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Agenda: Week of Feb 8-12, 2016

Advanced Placement World History with Mr. Duez
Unit 5: The European Moment, 1750 - 1914
Chapter 17: The Atlantic Revolutions and Their Echoes
-and-
Chapter 18: The Industrial Revolution
Week at a Glance:
MON: Quiz Ch 18; Review 18 Quiz
TUE: Revolutions of Industry; DBQ: Document Based Question Skills - POV, Historical Context; Analysis
WED/THU: TEST Unit 5, Part I: CH 17 & 18 -- Atlantic Revolutions & Revolutions of Industry -AND- DBQ Skills - POV
FRI: CCOT Skills; Timelines; WHC; Prep for Timed Writing next Fri.

Test Wed/Thu Unit 5: Part I, CH 17 & 18, Plus DBQ Skills - POV
No Quiz next week (no school on Monday)
CCOT Essay Next Friday, Feb. 19th
The next two weeks!
Next Friday, Feb. 19th: CCOT - Timed Writing in class.
Directions: You are to answer the following question. You should spend 5 minutes organizing or outlining your essay.

Write an essay that:
• Has a relevant thesis and supports that thesis with appropriate historical evidence. 
• Addresses all parts of the question. 
• Uses world historical context to show continuities and changes over time. 
• Analyzes the process of continuity and change over time. 
Question #1 2005 CCOT Rubric (be sure to scroll down for the second question for each - the CCOT)
 & Student Samples
Question #2 2008 CCOT - Rubric & Student Samples:
Information to help you prepare:
How to write the CCOT
Notes - CCOT Essay

CCOT - Graphic Organizer - Example
Why did the Industrial Revolution take hold and seem to explode in Great Britain?
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Monday, February 8th, 2016
Quote: "Change is the law of life. And those who look only to the past or present are certain to miss the future." - John F. Kennedy

Learning Targets:
• To explore the causes and consequences of the Industrial Revolution
• To root Europe’s Industrial Revolution in a global context
• To examine the question of why industrialization first “took off ” in Great Britain
• To heighten student awareness of both the positive and the negative effects of the Industrial Revolution
• To examine some of the ways in which nineteenth-century industrial powers exerted an economic imperialism over their non-industrialized neighbors

Essential Questions:
1. What was revolutionary about the Industrial Revolution?
2. What was common to the process of industrialization everywhere, and in what ways did that process vary from place to place?
3. What did humankind gain from the Industrial Revolution, and what did it lose?
4. In what ways might the Industrial Revolution be understood as a global rather than simply a European phenomenon?

Agenda:
1. Quiz Chapter 18 The Industrial Revolution
2. Review CH 17 & 18 Quizzes
The Russian Revolution definitely qualifies as "Revolution of Industry".
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Tuesday, February 9th, 2016
Quote: "Change does not roll in on the wheels of inevitability, but comes through continuous struggle. And so we must straighten our backs and work for our freedom. A man can't ride you unless your back is bent." - Martin Luther King, Jr.

Learning Targets:
• To explore the causes and consequences of the Industrial Revolution
• To root Europe’s Industrial Revolution in a global context
• To examine the question of why industrialization first “took off ” in Great Britain
• To heighten student awareness of both the positive and the negative effects of the Industrial Revolution
• To examine some of the ways in which nineteenth-century industrial powers exerted an economic imperialism over their non-industrialized neighbors

Essential Questions:
1. What was revolutionary about the Industrial Revolution?
2. What was common to the process of industrialization everywhere, and in what ways did that process vary from place to place?
3. What did humankind gain from the Industrial Revolution, and what did it lose?
4. In what ways might the Industrial Revolution be understood as a global rather than simply a European phenomenon?

Agenda:
1. DO NOW: Review the document on the screen, write out the meaning & point of view.
2. Notes, Video, Discussion: Revolutions of Industry
3. Discuss DQB Point of View - second section of the test on Wed/Thu.
Link to DBQ for Industrial Revolution 
Link to DBQ for Atlantic Revolutions
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Wednesday, February 10th & Thursday, February 11th, 2016
Quote: "To improve is to change; to be perfect is to change often." - Winston Churchill

Agenda:
1. TEST - Unit 5 - The European Moment, Part I:
Chapter 17 Atlantic Revolutions & Chapter 18 Revolutions of Industry
Also, be prepared to write about the Art of the French Revolution:

What was David? Was he a patriot? Artist? Propagandist? Or combination of all of those things? A criminal?
Plus, DBQ Point of View - second section of the test.
The Industrial Revolution made life better, but progress came with a cost. 
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Friday, February 12th, 2016
Quote: "I have noticed even people who claim everything is predestined, and that we can do nothing to change it, look before they cross the road." - Stephen Hawking

Agenda:
1. DO NOW: Pick up the CCOT Packet from the front of the room. 
2. CCOT: Timeline, tips, and practice.
Notes over CCOT

Thesis writing
Analysis
Showing change/continuity over time
World Historical Context
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Next Friday, Feb. 20th: CCOT 2 - Timed Writing in class.

Directions: You are to answer the following question. You should spend 5 minutes organizing or outlining your essay.

Write an essay that:
• Has a relevant thesis and supports that thesis with appropriate historical evidence. 
• Addresses all parts of the question. 
• Uses world historical context to show continuities and changes over time. 
• Analyzes the process of continuity and change over time. 

See the questions at the top of this post.