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7.15 Comparison in Period 7

  • Writer: Rosie Jayde Uyola
    Rosie Jayde Uyola
  • 8 hours ago
  • 2 min read


Making Connections- First Half of 20th Century


Directions: So many events and ideas developed during the first half of the 20th century! It can be difficult to understand and make connections between all of these developments!


Working as a team:

  1. Choose 10 of the developments in the chart.

  2. Write a narrative below by providing a description of each development. As you write, make connections between the 10 developments that you chose.

  3. Be sure to explain HOW these developments relate to each other in a cause/effect manner.


Underline each event that you use. Use the poster for final draft. The narrative has

been started for you....


  1. Stock Market Crash

  2. Cash and Carry Policy

  3. Treaty of Versailles

  4. Pearl Harbor

  5. Xenophobia

  6. Spanish American War

  7. Axis Powers

  8. Rosie the Riveter

  9. Lend Lease Policy

  10. Isolationism

  11. Japanese American Internment

  12. Island Hopping

  13. Facsism

  14. Imperialism

  15. League of Nations

  16. Hawley-Smoot Tariff


Use textbook (Unit 7), my outline of Unit 7, and your homework notes. Each team member should write a copy of your team draft in their notebook. The final draft should be written in neat handwriting on the poster. Team grade will be assigned.



Example:


The United States engaged in several incidents of imperialism during the late 1800s. Through imperialism, the United States expanded its influence and markets to several areas of the world. This support for imperialism contributed to the United States’ desire to spread markets and naval power into the Caribbean and Pacific. The United States declared war on Spain, which sparked the Spanish American War. This war allowed the United States to acquire more economic and political control over Cuba, the Philippines, Puerto Rico, and Guam… [your turn]



Final Draft on Poster



 
 

“Our histories never unfold in isolation. We cannot truly tell what we consider to be our own histories without knowing the other stories. And often we discover that those other stories are actually our own stories.”

Angela Y. Davis

Thank you for contacting Rosie Jayde Uyola

© 2035 by Rosie Jayde Uyola

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