Long periods: HSSSE Surveys in the library, followed by research presentations and some time to work.
Quiz #4 opens online on Monday, April 13 and closes Thursday evening, April 16 at midnight; covers the legacies of the First World War from before break, and materials on authoritarianism, fascism, and Stalinism. NOTE the change.
Final drafts of independent research papers DUE by Friday afternoon, 4/10.
Day 1, Monday, 4/7: The Nazi Seizure of Power, Part 2.
In-class: Discuss primary and secondary source handouts on the Nazi seizure of power and Stalinism; review for Quiz #5, and chronicle current events.
Homework for Day 3: Read “Into the Fire Again: World War II, 1939-1945,” in The West in the World, eds. Sherman/Salisbury, pp. 711-721 (Up to ""Behind the Lines"), and answer the following question.
Key Terms and Persons: The Popular Front, Chiang Kai-shek, Mao Zedong, Nanking, The Spanish Civil War, Guernica, The Axis Powers, The Anschluss, The Munich Conference of 1938, Appeasement, Nazi-Soviet Nonaggression Pact, blitzkrieg, the Battle of France, the Battle of Britain, Operation Barbarossa, and Pearl Harbor.
Homework question: What were the origins of the Second World War? What connections between Hitler, Nazism, and appeasement might have led to the outbreak of war?
Day 2: HSSSE Surveys and Research Presentations.
Day 3: The Road to War.
In-class: Discuss the origins and early stages of the Second World War.
Key Terms: The Holocaust (Shoah), Death camps, Stalingrad, the Battle of Midway, kamikaze, the atomic bomb, and the United Nations.
Homework question: How did the Allies turn the tide and defeat the Axis powers in the Second World War - what were the key actions and turning points?
Day 4: The Second World War.
In-class: Discuss the key actions and turning points of the war.
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