Click to go to homepage
Home Lesson Plans Resources Contact Us Partnerships
Elementary
Middle
High
Video Clips
Links
 

RESOURCES

High Curriculum Guide
 

ADDENDUM

An intricate part of the Teaching American History Teacher-Scholars Program was linking the local history of Norfolk and Portsmouth with the actual Standards of Learning (SOL) for the elementary, middle and high school levels.  The Curriculum Guide, which was prepared by the Norfolk-based Tidewater Community College History Department, demonstrates that our nation’s history can be enhanced by viewing it through a local lens.

One of the many program goals was to encourage teachers to incorporate local history to increase interest and to offer historical relevance to their students, and the Curriculum Guide is intended as a resource tool to demonstrate how that can be accomplished.  Obviously, there is much more historical data that can be incorporated beyond that presented in the Guide, but the goal is to assist the teachers in how to link specific SOL content with the history of Norfolk and Portsmouth.

The local historical information contained in the Curriculum Guide is primarily derived from the outstanding work done by historians Thomas C. Parramore, Peter C. Stewart and Tommy L. Bogger in their publication Norfolk, The First Four Centuries and secondarily from Marshall W. Butt’s Four Flags Over Portsmouth 1752-1970,   Helen C. Roundtree’s Pocahontas, Powhatan, Opechancanough: Three Indian Lives Changed by Jamestown, and Alfred Mapp’s The Virginia Experiment, for which full credit is due and hereby given. 

The pages that follow are Virginia’s Standards of Learning Curriculum Guide, with an additional column devoted to local historical narrative. In some cases where the local connections are difficult to make, the guide offers proposed activities, and/or online resources. The reader is encouraged to review all curriculum guides, elementary, middle and high for an all encompassing view of what our local history has to offer.

 

 

Text Box:

United States History:

1877 to the Present

Commonwealth of Virginia

Board of Education

Richmond, Virginia

2001

STANDARD USII.1 a, b, c, d, e, f, g, h                                                                                                                                                                                     

 


The student will demonstrate skills for historical and geographical analysis, including the ability to

a)     analyze and interpret primary and secondary source documents to increase understanding of events and life in United States history from 1877 to the present;

b)     make connections between past and present;

c)     sequence events in United States history from 1877 to the present;

d)     interpret ideas and events from different historical perspectives;

e)     evaluate and debate issues orally and in writing;

f)     analyze and interpret maps that include major physical features;

g)    use parallels of latitude and meridians of longitude to describe hemispheric location;

h)    interpret patriotic slogans and excerpts from notable speeches and documents.

 

 

The skills identified in standard USII.1a-h are cited in the “Essential Skills” column of each chart for United States History: 1877 to the Present with the exception of “e” (evaluate and debate issues orally and in writing). Students should have opportunities to practice speaking and writing, but these skills will not be assessed on the Standards of Learning test.  All other skills will be assessed on the Standards of Learning test.  Teachers should incorporate these skills into instruction throughout the year.

 

 

 

 

 


STANDARD USII.2a                                                                                                                                                                                                                  

 


The student will use maps, globes, photographs, pictures, and tables for

a)     explaining how physical features and climate influenced the movement of people westward.

 

 

 

Essential Understandings

Essential Questions

Essential Knowledge

Essential Skills

 

During the nineteenth century, people’s perceptions and use of the Great Plains changed.

 

Technological advances allowed people to live in more challenging environments.

 

 

How did people’s perceptions and use of the Great Plains change after the Civil War?

 

How did people adapt to life in challenging environments?

 

Physical features/climate of the Great Plains

·         Flatlands that rise gradually from east to west

·         Land eroded by wind and water

·         Low rainfall

·         Frequent dust storms

 

Because of new technologies, people saw the Great Plains not as a “treeless wasteland” but as a vast area to be settled.

 

Inventions/adaptations

·         Barbed wire

·         Steel plows

·         Dry farming

·         Sod houses

·         Beef cattle raising

·         Wheat farming

·         Windmills

·         Railroads

 

Analyze and interpret primary and secondary source documents to increase understanding of events and life in United States history. (USII.1a)

 

Analyze and interpret maps that include major physical features. (USII.1f)

 

 

 


STANDARD USII.2b                                                                                                                                                                                                                  

 


The student will use maps, globes, photographs, pictures, and tables for

b)     explaining relationships among natural resources, transportation, and industrial development after 1877.

 

 

 

Essential Understandings

Essential Questions

Essential Knowledge

Essential Skills

 

Advances in transportation linked resources, products, and markets.

 

Manufacturing areas were clustered near centers of population.

 

 

How did advances in transportation link resources, products, and markets?

 

What are some examples of manufacturing areas that were located near centers of population?

 

Transportation of resources

·         Moving natural resources (e.g., copper and lead) to eastern factories

·         Moving iron ore deposits to sites of steel mills (e.g., Pittsburgh)

·         Transporting finished products to national markets

 

Examples of manufacturing areas

·         Textile industry—New England

·         Automobile industry—Detroit

·         Steel industry—Pittsburgh

 

Make connections between past and present. (USII.1b)

 

Sequence events in United States history. (USII.1c)

 

Analyze and interpret maps that include major physical features. (USII.1f)

 

 

 

 


STANDARD USII.2c                                                                                                                                                                                                                  

 


The student will use maps, globes, photographs, pictures, and tables for

c)     locating the 50 states and the cities most significant to the historical development of the United States.

 

 

 

Essential Understandings

Essential Questions

Essential Knowledge

Essential Skills

 

A state is an example of a political region. States may be grouped as part of different regions, depending upon the criteria used.

 

Cities serve as centers of trade and have political, economic, and cultural significance.

 

 

What is one way of grouping the 50 states?

 

What are some examples of cities that historically have had political, economic, and/or cultural significance to the development of the United States?

 

States grouped by region

Northeast: Maine, Vermont, New Hampshire, Connecticut, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania

 

Southeast: Maryland, Delaware, West Virginia, Virginia, Kentucky, Tennessee, North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, Florida, Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana, Arkansas

 

Midwest: Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Michigan, Wisconsin, Minnesota, Iowa, Missouri, Kansas, Nebraska, South Dakota, North Dakota

 

Southwest: Texas, Oklahoma, New Mexico, Arizona

 

Rocky Mountains: Colorado, Utah, Nevada, Montana, Wyoming, Idaho

 

Pacific: Washington, Oregon, California

 

Noncontiguous: Alaska, Hawaii

 

 

Make connections between past and present. (USII.1b)

 

Analyze and interpret maps that include major physical features. (USII.1f)

 

Use parallels of latitude and meridians of longitude to describe hemispheric location. (USII.1g)

 

 


STANDARD USII.2c (continued)                                                                                                                                                                                             

 


The student will use maps, globes, photographs, pictures, and tables for

c)     locating the 50 states and the cities most significant to the historical development of the United States.

 

 

 

Essential Understandings

Essential Questions

Essential Knowledge

Essential Skills

 

 

 

 

Cities

Northeast: New York, Boston, Pittsburgh, Philadelphia

 

Southeast: Washington, D.C., Atlanta, New Orleans

 

Midwest: Chicago, St. Louis, Detroit

 

Southwest: San Antonio, Santa Fe

 

Western (Rocky Mountains): Denver, Salt Lake City

 

Pacific: San Francisco, Los Angeles, Seattle

 

Noncontiguous: Juneau, Honolulu

 

 

 

 


STANDARD USII.3a                                                                                                                                                                                                                  

 


The student will demonstrate knowledge of how life changed after the Civil War by

a)     identifying the reasons for westward expansion.

 

 

 

Essential Understandings

Essential Questions

Essential Knowledge

Essential Skills

 

New opportunities and technological advances led to westward migration following the Civil War.

 

Why did westward expansion occur?

 

Reasons for westward expansion

·         Opportunities for land ownership

·         Technological advances, including the Transcontinental Railroad

·         Possibility of wealth created by the discovery of gold and silver

·         Adventure

·         A new beginning for former slaves

 

Interpret ideas and events from different historical perspectives. (USII.1d)

 

 

 


STANDARD USII.3b                                                                                                                                                                                                                  

 


The student will demonstrate knowledge of how life changed after the Civil War by

b)     explaining the reasons for the increase in immigration, growth of cities, new inventions, and challenges arising from this expansion.

 

 

 

Essential Understandings

Essential Questions

Essential Knowledge

Essential Skills

 

Population changes, growth of cities, and new inventions produced interaction and often conflict between different cultural groups.

 

Population changes, growth of cities, and new inventions produced problems in urban areas.

 

Inventions had both positive and negative effects on society.

 

 

 

Why did immigration increase?

 

Why did cities develop?

 

What inventions created great change and industrial growth in the United States?

 

What challenges faced Americans as a result of those social and technological changes?

 

Reasons for increased immigration

·         Hope for better opportunities

·         Religious freedom

·         Escape from oppressive governments

·         Adventure

 

Reasons why cities developed

·         Specialized industries including steel (Pittsburgh), meat packing (Chicago)

·         Immigration from other countries

·         Movement of Americans from rural to urban areas for job opportunities

 

Inventions that contributed to great change and industrial growth

·         Lighting and mechanical uses of electricity (Thomas Edison)

·         Telephone service (Alexander Graham Bell)

 

 

 

 

Make connections between past and present. (USII.1b)

 

Sequence events in United States history. (USII.1c)

 

Interpret ideas and events from different historical perspectives. (USII.1d)

 

Analyze and interpret maps that include major physical features. (USII.1f)

 

 

 


STANDARD USII.3b (continued)                                                                                                                                                                                             

 


The student will demonstrate knowledge of how life changed after the Civil War by

b)     explaining the reasons for the increase in immigration, growth of cities, new inventions, and challenges arising from this expansion.

 

 

 

Essential Understandings

Essential Questions

Essential Knowledge

Essential Skills

 

 

 

 

 

 

Rapid industrialization and urbanization led to overcrowded immigrant neighborhoods and tenements.

 

Efforts to solve immigration problems

·         Settlement houses, such as Hull House founded by Jane Addams

·         Political machines that gained power by attending to the needs of new immigrants (e.g., jobs, housing)

 

Interaction and conflict between different cultural groups

·         Indian policies and wars

         Reservations

         Battle of Little Bighorn

         Chief Joseph

·         Discrimination against immigrants

         Chinese

         Irish

 

Challenges faced by cities

·         Tenements and ghettos

·         Political corruption (political machines)

 

 

 

STANDARD USII.3c                                                                                                                                                                                                                  

 


The student will demonstrate knowledge of how life changed after the Civil War by

c)     describing racial segregation, the rise of “Jim Crow,” and other constraints faced by African Americans in the post-Reconstruction South.

 

 

 

Essential Understandings

Essential Questions

Essential Knowledge

Essential Skills

 

Discrimination against African Americans continued after Reconstruction.

 

“Jim Crow” laws institutionalized a system of legal segregation.

 

African Americans differed in their responses to discrimination and “Jim Crow.”

 

 

 

What is racial segregation?

 

How were African Americans discriminated against?

 

How did African Americans respond to discrimination and “Jim Crow”?

 

Racial segregation

·         Based upon race

·         Directed primarily against African Americans, but other groups also were kept segregated

 

“Jim Crow” laws were passed to discriminate against African Americans.

 

“Jim Crow” laws

·         Made discrimination practices legal in many communities and states

·         Were characterized by unequal opportunities in housing, work, education, government

 

African American response

·         Booker T. Washington—Believed equality could be achieved through vocational education; accepted social separation

·         W.E.B. Du Bois—Believed in full political, civil, and social rights for African Americans

 

Analyze and interpret primary and secondary source documents to increase understanding of events and life in United States history. (USII.1a)

 

Make connections between past and present. (USII.1b)

 

Sequence events in United States history. (USII.1c)

 

Interpret ideas and events from different historical perspectives. (USII.1d)

 

 

 


STANDARD USII.3d                                                                                                                                                                                                                  

 


The student will demonstrate knowledge of how life changed after the Civil War by

d)     explaining the rise of big business, the growth of industry, and life on American farms.

 

 

 

Essential Understandings

Essential Questions

Essential Knowledge

Essential Skills

 

Between the Civil War and World

War I, the United States was transformed from an agricultural to an industrial nation.

 

 

What created the rise in big business?

 

What factors caused the growth of industry?

 

How did industrialization and the rise in big business influence life on American farms?

 

Reasons for rise and prosperity of big business

·         National markets created by transportation advances

·         Captains of industry (John D. Rockefeller, oil; Andrew Carnegie, steel; Henry Ford, automobile)

·         Advertising

·         Lower-cost production

 

Factors resulting in growth of industry

·         Access to raw materials and energy

·         Availability of work force

·         Inventions

·         Financial resources

 

Examples of big business

·         Railroads

·         Oil

·         Steel

 

Postwar changes in farm and city life

·         Mechanization (e.g., the reaper) had reduced farm labor needs and increased production.

·         Industrial development in cities created increased labor needs.

·         Industrialization provided access to consumer goods (e.g., mail order).

 

Make connections between past and present. (USII.1b)

 

Sequence events in United States history. (USII.1c)

 

Analyze and interpret maps that include major physical features. (USII.1f)

 

 

 


STANDARD USII.3e                                                                                                                                                                                                                  

 


The student will demonstrate knowledge of how life changed after the Civil War by

e)     describing the impact of the Progressive Movement on child labor, working conditions, the rise of organized labor, women’s suffrage, and the temperance movement.

 

 

Essential Understandings

Essential Questions

Essential Knowledge

Essential Skills

 

The effects of industrialization led to the rise of organized labor and important workplace reforms.

 

 

 

 

How did the reforms of the Progressive Movement change the United States?

 

How did workers respond to the negative effects of industrialization?

 

 

Negative effects of  industrialization

·         Child labor

·         Low wages, long hours

·         Unsafe working conditions

 

Rise of organized labor

·         Formation of unions—Growth of American Federation of Labor

·         Strikes—Aftermath of Homestead Strike

 

Progressive Movement workplace reforms

·         Improved safety conditions

·         Reduced work hours

·         Placed restrictions on child labor

 

Women’s suffrage

·         Increased educational opportunities

·         Attained voting rights  

         Women gained the right to vote with passage of the 19th Amendment to the Constitution of the United States of America.

         Susan B. Anthony worked for women’s suffrage.

 

 

 

Analyze and interpret primary and secondary source documents to increase understanding of events and life in United States history. (USII.1a)

 

Make connections between past and present. (USII.1b)

 

Sequence events in United States history. (USII.1c)

 

Interpret ideas and events from different historical perspectives. (USII.1d)

 

 

STANDARD USII.3e (continued)                                                                                                                                                                                             

 


The student will demonstrate knowledge of how life changed after the Civil War by

e)     describing the impact of the Progressive Movement on child labor, working conditions, the rise of organized labor, women’s suffrage, and the temperance movement.

 

 

Essential Understandings

Essential Questions

Essential Knowledge

Essential Skills

 

 

 

 

Temperance Movement

·         Composed of groups opposed to the making and consuming of alcohol

·         Supported 18th Amendment prohibiting the manufacture, sale, and transport of alcoholic beverages

 

 

STANDARD USII.4a                                                                                                                                                                                                                  

 


The student will demonstrate knowledge of the changing role of the United States from the late nineteenth century through World War I by

a)     explaining the reasons for and results of the Spanish American War.

 

 

 

Essential Understandings

Essential Questions

Essential Knowledge

Essential Skills

 

The United States emerged as a world power as a result of victory over Spain in the Spanish American War.

 

Economic interests and public opinion often influence U.S. involvement in international affairs.

 

 

What were the reasons for the Spanish American War?

 

What were the results of the Spanish American War?

 

 

Reasons for the Spanish American War

·         Protection of American business interests in Cuba

·         American support of Cuban rebels to gain independence from Spain

·         Rising tensions as a result of the sinking of the U.S.S. Maine in Havana Harbor

·         Exaggerated news reports of events (Yellow Journalism)

 

Results of the Spanish American War

·         The United States emerged as a world power.

·         Cuba gained independence from Spain.

·         The United States gained possession of the Philippines, Guam, and Puerto Rico.

 

 

Analyze and interpret primary and secondary source documents to increase understanding of events and life in United States history. (USII.1a)

 

Sequence events in United States history. (USII.1c)

 

 

 


STANDARD USII.4b                                                                                                                                                                                                                  

 


The student will demonstrate knowledge of the changing role of the United States from the late nineteenth century through World War I by

b)     explaining the reasons for the United States’ involvement in World War I and its leadership role at the conclusion of the war.

 

 

 

Essential Understandings

Essential Questions

Essential Knowledge

Essential Skills

 

The United States involvement in World War I ended a long tradition of avoiding involvement in European conflicts and set the stage for the United States to emerge as a global superpower later in the 20th century.

 

There were disagreements about the extent to which the United States should isolate itself from world affairs.

 

 

What were the reasons for the United States becoming involved in World War I?

 

Who were the Allies?

 

Who were the Central Powers?

 

In what ways did the United States provide leadership at the conclusion of the war?

 

 

Reasons for U.S. involvement in war

·         Inability to remain neutral

·         German submarine warfare— sinking of Lusitania

·         U.S. economic and political ties to Great Britain

 

Allies

·         Great Britain

·         France

·         Russia

·         Serbia

·         Belgium

 

Central Powers

·         Germany

·         Austria-Hungary

·         Bulgaria

·         Ottoman Empire

 

U.S. leadership as the war ended

·         At the end of World War I, President Woodrow Wilson prepared a peace plan that called for the formation of the League of Nations, a peace-keeping organization.

·         The United States decided not to join the League of Nations.

 

Analyze and interpret primary and secondary source documents to increase understanding of events and life in United States history. (USII.1a)

 

Sequence events in United States history. (USII.1c)

 

Interpret ideas and events from different historical perspectives. (USII.1d)

 

 

 


STANDARD USII.5a                                                                                                                                                                                                                  

 


The student will demonstrate knowledge of the social, economic, and technological changes of the early twentieth century by

a)     explaining how developments in transportation (including the use of the automobile), communication, and electrification changed American life.

 

 

 

Essential Understandings

Essential Questions

Essential Knowledge

Essential Skills

 

Technology extended progress into all areas of American life, including neglected rural areas.

 

 

 

How was social and economic life in the early twentieth century different from that of the late nineteenth century?

 

 

Results of improved transportation brought by affordable automobiles

·         Greater mobility

·         Creation of jobs

·         Growth of transportation-related industries (road construction, oil, steel, automobile)

·         Movement to suburban areas

 

Invention of the airplane

·         The Wright brothers

 

Use of the assembly line

·         Henry Ford

 

Communication changes

·         Increased availability of telephones

·         Development of the radio (role of Guglielmo Marconi) and broadcast industry (role of David Sarnoff)

·         Development of the movies

 

Ways electrification changed American life

·         Labor-saving products (e.g., washing machines, electric stoves, water pumps)

·         Electric lighting

·         Entertainment (e.g., radio)

·         Improved communications

 

Make connections between past and present. (USII.1b)

 

Interpret ideas and events. (USII.1d)

 

 

 

 

 


STANDARD USII.5b                                                                                                                                                                                                                  

 


The student will demonstrate knowledge of the social, economic, and technological changes of the early twentieth century by

b)     describing the social changes that took place, including Prohibition, and the Great Migration north.

 

 

 

Essential Understandings

Essential Questions

Essential Knowledge

Essential Skills

 

Reforms in the early twentieth century could not legislate how people behaved.

 

Economic conditions and violence led to the migration of people.

 

 

What was Prohibition, and how effective was it?

 

Why did African Americans migrate to northern cities?

 

 

Prohibition was imposed by a constitutional amendment that made it

illegal to manufacture, transport, and sell alcoholic beverages.

 

Results of Prohibition

·         Speakeasies were created as places for people to drink alcoholic beverages.

·         Bootleggers smuggled illegal alcohol and promoted organized crime.

 

Great Migration north

·         Jobs for African Americans in the South were scarce and low paying.

·         African Americans faced discrimination and violence in the South.

·         African Americans moved to northern cities in search of better employment opportunities.

·         African Americans also faced discrimination and violence in the North.

 

 

Interpret ideas and events from different historical perspectives. (USII.1d)

 

Analyze and interpret maps that include major physical features. (USII.1f)

 

 

 


STANDARD USII.5c                                                                                                                                                                                                                  

 


The student will demonstrate knowledge of the social, economic, and technological changes of the early twentieth century by

c)     examining art, literature, and music from the 1920s and 1930s, emphasizing Langston Hughes, Duke Ellington, and Georgia O'Keeffe and including the Harlem Renaissance.

 

 

Essential Understandings

Essential Questions

Essential Knowledge

Essential Skills

 

The 1920s and 1930s were important decades for American art, literature, and music.

 

The leaders of the Harlem Renaissance drew upon the heritage of black culture to establish themselves as powerful forces for cultural change.

 

Who were the leaders in art, literature, and music?  What were their contributions?

 

How did the Harlem Renaissance influence American life?

 

 

Cultural climate of the 1920s and 1930s

·         ArtGeorgia O’Keeffe, an artist known for urban scenes and, later, paintings of the Southwest

·         Literature—F. Scott Fitzgerald, a novelist who wrote about the Jazz Age of the 1920s; John Steinbeck, a novelist who portrayed the strength of  poor migrant workers during the 1930s

·         Music—Aaron Copland and George Gershwin, composers who wrote uniquely American music

 

Harlem Renaissance

African American artists, writers, and musicians based in Harlem revealed the freshness and variety of African American culture.

·         Art—Jacob Lawrence, painter who chronicled the experiences of the Great Migration north through art

·         Literature—Langston Hughes,   poet who combined the experiences of African and American cultural roots

 

 

 

Analyze and interpret primary and secondary source documents to increase understanding of events and life in United States history. (USII.1a)

 

Sequence events in United States history. (USII.1c)

 

Interpret ideas and events from different historical perspectives. (USII.1d)

 

 

 


STANDARD USII.5c (continued)                                                                                                                                                                                             

 


The student will demonstrate knowledge of the social, economic, and technological changes of the early twentieth century by

c)     examining art, literature, and music from the 1920s and 1930s, emphasizing Langston Hughes, Duke Ellington, and Georgia O'Keeffe and including the Harlem Renaissance.

 

 

Essential Understandings

Essential Questions

Essential Knowledge

Essential Skills

 

 

 

 

 

·         Music—Duke Ellington and Louis Armstrong, jazz composers; Bessie Smith, blues singer

Popularity of these artists spread to the rest of society.

 

 

 

 


STANDARD USII.5d                                                                                                                                                                                                                  

 


The student will demonstrate knowledge of the social, economic, and technological changes of the early twentieth century by

d)     identifying the causes of the Great Depression, its impact on Americans, and the major features of Franklin D. Roosevelt’s New Deal.

 

 

 

Essential Understandings

Essential Questions

Essential Knowledge

Essential Skills

 

The optimism of the 1920s concealed problems in the American economic system and attitudes about the role of government in controlling the economy.

 

The Great Depression had a widespread and severe impact on American life.

 

Franklin Roosevelt’s New Deal used government programs to help the nation recover from the Depression.

 

 

What were the causes of the Great Depression?

 

How were the lives of Americans affected by the Great Depression?

 

What were the major features of the New Deal?

 

 

Causes of the Great Depression

·         People overspeculated on stocks, using borrowed money that they could not repay when stock prices crashed.

·         The Federal Reserve failed to prevent the collapse of the banking system.

·         High tariffs strangled international trade.

 

Impact on Americans

·         A large numbers of banks and businesses failed.

·         One-fourth of workers were without jobs.

·         Large numbers of people were hungry and homeless.

·         Farmers’ incomes fell to low levels.

 

Major features of the New Deal

·         Social Security

·         Federal work programs

·         Environmental improvement programs

·         Farm assistance programs

·         Increased rights for labor

 

 

 

Make connections between past and present. (USII.1b)

 

Sequence events in United States history. (USII.1c)

 

Interpret ideas and events from different historical perspectives. (USII.1d)

 

 

 


STANDARD USII.6a                                                                                                                                                                                                                  

 


The student will demonstrate knowledge of the major causes and effects of American involvement in World War II by

a)     identifying the causes and events that led to American involvement in the war, including the attack on Pearl Harbor.

 

 

 

Essential Understandings

Essential Questions

Essential Knowledge

Essential Skills

 

Political and economic conditions in Europe following World War I led to the rise of fascism and to World War II.

 

The rise of fascism threatened peace in  Europe and Asia.

 

As conflict grew in Europe and Asia, American foreign policy evolved from neutrality to direct involvement.

 

How did post-World War I Europe set the stage for World War II?

 

How did the rise of fascism affect world events following World War I?

 

How did American policy toward events in Europe and Asia change over time?

 

 

 

Causes of World War II

·         Political instability and economic devastation in Europe resulting from World War I

         Worldwide depression

         High war debt owed by Germany

         High inflation

         Massive unemployment

·         Rise of Fascism

         Fascism is a political philosophy in which total power is given to a dictator and individual freedoms are denied.

         Fascist dictators included Adolf Hitler (Germany), Benito Mussolini (Italy), and Hideki Tojo (Japan).

         These dictators led the countries that became known as the Axis Powers.

 

The Allies

·         Democratic nations (the United States, Great Britain, Canada) were known as the Allies. The Soviet Union joined the Allies after being invaded by Germany.

 

Make connections between past and present. (USII.1b)

 

Sequence events in United States history. (USII.1c)

 

Interpret ideas and events from different historical perspectives. (USII.1d)

 

Analyze and interpret maps that include major physical features. (USII.1f)

 

 

 


STANDARD USII.6a (continued)                                                                                                                                                                                             

 


The student will demonstrate knowledge of the major causes and effects of American involvement in World War II by

a)     identifying the causes and events that led to American involvement in the war, including the attack on Pearl Harbor.

 

 

 

Essential Understandings

Essential Questions

Essential Knowledge

Essential Skills

 

 

 

 

 

·         Allied leaders included Franklin D. Roosevelt and later Harry S. Truman (United States), Winston Churchill (Great Britain), Joseph Stalin (Soviet Union)

 

Gradual change in American policy from neutrality to involvement

·         Isolationism (Great Depression, legacy of World War I)

·         Economic aid to Allies

·         Direct involvement in the war

 

War in the Pacific

·         Rising tension developed between the United States and Japan because of Japanese aggression in East Asia.

·         On December 7, 1941, Japan attacked the United States at Pearl Harbor without warning.

·         The United States declared war on Japan.

·         Germany declared war on the United States.

 

 



 

 

 

STANDARD USII.6b                                                                                                                                                                                                                  

 


The student will demonstrate knowledge of the major causes and effects of American involvement in World War II by

b)     describing the major events and turning points of the war in Europe and the Pacific.

 

 

Essential Understandings

Essential Questions

Essential Knowledge

Essential Skills

 

Despite initial Axis success in both Europe and the Pacific, the Allies persevered and ultimately defeated Germany and Japan.

 

The Holocaust is an example of prejudice and discrimination taken to the extreme.

 

 

 

What were the major events and turning points of World War II?

 

What was the Holocaust?

 

 

Major events and turning points of World War II

·         Germany invaded Poland, setting off war in Europe. The Soviet Union also invaded Poland and the Baltic nations.

·         Germany invaded France, capturing Paris.

·         Germany bombed London and the Battle of Britain began.

·         The United States gave Britain war supplies and old naval warships in return for military bases in Bermuda and the Caribbean.

·         Japan bombed Pearl Harbor.

·         After Japan bombed Pearl Harbor, Germany declared war on the United States.

·         The United States declared war on Japan and Germany.

·         The United States was victorious over Japan in the Battle of Midway. This victory was the turning point of the war in the Pacific.

·         Germany invaded the Soviet Union. The Soviet Union defeated Germany at Stalingrad, marking the turning point of the war in Eastern Europe.

 

 

 

Sequence events in United States history. (USII.1c)

 

Interpret events from different historical perspectives. (USII.1d)

 

Analyze and interpret maps that include major physical features. (USII.1f)

 

 

 


STANDARD USII.6b (continued)                                                                                                                                                                                             

 


The student will demonstrate knowledge of the major causes and effects of American involvement in World War II by

b)     describing the major events and turning points of the war in Europe and the Pacific.

 

 

 

Essential Understandings

Essential Questions

Essential Knowledge

Essential Skills

 

 

 

 

 

 

·         American and Allied troops landed in Normandy, France, on

D-Day to begin the liberation of Western Europe.

·         The United States dropped two atomic bombs on Japan (Hiroshima and Nagasaki) in 1945, forcing Japan to surrender and ending World War II.

 

The Holocaust

·         Anti-Semitism

·         Aryan supremacy

·         Systematic attempt to rid Europe of all Jews

·         Tactics

         Boycott of Jewish stores

         Threats

         Segregation

         Imprisonment and killing of Jews and others in concentration camps

Liberation by Allied forces of Jews and others in concentration camps

 

 


STANDARD USII.6c                                                                                                                                                                                                                  

 


The student will demonstrate knowledge of the major causes and effects of American involvement in World War II by

c)     describing the impact of World War II on the homefront.

 

 

Essential Understandings

Essential Questions

Essential Knowledge

Essential Skills

 

World War II affected every aspect of American life.

 

Americans were asked to make sacrifices in support of the war effort and the ideas for which we fought.

 

 

 

How did Americans at home support the war effort?

 

What effect did the war have on race relations in America?

 

 

American involvement in World War II brought an end to the Great Depression.  Factories and workers were needed to produce goods to win the war.

Thousands of American women took jobs in defense plants during the war (e.g., Rosie the Riveter).

 

Americans at home supported the war by conserving and rationing resources.

 

The need for workers temporarily broke down some racial barriers (e.g., hiring in defense plants) although discrimination against African Americans continued.

 

While many Japanese Americans served in the armed forces, others were treated with distrust and prejudice, and many were forced into internment camps.


 

Make connections between past and present. (USII.1b)

 

Sequence events in United States history. (USII.1c)

 

Interpret ideas and events from different historical perspectives. (USII.1d)

 

 

 


STANDARD USII.7a                                                                                                                                                                                                                  

 


The student will demonstrate knowledge of the economic, social, and political transformation of the United States and the world between the end of World War II and the present by

a)     describing the rebuilding of Europe and Japan after World War II, the emergence of the United States as a superpower, and the establishment of the United Nations.

 

Essential Understandings

Essential Questions

Essential Knowledge

Essential Skills

 

Learning from the mistakes of the past, the United States accepted its role as a world superpower, helping to rebuild Europe and Japan and taking the leading role in establishing the United Nations.



 

How did the United States help rebuild postwar Europe and Japan?

 

Much of Europe was in ruins following World War II. Soviet forces occupied most of Eastern and Central Europe and the eastern portion of Germany. The United States felt it was in its best interest to rebuild Europe and prevent political and economic instability.

 

Rebuilding efforts

·         The United States instituted George C. Marshall’s plan to rebuild Europe (the Marshall Plan), which provided massive financial aid to rebuild European economies and prevent the spread of communism.

·         Germany was partitioned into East and West Germany. West Germany became democratic and resumed self-government after a few years of American, British, and French occupation. East Germany remained under the domination of the Soviet Union and did not adopt democratic institutions.

 

Analyze and interpret primary and secondary source documents to increase understanding of events and life in United States history. (USII.1a)

 

Make connections between past and present. (USII.1b)

 

Sequence events in United States history. (USII.1c)

 

Interpret ideas and events from different historical perspectives. (USII.1d)

 

 

 


STANDARD USII.7a (continued)                                                                                                                                                                                             

 


The student will demonstrate knowledge of the economic, social, and political transformation of the United States and the world between the end of World War II and the present by

a)     describing the rebuilding of Europe and Japan after World War II, the emergence of the United States as a superpower, and the establishment of the United Nations.

 

Essential Understandings

Essential Questions

Essential Knowledge

Essential Skills

 

 



 

 

 

·         Following its defeat, Japan was occupied by American forces. It soon adopted a democratic form of government, resumed self-government, and became a strong ally of the United States.

 

Establishment of the United Nations

·         The United Nations was formed near the end of World War II to create a body for the nations of the world to try to prevent future global wars.

 

 

 

 


STANDARD USII.7b                                                                                                                                                                                                                  

 


The student will demonstrate knowledge of the economic, social, and political transformation of the United States and the world between the end of World War II and the present by

b)     describing the conversion from a wartime to a peacetime economy.

 

 

Essential Understandings

Essential Questions

Essential Knowledge

Essential Skills

 

Following World War II, Americans prospered due to an expanding economy stimulated by America’s involvement in the war.

 



 

What contributed to the prosperity of Americans following World War II?



 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Reasons for rapid growth of American economy following World War II

·         With rationing of consumer goods over, business converted from production of war materials to consumer goods.

·         Americans purchased goods on credit.

·         The workforce shifted back to men, and most women returned to family responsibilities.

·         Labor unions merged and became more powerful; workers gained new benefits and higher salaries.

·         As economic prosperity continued and technology boomed, the next generation of women re-entered  the labor force in large numbers.



 

 

Make connections between past and present. (USII.1b)

 

 

 


STANDARD USII.7c                                                                                                                                                                                                                  

 


The student will demonstrate knowledge of the economic, social, and political transformation of the United States and the world between the end of World War II and the present by

c)     identifying the role of America’s military and veterans in defending freedom during the Cold War, including the wars in Korea and Vietnam, the Cuban missile crisis, the collapse of communism in Europe, and the rise of new challenges.

 

Essential Understandings

Essential Questions

Essential Knowledge

Essential Skills

 

The United States and the Soviet Union emerged from World War II as world powers, triggering a rivalry over ideology and national security.

 

Since World War II, the United States has been directly involved in various conflicts that reflected the divisions created by Cold War tensions and hostilities.

 

The tension between the free world and the communist world caused divisiveness at home and abroad.

 

The Cold War was the central organizing principle in foreign affairs for 40 years.

 

How and why did the Cold War begin?

 

What have been the major conflicts and confrontations involving America in the post-World War II era?

 

How did Cold War tensions cause divisiveness at home?

 

How did communism collapse in Europe?

 

How were the challenges after the Cold War different from earlier challenges?

 
Terms to know

·         Cold War: State of tension between the United States and the Soviet Union without actual fighting that divided the world into two camps

 

Origins of the Cold War

·         Differences in goals and ideologies between the United States and the Soviet Union (the two superpowers)—The United States was democratic and capitalist; the Soviet Union was dictatorial and communist.

·         The Soviet Union’s domination over Eastern European countries

·         American policy of containment (to stop the spread of communism)

·         North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) versus Warsaw Pact

 

Major conflicts in the post-World War II era

·         South Korea and the United States resisted Chinese and North Korean aggression. The conflict ended in a stalemate.

 

 

Analyze and interpret primary and secondary source documents to increase understanding of events and life in United States history. (USII.1a)

 

Make connections between past and present. (USII.1b)

 

Sequence events in United States history. (USII.1c)

 

Interpret ideas and events from different historical perspectives. (USII.1d)

 

Analyze and interpret maps that include major physical features. (USII.1f)

 

 

 


STANDARD USII.7c (continued)                                                                                                                                                                                             

 


The student will demonstrate knowledge of the economic, social, and political transformation of the United States and the world between the end of World War II and the present by

c)     identifying the role of America’s military and veterans in defending freedom during the Cold War, including the wars in Korea and Vietnam, the Cuban missile crisis, the collapse of communism in Europe, and the rise of new challenges.

 

Essential Understandings

Essential Questions

Essential Knowledge

Essential Skills

 

 

 

 

 

·         The Cuban Missile Crisis occurred when the Soviet Union placed missiles in Cuba. The Soviets removed the missiles in response to a U.S. blockade.

·         The United States intervened to stop the spread of communism into South Vietnam (Domino Theory). Americans were divided over whether the United States should be involved militarily in Vietnam. The conflict ended in a cease-fire agreement in which U.S. troops withdrew.

 

Collapse of Communism in Europe

·         Breakup of the Soviet Union into independent countries

·         Destruction of Berlin Wall

 

New challenges

·         Role of U.S. military intervention

·         Environmental challenges

·         Global issues, including trade, jobs, diseases

 

 


STANDARD USII.7d                                                                                                                                                                                                                  

 


The student will demonstrate knowledge of the economic, social, and political transformation of the United States and the world between the end of World War II and the present by

d)     describing the changing patterns of society, including expanded educational and economic opportunities for military veterans, women, and minorities.

 

 

Essential Understandings

Essential Questions

Essential Knowledge

Essential Skills

 

Changing patterns in American society at the end of World War II changed the way most Americans lived and worked.

 

 

 

What factors led to changing patterns of society in the post-World War II era?
 

What policies and programs expanded educational and employment opportunities for the military, women, and minorities?

 

 

 

 

 

Factors leading to changing patterns in U.S. society

·         Strong economy (healthy job market, increased productivity, increased demand for American products)

·         Greater investment in education

·         “The Baby Boom,” which led to changing demographics

·         Interstate highway system

·         Evolving role of women (expected to play supporting role in the family, but increasingly working outside the home)

·         Role of Eleanor Roosevelt in expanding women’s rights

·         African Americans’ aspirations for equal opportunities

·         Changes in make-up of immigrants after 1965 (e.g., Hispanic Americans, Asian Americans)

 

 

 

 

Make connections between past and present. (USII.1b)

 

Sequence events in United States history. (USII.1c)

 

Interpret ideas and events from different historical perspectives. (USII.1d)

 

Interpret slogans and documents. (USII.1h)

 

 

 


STANDARD USII.7d (continued)                                                                                                                                                                                             

 


The student will demonstrate knowledge of the economic, social, and political transformation of the United States and the world between the end of World War II and the present by

d)     describing the changing patterns of society, including expanded educational and economic opportunities for military veterans, women, and minorities.

 

 

Essential Understandings

Essential Questions

Essential Knowledge

Essential Skills

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Policies and programs expanding educational and employment opportunities

·         G.I. Bill of Rights gave educational, housing, and employment benefits to World War II veterans.

·         Truman desegregated the armed forces.

·         Civil Rights legislation led to increased educational, economic, and political opportunities for women and minorities.

 

 

 

 

 


STANDARD USII.8a                                                                                                                                                                                                                  

 


The student will demonstrate knowledge of the key domestic issues during the second half of the twentieth century by

a)     examining the Civil Rights Movement and the changing role of women;

 

 

 

Essential Understandings

Essential Questions

Essential Knowledge

Essential Skills

 

The Civil Rights Movement resulted in legislation that ensured constitutional rights to all citizens regardless of race.

 

Women activists were inspired by the achievements of the Civil Rights Movement and took action to gain equality for themselves, particularly in the workplace.

 

 

 

What were some effects of segregation on American society?

 

How did the African American struggle for equality become a mass movement?

 

How did the law support the struggle for equality for African Americans?

 

How were women disadvantaged in the workplace?

 

What actions were taken to improve conditions for women?

 

 

 

 

 

Some effects of segregation

·         Separate educational facilities and resources for white and African American students

·         Separate public facilities (e.g., restrooms, drinking fountains, restaurants)

·         Social isolation of races

 

Civil Rights Movement

·         Opposition to Plessy v. Ferguson—“Separate but equal”

·         Brown v. Board of Education, desegregation of schools

·         Martin Luther King, Jr.—Passive resistance against segregated facilities; “I have a dream…” speech

·         Rosa Parks—Montgomery bus boycott

·         Organized protests, Freedom Riders, sit-ins, marches

·         Expansion of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP)

·         Civil Rights Act of 1964

·         Voting Rights Act of 1965

 

 

 

 

 


STANDARD USII.8a (continued)                                                                                                                                                                                             

 


The student will demonstrate knowledge of the key domestic issues during the second half of the twentieth century by

a)     examining the Civil Rights Movement and the changing role of women;

 

 

 

Essential Understandings

Essential Questions

Essential Knowledge

Essential Skills

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Changing role of women

·         Workplace disadvantages

         Discrimination in hiring practices against women

         Lower wages for women than for men doing the same job

·         Improved conditions

         National Organization for Women (NOW)

         Federal legislation to force colleges to give women equal athletic opportunities

         The Equal Rights Amendment, despite its failure, and a focus on equal opportunity employment created a wider range of options and advancement for women in business and public service.

 

 

 

 


STANDARD USII.8b                                                                                                                                                                                                                  

 


The student will demonstrate knowledge of the key domestic issues during the second half of the twentieth century by

b)     describing the development of new technologies and their impact on American life.

 

 

 

Essential Understandings

Essential Questions

Essential Knowledge

Essential Skills

 

After the war, Americans turned their energies to the development of peacetime technologies.

 

 

 

Which industries benefited the most from the new technologies?

 

What impact did the new technologies have on American life?

 

 

 

 

 

Industries benefiting from new technologies

·         Airline industry—Jets

·         Automobile industry and interstate highway system

·         Entertainment and news media industry

·         Exploration of space

·         Computer industry

·         Satellite system— Telecommunications (pagers, cell phones, television)

·         Internet

 

Impact of new technologies on American life

·         Increased domestic and international travel for business and pleasure

·         Greater access to news and other information

·         Cheaper and more convenient means of communication

·         Greater access to heating and air-conditioning

·         Decreased regional variation, resulting from nationwide access to entertainment and information provided by national television and radio programming, Internet services, computer games

 

 

Make connections between past and present. (USII.1b)

 

Sequence events in United States history. (USII.1c)

 

 

 

Comments/Concerns: Ccampbell@tcc.edu
All Rights Reserved
October 2004