bar -->

Tuesday, April 16, 2013

HW 4/16 SRF on the 100 Days



Task: Using these today's classwork, answer the SRF question at the back of your packet from today's class. You must use at least two direct quotes, fully explained and analyzed, from the readings listed above to support your response. You must answer on a separate sheet of paper, per the directions

Due: Wednesday, April 17, 2013

Monday, April 15, 2013

HW 4/15 SRF on the Dust Bowl


Task: Using these today's classwork, answer the SRF question at the back of your packet from today's class. You must use at least two direct quotes, fully explained and analyzed, from the readings listed above to support your response. You must answer on a separate sheet of paper, per the directions

Due: Tuesday, April 16, 2013

Friday, April 12, 2013

HW 4/12 Ch. 21, Sec 1-4


Read: Eric Foner, Chapter 21, Sections 1-4; pages 794-820*; packet distributed in class.
Task: Complete Cornell Notes for each section- 4 sections worth 60 points total! Guidelines provided below 
Due: Monday, April 15, 2013

*Previously this post stated that the reading was from pages 794-813, but that was incorrect. Section 4 does not end until page 820. 

Cornell Notes Guidelines:

1. Read FIRST, then decide which ideas to record in your Cornell Notes
2. The size of the space that I have provided for you should indicate to you how many or how few notes you should include.
3. This is where you should record details that support the heading. Your readings will be collected in class, so these notes will your primary reference for class discussions. 
4. As we progress through the year, you should get better and better at identifying which details are worth recording for later reference.
5. Generate your own Cornell Notes pages using the link on the side bar -->

Monday, April 8, 2013

Exam: Foner Ch. 18-20


Exam Content: Foner Chapter 18, 19, 20
Exam Format: 50 multiple choice questions
Exam Date: Friday, April 12, 2013
Topics:

Chapter 18 

  • The Progressive Era
  • Reforms and Reformers
  • Presidents and their Policies
Chapter 19

  • World War I
  • Presidents and their Policies
  • Race, Women, and Civil Liberties (or not) in war-times
Chapter 20
  • Versions of the 1920s
  • Culture Wars: Women, Blacks, Immigrants, Religion/Science, Prohibition
  • The Great Depression

Friday, April 5, 2013

HW 4/5 Race & Society in the 1920s

Read: "Race and Society in the 1920s" (p.15-18) from your 1920s classwork packet; packet distributed yesterday in class; available electronically if you email Ms. Hanemann
Task: 

  • Use the readings on Race and Society to answer the questions on page 18 of your packet.  
  • As you read, annotate in the margins, following all previous annotation guidelines to earn full credit. 
  • When you have completed the readings, answer all questions on page 18 on a separate sheet of paper to hand in for credit as well. 
  • Your goal in this reading is find out how each major idea in the reading influenced the others politically, economically, and socially. 
Due: Monday, April 8th 

Thursday, April 4, 2013

HW 4/4 Reading: Women, Consumerism and Multimedia in the 1920s


Read: "Women, Consumerism and Multimedia in the 1920s" (p.15-18) from your 1920s classwork packet; packet distributed yesterday in class; available electronically if you email Ms. Hanemann
Task: As you read, annotate in the margins, following all previous annotation guidelines to earn full credit. 
Due: Friday, April 5th 

Wednesday, April 3, 2013

HW 4/3 Reading: Reaction & Rebellion in the 1920s with Annotation and Questions


Read: Rebellion & Reaction in the 1920s (p.4-9) of your 1920s classwork packet; packet distributed today in class; available electronically if you email Ms. Hanemann
Task: 
  • Use the readings on the Red Scare, Fundamentalism, the Scopes Trial, Leopold and Lowe, Prohibition and Immigration to answer the questions on page 9 of your packet.  
  • As you read, annotate in the margins, following all previous annotation guidelines to earn full credit. 
  • When you have completed the readings, answer all 8 questions on page 9 on a separate sheet of paper to hand in for credit as well. 
  • Your goal in this reading is find out how each major idea in the reading influenced the others politically, economically, and socially. 
Due: Thursday, April 4th