Monday through Friday, March 3-7, 2014.
Self-reflections are optional this quarter, but still recommended; DUE by Thursday, 3/6.
Independent Research Paper Drafts DUE on Friday, 3/7 (see guidelines below on blog).
Capstone proposal drafts DUE by the end of the week before break.
No quiz this week.
End of third quarter, Friday, 3/7
Spring Break, 3/8-3/27 - HAVE A GOOD BREAK!!!
Day 1, Monday, 3/7: War on the Homefront
In-class: Read the primary and secondary source handouts on the homefront and women.
Homework for Day 2: Please read “Descending into
the Twentieth Century: World War and Revolution, 1914-1920,” in The West in
the World, eds. Sherman/Salisbury, pp. 665-673, and prepare answers to the key questions.
Key Terms and Persons: Propaganda, Kaethe Kollwitz, the Versailles Treaty, Georges Clemenceau, David Lloyd George, Woodrow Wilson, Wilson's Fourteen Points, The League of Nations, Mustafa Kemal, and John Maynard Keynes.
Key question#1 (review): How did people
experience the war on the home fronts and battle fronts?
Key question#2 (new): What are the legacies of the First World War?
Day 2: The Peace Settlement
In-class: Read the primary and secondary source handouts on the Treaty of Versailles, and discuss the legacies of the First World War.
Homework for Day 3: Please read “Revolutions in Russia,” in The West in
the World, eds. Sherman/Salisbury, pp. 674-683, and prepare answers to the key questions.
Key Terms and Persons: Tsar Nicholas II, 1905 Revolution: Bloody Sunday, the Battleship Potemkin, and Duma; the March Revolution, the Provisional Government, Alexander Kerensky, the soviets, Lenin, the Bolsheviks, Lenin's principles, Leon Trotsky, the November Revolution, the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk, and the Russian Civil War.
Key question#1: Key Terms and Persons: How did the Bolsheviks come to power?
Day 3: The Russian Revolution
In-class: Read the primary and secondary source handouts on the Russian Revolution, and discuss the Russian Revolutions.
No new homework.
Day 4: Wrap-up
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