Midyear Review 2013
The Foundations Midyear Exam is designed to be a comprehensive examination of the material that we covered during the first half of the year. The exam will take up the majority of the block allotted to us and will be comprised of several types of questions. You will be asked to diagram your reasoning in several instances. There will be no open note portion or open book portion of the exam. Students are required to take the exam during the assigned period barring emergency or ruling of the administration. This exam counts for 10% of your final grade, but does not count toward any marking period. Unexcused students who are late to class on the day of the exam are penalized since they will be a distraction to the test environment. Anyone with a need for accommodations for the exam MUST inform me and make arrangements with their liaison prior to the exam period. Everything that is on this review appears on the midyear in one form or another. (for some reason, many of the links have failed on the webpages. B Period’s links all still work if you need to refer back for past work.)
UNIT 1a: Historical thinking and skills
- Identifying, defining, and developing an understanding of the contrasting values. (see 9/6 on website for definitions)
- Identifying, defining, and of the elements of the Bedford High School philosophy of historical argument. (see 9/19 for ppt)
- Identifying, defining, and diagramming Reasoning (Comparisons and Cause and Effect)
- “Prop”ing evidence (see 10/5 for doc)
- Informed Decision Making (10/26 also, use health class notes)
UNIT 1b: Early English Colonies
- Colonial Geographic Locations – 13 original colonies
- Identify key events and individuals related to the origin and survival of Jamestown colony.
- Identify key events and individuals related to the origin and changes in Mass Bay and Plymouth colonies.
- Identify key events and individuals related to the settlement of the Middle colonies.
Terms and Names – Jamestown
John SmithJoint stock companyKing James I
RoanokePowhatanStarving time
Brown goldJohn Rolfe Pocahontas
Headright system PlantationNathaniel Bacon
Indentured servants English laws of conquestRoyal colony
Charter ColonyVirginia Colony
Terms and Names -- Puritan New England
PuritansJohn WinthropSeparatists
Plymouth colonyMayflower Compact Roger Williams
Massachusetts Bay ColonyAnne Hutchinson
Terms and Names -- Middle colonies
William PennQuakersNew Netherland
The DutchHoly experimentMaryland
City of brotherly loveNorth and South CarolinaGeorgia
Unit 2: Revolutionary War
Terms, Names, and Questions – Road to Revolutionary War
- Identify the major tax acts that the British passed that angered the colonists
- Explain the effects that the tax acts had on the relationship between the colonies and the mainland
Stamp ActSamuel Adams Patrick HenryDeclaratory Act
Townshend ActsboycottpetitionBoston Massacre
John HancockKing George Parliamentmartial law
Committees of CorrespondenceSons of LibertyBoston Tea Party
Intolerable ActsGeneral Thomas Gage First Continental Congress
MinutemenmilitiaLexington and Concord Bunker Hill
Guerrilla warfareOlive Branch PetitionSecond Continental Congress
John DickinsonJohn Adams
Terms, Names, and Questions – Ideas of Revolutionary War
- What did Paine want to accomplish with Common Sense? Why did he succeed?
- What was the Declaration of Independence supposed to "tell" the world about the reasons for American rebellion and American Values?
Thomas PaineThomas JeffersonJohn Lockenatural rights
July 4, 1776patriots loyalists
Declaration of Independence
Terms, Names, and Questions – Fighting the Revolutionary War
- Explain the fighting in New York (not including Saratoga)
- Explain the fighting in New Jersey
- Explain the fighting in Philadelphia
- Explain the fighting in Saratoga
- Explain the fighting in Savannah and Charles Town, and the Carolinas
- Explain the fighting in Yorktown
Howe brothersHessiansDelaware RiverPrinceton
TrentonBurgoyneGatesClinton
CornwallisCowpensLafayettevon Steuben
Unconventional WarValley ForgeBlockadeEnlistment
Greene Articles of Confederation
Unit 3 Forming a new nation
- What were the guiding principles behind the Articles & Confederation? How did those principles affect its success?
- Why did the framers prefer a republic to a democracy?
- Why did the states fear a strong central government? How did the differences between the states cause problems?
- What were some of the specific problems did they face as a new nation?
- Why did Shays’ Rebellion lead to further discussions about strengthening the national government?
- What were the key conflicts of the Constitutional Convention and how did the Framers try to form a “more perfect union” while also “secure[ing] the blessings of liberty?”
- Describe the process that occurred as they drafted a new government.
- What were the key conflicts that came up at the constitutional convention?
- What were the key compromises reached at the constitutional convention?
- How did the framers attempt to divide and ensure checks on power?
- What were the central controversies of ratification? How was ratification achieved?
- Who were the Federalists and the Anti-Federalists?
- What role did the Bill of Rights play in the Ratification process?
Terms, Names, and Questions – Forming a new nation
RepublicRepublicanismPrecedent
Articles of ConfederationNorthwest Ordinance of 1787“E Pluribus Unum”
“The Framers” “Founding Fathers” (a) constitution
Shays’ RebellionPhiladelphia/Constitutional Convention
The ConstitutionJames Madison Great Compromise
Bicameral Legislature House of Representatives Roger Sherman
Senate Three Fifths Compromise Compromise
Federalism Separation of Powers Legislative Branch
Executive Branch John JayVeto
Judicial Branch Checks & Balances Electoral College
Ratification Federalists Anti-Federalists
Alexander Hamilton Bill of RightsAmendment