Advanced Placement World History with Mr. Duez
PART SIX THE MOST RECENT CENTURY 1914–2010
CHAPTER 23 Independence in the Global South, 1914-2014
WEEK AT A GLANCE:CHAPTER 23 Independence in the Global South, 1914-2014
MON: Reading Check QUIZ 24; Review Quiz;
TUE: Crash Course #41 Globalism I; Discuss the main themes of Ch 24: Comparing the perspectives of accelerating connections in the Global North and Global South according to these factors:
Economic Globalization, Environmentalism, Feminism, Fundamentalism
REVIEW: Questions to consider for Chapter 24
WED/THU: TEST - 23, 24: Independence Movements; Global Interactions
After the test, we'll look at the skills needed for the DBQ & CCOT for Friday's Timed Writing.
FRI: FRQ- Timed Writing!
FRQ Timed Writing in class: Friday, April 22nd, 2016
CHOICE #1 - HEADS: DBQ 2013 Seven Years War
CHOICE #2 - TAILS: CCOT 2011 Long Distance Migrations
Monday, April 18, 2016
Quote: "In 5-billion years the Sun will expand & engulf our orbit as the charred ember that was once Earth vaporizes. Have a nice day." - @NeilTyson
PART SIX THE MOST RECENT CENTURY 1914–2010
CHAPTER 24 Accelerating Global Interaction, Since 1945
• To consider the steps since 1945 that have increasingly made human populations into a single “world” rather than citizens
• To explore the factors that make it possible to speak now of a true “world economy”
• To explore the debate about economic globalization
• To raise student awareness of global liberation movements, especially feminism, and their implications for human life
• To investigate the “fundamentalist” religious response to aspects of modernity
• To consider environmentalism as a matter that cannot help but be global because the stakes are so high for all humankind
• To step back and ponder the value of studying history
1. To what extent did the processes discussed in this chapter (economic globalization, feminism, fundamentalism, environmentalism) represent something new in the twentieth century? In what respects did they have roots in the more distant past?
2. In what ways did the global North/South divide find expression in the twentieth and early twenty-first centuries?
3. What have been the benefits and drawbacks of globalization since 1945?
4. Do the years since 1914 confirm or undermine Enlightenment predictions about the future of humankind?
5. “The twentieth century marks the end of the era of Western dominance in world history.” What evidence might support this statement? What evidence might contradict it?
6. To what extent do you think the various liberation movements of the twentieth and early twenty-first centuries—communism, nationalism, democracy, feminism, internationalism—have achieved their goals?
7. Based on material in Chapters 21, 22, and 24, how might you define the evolving roles of the United States in the twentieth and early twenty-first centuries?
MARGIN REVIEW QUESTIONS:
1. What factors contributed to economic globalization during the twentieth century?
2. In what ways has economic globalization linked the world’s peoples more closely together?
3. What new or sharper divisions has economic globalization generated?
4. What distinguished feminism in the industrialized countries from that of the Global South?
5. In what respect did the various religious fundamentalists of the twentieth century express hostility to global
6. From what sources did Islamic renewal movements derive?
7. In what different ways did Islamic renewal express itself?
8. How can we explain the dramatic increase in the human impact on the environment in the twentieth century?
9. What differences emerged between environmentalism in the Global North and that in the Global South?
Agenda:
1. DO NOW: Prep for Reading Check Quiz CH 24 - the LAST ONE!
After quiz begin to formulate your answer for this question: Comparing the perspectives of accelerating connections in the Global North and Global South according to these factors:
Economic Globalization, Environmentalism, Feminism, Fundamentalism
2. QUIZ: Reading Check CH 24 - The End of Strayer.
3. Review Quiz #24 Economic Globalization, Environmentalism, Feminism, Fundamentalism
Thomas Hoepker's controversial photograph of the afternoon of Sept. 9, 2011. |
Tuesday, April 19, 2016
Quote: "Apollo in 1969. Shuttle in 1981. Nothing in 2011. Our space program would look awesome to anyone living backwards thru time." - Neil deGrasse Tyson @NeilTyson
PART SIX THE MOST RECENT CENTURY 1914–2010
CHAPTER 24 Accelerating Global Interaction, Since 1945
• To consider the steps since 1945 that have increasingly made human populations into a single “world” rather than citizens
• To explore the factors that make it possible to speak now of a true “world economy”
• To explore the debate about economic globalization
• To raise student awareness of global liberation movements, especially feminism, and their implications for human life
• To investigate the “fundamentalist” religious response to aspects of modernity
• To consider environmentalism as a matter that cannot help but be global because the stakes are so high for all humankind
• To step back and ponder the value of studying history
1. To what extent did the processes discussed in this chapter (economic globalization, feminism, fundamentalism, environmentalism) represent something new in the twentieth century? In what respects did they have roots in the more distant past?
2. In what ways did the global North/South divide find expression in the twentieth and early twenty-first centuries?
3. What have been the benefits and drawbacks of globalization since 1945?
4. Do the years since 1914 confirm or undermine Enlightenment predictions about the future of humankind?
5. “The twentieth century marks the end of the era of Western dominance in world history.” What evidence might support this statement? What evidence might contradict it?
6. To what extent do you think the various liberation movements of the twentieth and early twenty-first centuries—communism, nationalism, democracy, feminism, internationalism—have achieved their goals?
7. Based on material in Chapters 21, 22, and 24, how might you define the evolving roles of the United States in the twentieth and early twenty-first centuries?
MARGIN REVIEW QUESTIONS:
1. What factors contributed to economic globalization during the twentieth century?
2. In what ways has economic globalization linked the world’s peoples more closely together?
3. What new or sharper divisions has economic globalization generated?
4. What distinguished feminism in the industrialized countries from that of the Global South?
5. In what respect did the various religious fundamentalists of the twentieth century express hostility to global
6. From what sources did Islamic renewal movements derive?
7. In what different ways did Islamic renewal express itself?
8. How can we explain the dramatic increase in the human impact on the environment in the twentieth century?
9. What differences emerged between environmentalism in the Global North and that in the Global South?
1. DO NOW: To what extent did the processes discussed in this chapter:
Economic Globalization, Environmentalism, Feminism, Fundamentalism
represent something new in the twentieth century?
In what respects did they have roots in the more distant past?
2. Notes, Video, Discussion:
Crash Course World History #42 Globalization II
In which John asks whether globalization is a net positive for humanity. While the new global economy has created a lot of wealth, and lifted a lot of people out of poverty, it also has some effects that aren't so hot. Wealth disparity, rising divorce rates, environmental damage, and new paths for the spread of disease. So does all this outweigh the economic benefits, the innovation, and the relative peace that come with interconnected economies? As usual, the answer is not simple. In this case, we're living in the middle of the events we're discussing, so it's hard to know how it's going to turn out.
Chapter 24 Presentation with video examples.
2. Review Questions: Chapter 24: Review Questions - Globalism, Feminism, Fundamentalism, & Environmentalism.
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Wednesday, April 20, 2016 & Thursday, April 21, 2016
I can't believe I read the whole thing!
Quote: "A 'No' uttered from the deepest conviction is better than a 'Yes' merely uttered to please, or worse, to avoid trouble." - Mahatma Gandhi
PART SIX THE MOST RECENT CENTURY 1914–2014
CHAPTER 23 Independence in the Global South, 1914-2014
CHAPTER 24 Accelerating Global Interaction, Since 1945
Agenda:
1. DO NOW: Prep for Final Strayer Test of the Year! Chapters 22, 23, & 24
2. TEST - 23, 24: Independence Movements; Global Interactions
Economic Globalization
Environmentalism
Feminism
Fundamentalism
Earthrise. |
Friday, April 22, 2015
Quote: "History is nothing but a problem of mechanics applied to psychology." - Hippolyte Taine
French critic and historian. He was the chief theoretical influence of French naturalism, a major proponent of sociological positivism and one of the first practitioners of historicist criticism.
1. DO NOW: Prep for FRQ Timed Writing. Need a black pen.
2. FRQ TIMED WRITING:
Coin Flip to determine the question. See the questions at the top of this post.
CHOICE #1 - HEADS: DBQ 2013 Seven Years War
CHOICE #2 - TAILS: CCOT 2011 Long Distance Migrations