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Course Profile   Twentieth-Century History: Global and Regional Perspectives, Grade 11, Open, Catholic and Public

 

Course Overview

 

 

Course Profiles are professional development materials designed to help teachers implement the new Grade 11 secondary school curriculum. These materials were created by writing partnerships of school boards and subject associations. The development of these resources was funded by the Ontario Ministry of Education. This document reflects the views of the developers and not necessarily those of the Ministry. Permission is given to reproduce these materials for any purpose except profit. Teachers are also encouraged to amend, revise, edit, cut, paste, and otherwise adapt this material for educational purposes.

 

Any references in this document to particular commercial resources, learning materials, equipment, or technology reflect only the opinions of the writers of this sample Course Profile, and do not reflect any official endorsement by the Ministry of Education or by the Partnership of School Boards that supported the production of the document.

 

© Queen’s Printer for Ontario, 2001

 

Acknowledgments

Public and Catholic District School Board Writing Teams – Twentieth-Century History: Global and Regional Perspectives

 

Lead Writers

Public – J.F. Hamilton, (retired from Eastview Secondary School in Barrie, Simcoe County District School Board)

Catholic – Bernadette Peters, St Peter’s High School, Peterborough, Peterborough, Victoria, Northumberland, and Clarington Catholic District School Board (PVNCCDSB)

 

Public Writers

Tamara Tiemersma-Brasil, Barrie Central Collegiate, Barrie, Simcoe County District Board of Education

Steve Engelhardt, Banting Memorial High School, Alliston, Simcoe County District Board of Education

 

Catholic Writers

Reg Hartwick, St. Stephen’s High School, Bowmanville, PVNCCDSB

Stephen Meinhardt, Catholic Education Centre, Peterborough, PVNCCDSB

 


Course Overview

Twentieth-Century History: Global and Regional Perspectives, Grade 11, Open, CHT30

Prerequisite:  Canadian History in the Twentieth Century, Grade 10, Academic or Applied

Secondary Policy Document:  The Ontario Curriculum Grades 11 and 12,

Canada and World Studies

Course Description

This course focuses on events and issues in twentieth-century world history. Students analyse issues relating to the two world wars, the Cold War, post-1945 regional conflicts, human rights, changes in everyday life, and the problems facing developing countries. The skills and knowledge developed in the course will help students understand and analyse the challenges facing peoples, both historically and at the present time, in various parts of the world.

How This Course Supports the Ontario Catholic School Graduate Expectations

Catholic teachers have a unique opportunity to introduce students to their rich intellectual, philosophical, and theological heritage as tools for viewing historical and contemporary political and social realities. The Church has addressed most of the general areas dealt with in this course, based on philosophical and theological principles. Church teachings provide a Catholic framework for learning and analysing events.

Specifically, the Church’s teachings on social justice, the sacredness of human life, and economic and social equity form the foundation upon which students examine the twentieth century. Students are challenged to look at world events from a ‘gospel perspective’ and are encouraged to make connections between values of the gospel and those of the present.

Course Notes

This course focuses on the dynamism of the twentieth century as it affects the world’s inhabitants in national, regional, and global contexts. Emphasis is placed on defining the concept of ‘progress’ as interpreted though the eyes of diverse members of our global community. Students are challenged to widen their perspectives and to consider the history of the twentieth century from quite different viewpoints.

This course confronts the teacher with at least two significant challenges. First, the Open designation requires a flexible approach to course design and application. Second, the broad content parameters, the history of the twentieth century in a global and regional context, are so extensive as to require strongly-focused structural guidelines in terms of both content and delivery, in order to effectively and efficiently meet the course expectations.

The structure proposed in this profile consists of six units. Units 1 and 2 undertake a chronological study of the first half of the century, specifically 1900 to 1945. This chronological approach is employed in order to provide a familiar and comfortable framework for students, given that they experienced a parallel approach in the Grade 10 Canadian History curriculum (CHC2D, CHC2P). This should allow students to ‘reconnect’ to the learning of the earlier course and reinforce that knowledge and skill development. These two units should provide, as well, the opportunity for extensive initial diagnostic assessment.

In Units 3, 4, and 5, however, the method of inquiry changes. The second half of the century is considered through three general thematic areas, political, economic, and social history, in order to introduce the student to an alternative methodology in the study of history. In these units, timelines and chronology are employed to augment the thematic study. Consistent with Units 1 and 2, this thematic approach allows for a flexible structure in order to entertain both a global and regional consideration of the material as well as allowing local needs to be met.

Unit 6 is the culminating activity of the course and involves the implementation of an ongoing, comprehensive study. The suggested activity involves each student in an individualized study of the contemporary condition of a selected nation, through the creation of a National Portfolio. The student is introduced to the activity in Unit 1, and activities associated with the Portfolio are closely integrated into each successive unit. The activity provides a wide range of summative opportunities, and Unit 6 is designed to that purpose.

Units:  Titles and Times

* Unit 1

Challenges to the Established Order: The World at the Turn of the 20th Century (1900-1919)

22 hours

Unit 2

After the Great War: A Search for Answers (1920-1945)

22 hours

* Unit 3

Global and Regional Conflicts in the Nuclear Age (1945-Present)

22 hours

Unit 4

 New Economic Realities: Options for the Future (1945-Present)

18 hours

Unit 5

The Individual and the Twentieth Century (1945-Present)

18 hours

Unit 6

The National Portfolio - A Synthesis (20th Century)

8 hours (**15)

* These units are fully developed in this Course Profile.

** Seven hours have been devoted to the National Portfolio in the five previous units, for a total of 15 hours.

Unit Overviews

Unit 1:  Challenges to the Established Order: The World at the Turn of the 20th Century
(1900-1919)

Time:  22 hours

Unit Description

The first unit of this course focuses on the various challenges to the established world orders and the sources of stress on citizens, nations, and regions around the globe at the turn of the century. Students, by adopting the viewpoint and working with the tools of the historian, develop an awareness of the forces at work in the first two decades of the twentieth century. Theoretical concepts, such as nationalism, colonialism, and imperialism, are explored through the context of practical application, as shifts in the structures of power blocs, technology, and national and international demographics are considered. This unit concludes with an examination of the global ramifications of the First World War. As a linking theme within the activities of the unit, students investigate how society’s “belief in progress” is tested by events and developments within these decades. Following the second activity, the introduction of the course’s culminating summative activity, the creation of a National Portfolio in a Global Perspective, begins.

Unit 1 Activity Titles (Time and Sequence)

1.   The Century Turns: New Ideas for a New Era? (75 minutes)

2.   Technological and Demographic Change at the Turn of Century (300 minutes)

3.   Introduction of the Course Culminating Activity: The National Portfolio (75 minutes)

4.   Major Power Blocs and Empires: Colonialism and Imperialism (240 minutes)

5.   Nationalism and Emerging Nationalism at the Turn of the 20th Century (75 minutes)

6.   World War I: Causes, Course, and Consequences (480 minutes)

7.   National Portfolio Research Skills and Development Activity (75 minutes)

Unit 1 Overview Chart

Activity

Expectations

Assessment

Focus

1

COV.01, CO1.03, SE2.01, HI2.01, HI3.01, HI4.03

CGE3a, 3e, 7f

Knowledge/ Understanding

Thinking/ Inquiry

-Belief in Progress, (science, technology, and education)

-Social Darwinism

-Economics - mercantilism, expansionism, protectionism

-Political Alternatives: anarchism, Marxism, belief in democracy

-Imperialism, Nationalism, Colonialism

2

CO1.02, CO1.03, CC2.03, SEV.01, SE1.03, SE1.05, SE3.03

CGE2e, 3b

Knowledge/ Understanding

Thinking/ Inquiry

Communication

-Global population increase

-Migration and immigration to New World

-Urbanization

-Industrialization

-Technology: internal combustion engine, electricity, automobile, communications, railways

3

HIV.01, HI1.01, HIV.04, HI4.01, HI4.02, HI4.03

CGE4f

v see Assessment and Evaluation

Introduction of National Portfolio Activity

4

COV.01, CO1.01, CO2.05, CC1.02, CC1.04, CCV.03, CC3.01, CC3.02

CGE7f

Knowledge/ Understanding

Thinking/ Inquiry

Major Power Blocs and Empires: colonialism and imperialism

-European Powers: Britain, Germany, Russia, France, Austro-Hungary, Ottoman

-Emerging powers: USA, Japan

-Define/Assess colonialism and imperialism

-Case studies of imperialism/colonialism

5

COV.02, CO2.01, CO2.03, CC2.01, CC3.03, CHV.01, CH1.01, CH1.02

CGE3c

Knowledge/ Understanding

Thinking/ Inquiry

Application

Nationalism and Emerging Nationalism at the Turn of the Century

-Defining the terms

-Case study: nationalism in the Balkans

-Selected studies of nationalism globally: Ireland, India, South Africa, Quebec

6

COV.02, CO2.03, CO2.06, CCV.03, CC3.02, CHV.01, SEV.01, SE1.01, SE1.02, SEV.03, SE3.04

CGE1d, 1j, 3f

Knowledge/ Understanding

Thinking/ Inquiry

Communication

Application

World War I: Causes, Course, and Consequences

-Causation

-Course: timelines, major battles, global involvement

-Global implications: war technology, communications, propaganda, new power structures, attitudes to war, effect on democratic movements, labour, family

-Introduction to Treaty of Versailles

7

HIV.01, HI1.01, HI1.02, HI1.03, HIV.02, HIV.03, HIV.04

CGE4f

Knowledge/ Understanding

Thinking/ Inquiry

National Portfolio: Research and Development Activity

-Does the student fully understand the project?

-Has the student begun in an organized fashion?

 

Unit 2:  After the Great War: A Search for Answers (1920-1945)

Time:  22 hours

Unit Description

Building on the concepts developed in Unit 1 and maintaining the chronological approach, this unit deals with the implications of the Treaty of Versailles for various regions of the world. Cause-and-effect relationships are developed through timelines and case studies. The origins and expressions of conflicting ideologies, such as fascism and communism, are examined in detail, complete with an understanding of emerging, new power structures, particularly in Europe, Asia, and America. A look at the cultural expression of the twenties and thirties and the link to emerging technologies is undertaken, and effort is made to put it into a context of dramatic social and economic dislocation. Unit 2 focuses on the events preceding World War II and the course of that cataclysm. The unit offers opportunity for intensive study of significant events (e.g., the Holocaust) and influential individuals in political, economic, and cultural fields around the globe. Again, the National Portfolio is integrated into the unit. Teaching/learning strategies are suitable for student-centred studies. Primary document analysis and debates are advised. Activity 5 is ideally suited to cross-curricular studies in Art, Music, Drama, and English.

Unit 2 Activity Titles (Time and Sequence)

1.   A post-WWI analysis – a search for answers (320 minutes)

i.    Implications of the Treaty of Versailles, League of Nations

ii.    The Russian Revolution, overview of Communist theory, Rise of Russia/USSR

iii.   Rise of fascism, nazism (link to Unit 1 nationalism)

iv.   American isolationism

v.   The political spectrum

2.   The World in the Inter-War Period (150 minutes)

i.    Technological accomplishment and application

ii.    Economic boom and bust

3.   The emergence of regional powers (Japan, China, India) (120 minutes)

4.   Art, music, and literature as a reflection of the dynamics of the first half of the century (155 minutes)

5.       A study of World War II – causes and course of war, focus on global scope of war (Include Holocaust studies, study of significant individuals, immediate global situation after the war.) (480 minutes)

6.   National Portfolio Integration: Peer-sharing activity (75 minutes)

Unit 2 Overview Chart

Activity

Expectations

Assessment

Focus

1

COV.02, CO2.02, CO2.03, CO2.05, CC1.02, CC3.01, CC3.02, CC3.03, CH1.04, SEV.03, SE3.01, SE3.04

CGE3b, 3d, 5b

Knowledge/ Understanding

Thinking/Inquiry

Application

A Post-World War I Analysis:

-Treaty of Versailles, political spectrum; rise of nazism and fascism, Russian Revolution, the League of Nations, and America after the War

-Prelude to WWII

2

CCV.01, CC1.01, CC1.02, CC1.03, CCV.02, SEV.01, SE1.01, SE1.03, SE1.05, SEV.02, SE2.01, SE2.03

CGE3f

Knowledge/ Understanding

Thinking/Inquiry

Communication

Post-World War I

-Impact in social, economic, and technological areas

3

COV.02, CO2.05, CCV.02, CC2.01, CC3.01, CC3.02, CH1.01, CH1.02, CH1.05, SE3.02, SE3.03

CGE7f, 7g

Knowledge/ Understanding

Thinking/Inquiry

Communication

A World and Regional Study: Asia, Africa, South America in the 1920-1945 period

-Link to National Portfolio

4

CC1.033, CC2.03, CH1.01, CH3.01, CH3.02, CH3.03, SEV.01, SE1.04, SE1.05

Knowledge/ Understanding

Thinking/Inquiry

Application

Art, Music and Literature as it reflects the first half of the century

-Project-oriented activity

5

COV.02, CO2.02, CO2.03, CO2.05, CO2.06, CC1.01, CC2.03, CCV.03, CHV.01, CH1.03, CH1.05, CHV.02 CH2.02

CGE3a

Knowledge/ Understanding

Thinking/Inquiry

Communication

Application

World War II: Causes, Course, Conclusion, and Implications

-Prelude to Cold War

6

HIV.01, HIV.02, HIV.03, HIV.04

CGE4f

Thinking/Inquiry

Communication

National Portfolio Integration

-Peer sharing of inquiry methods

-Application of unit study to National Portfolio

 

Unit 3:  Global and Regional Conflicts in the Nuclear Age (1945-Present)

Time:  22 hours

Unit Description

The focus of this unit is on global, regional, and national conflicts, and whether or not progress has been made in dealing with conflict in this century. Attention is paid to identifying types of conflict and methods of conflict resolution. The time period is framed in a chronological study of the Cold War. With this overview in mind, students undertake an in-depth study of the intricacies of the Middle East region, with the intention of developing a model by which conflict may be studied. Students apply this analysis model to selected conflicts, as well as to their National Portfolio nation. The primary strategy is co-operative group study.

Unit 3: Activity Titles (Time and Sequence)

1.   Defining Types of Conflict and Identifying Methods of Dispute Resolution. (60 minutes)

i.    Civil, ethnic, territorial, economic, cultural, religious, tribal, ideological, dynastic

ii.    Military intervention, international tribunals, judicial organizations, sanctions

2.   The Cold War in a Nuclear Age: identified ideologically and examined chronologically, from a global perspective. (480 minutes)

3.   Developing and Applying a Model for the Study of Conflict and Resolution (540 minutes)

i.    The Middle East: a case study

ii.    Applying the model in selected studies from around the globe.

4.   Hypothesizing: Students identify potential ‘hot spots’ and the types of conflict-resolution mechanisms that might be employed in the future, and anticipate Canada’s role in those actions. (180 minutes)

5.   Link to National Portfolio: Applying concepts of conflict and conflict resolution to nation (60 minutes)

Unit 3 Overview Chart

Activity

Expectations

Assessment

Focus

1

CCV.01, CC2.01, CCV.02, CC2.02, CH1.02, CC3.01, CHV.01, SEV.03, SE3.04, HIV.04, H14.02, HI4.03

CGE3e, 3f

Knowledge/ Understanding

Thinking/Inquiry

Communication

Types of Conflict: civil, ethnic, territorial, economic, cultural, religious, tribal, ideological, dynastic, legal

-Methods of Dispute Resolution: military intervention, international tribunals, judicial organizations, sanctions

2

COV.02, C02.02, CO2.04, CO2.05, CCV.03, CC3.03, CHV.01, CH1.01, CH3.02, SE3.01, SEV.03, SE3.03, HIV.01, HIV.02, HIV.03, HIV.04

CGE1d, 3a, 3f, 7f

Knowledge/ Understanding

Communication

Application

A Framework for the period 1945-2000

The Cold War: ideology, history, course of events: e.g.,

-Churchill’s ‘Iron Curtain’/Berlin

-People’s Republic of China

-Korea

-Arms/space race

-Sporting/cultural rivalry

-Terrorism globally

-Vietnam

-Collapse of Soviet Union

3

COV.02, CO2.01, CO2.02, COV.03, CO3.01, CO3.03, CCV.01, CC1.03, CCV.02, CC2.02, CCV.03, CC3.01, CHV.01, CH1.02, CHV.02, SEV.03, HIV.01, HIV.02, HIV.03, HIV.04, HI4.02, HI4.03, HI3.01, HI3.02, HI1.02, HI1.03, HI2.03

CGE2a, 2b, 2c, 5a, 7d, 7e, 7f

Knowledge/ Understanding

Thinking/Inquiry

Communication

Application

A Model for Studying Conflict and Conflict Resolution:

-A case study: the Middle East

-Applied studies: group study and presentation of selected conflicts

4

COV.02, CO2.01, CO2.02, COV.03, CO3.01, CO3.03, CCV.02, CC2.02, CC3.01, CH1.02, CHV.02, CH2.02, HIV.01, HIV.02, HIV.03, HIV.04, HI1.02, HI1.03, HI2.03, HI3.01, HI3.02, HI4.03

CGE3b, 3c, 3d, 3f, 4a, 4d, 7d

Thinking/Inquiry

Communication

Application

Hypothesizing:

Where are the potential global ‘hot spots’ and why is this so?

What methods of dispute resolution could be used effectively? (based on prior learning)

What should Canada’s role be?

5

HIV.01, HIV.02, HIV.04, HI1.02, HI1.03, HI2.03, HI3.02, HI4.03

CGE4f

Thinking/Inquiry

Application

National Portfolio: Conflict analysis applied to the selected nation

Unit 4:  New Economic Realities: Options for the Future (1945-Present)

Time:  18 hours

Unit Description

This unit maintains the thematic approach begun in Unit 3, but moves into an exploration of the economic imperatives of the second half of the century and the decisions facing the various nations, regions, and cultures of the world. A selection of representative case studies, set chronologically, leads to an examination of economic ideologies, technological (especially communication) developments, emerging economic power blocs, and new forms of cultural and economic imperialism. Increasing economic contacts necessitate strategies used to assess the benefits and limitations of economic and cultural exchanges. Case studies of specific nations and cultures, and the individuals who are identified with those strategies are undertaken. Students relate the content to the specific issues confronting their selected National Portfolio country. Individual research and oral presentations form the primary teaching/learning strategies.

Unit 4 Activity Titles (Time and Sequence)

1.   New economic realities: a chronological sample of case studies (480 minutes)

i.    Post-war reconstruction in Germany and Japan

ii.    China: the Great Leap Forward

iii.   The OPEC Crisis of 1972

iv.   Cuba and the US Trade Embargo

v.   The rise of the ‘Asian Tiger’ economies

2.   Economic ideologies, coping with change (185 minutes)

i.    The appeal and impact of ideologically based economic systems: communist and capitalist

ii.    The 20th-century transition from agrarian economies to the information age, and the impact on a variety of societies

3.   The New Economic Internationalism (180 minutes)

i.    New regional economic power blocs (EC, NAFTA, OPEC, World Trade Organization)

ii.    New forms of imperialism - economic and cultural

iii.   Corporate power and national identity

4.   Maintaining identity in a global age (160 minutes)

i.    Cultural conquest or cultural exchanges: communication technology and cultural assimilation

ii.    Coping strategies for maintaining cultural, regional, and national identities (in relation to the National Portfolio activity as well as in global context)

5.   National Portfolio Integration: Developing techniques of presentation (75 minutes)

Unit 4 Overview Chart

Activity

Expectations

Assessment

Focus

1

CCV.01, CO1.02, CC1.03, SEV.01, SE1.03, SEV.02, SE2.02, SE2.03, SE2.04, SE2.05

CGE2a, 2b

Knowledge/ Understanding

Thinking/Inquiry

Communication

Application

New Economic Realities:

-Post-War reconstruction in Japan and Germany

-China’s Great Leap Forward

-OPEC Crisis of 1972

-Cuba and US Trade Embargo

-Asian ‘Tiger’ economies

-Eurocurrency debates

2

CCV.01, CC1.01, CC1.02, CC1.03, CCV.02, CC2.03, SEV.01, SE1.03, SEV.02, SE2.01, SE2.02, SEV. 03, SE3.03, SE3.04

CGE2a, 2b

Knowledge/ Understanding

Thinking/Inquiry

Communication

Coping with Economic Change

-Appeal of ideologically-based economic systems

-Economies in transition from agriculture, to industry, to information/service

3

CH2.02, COV.03, CO3.02, CO3.03, CCV.01, CC1.04, CC3.02, SEV.02, SE2.03, SE2.04, SE2.05

CGE4a, 7f, 7g

Knowledge/ Understanding

Thinking/Inquiry

Impact of Modern Economic Development Globally and Regionally:

-New economic imperialism

-New economic power blocs

4

CHV.01, CH1.04, CH1.05, CHV.03, CH3.03

CGE4a, 7f, 7g

Knowledge/ Understanding

Thinking/Inquiry

Maintaining Identity in a Global Age:

-Local, national, regional identities

-Proactive techniques: cultural promotional devices, protectionism, language laws

5

HIV.01, HIV.02, HIV.03, HIV.04

CGE4d, 4f

Communication

Application

Considering a variety of presentation and organizational techniques – a sharing session

 

Unit 5:  The Individual and the Twentieth Century (1945-Present)

Time:  18 hours

Unit Description

Unit 5 maintains the thematic approach developed in Units 3 and 4, with a specific focus on the individual rather than the larger group. While the target time frame is 1945 to present, many of the activities are viewed in a broader chronological window, the century as a whole. Detailed consideration is made of the collapse of the USSR, the emergence of ‘new nations’, and the challenges of implementing democratic reforms in the face of the multitude of dynamic forces unleashed during the twentieth century. The effect of those forces on women, gender roles, and the family provides the pivot for this unit, while examining issues of disparity in opportunity through discussions of contemporary global problems, such as the growing gap in educational opportunity, access to technology, urbanization, demographic exigencies, and poverty.

Unit 5 Activity Titles (Time and Sequence)

1.   The effect of the twentieth century on women, families, and traditional gender roles (75 minutes)

2.   The effect of modern world events on Indigenous societies (opportunity for individual study)
(150 minutes)

3.   Confronting the issue of increased disparity in the human condition around the globe (180 minutes)

i.    Identifying the elements contributing to that disparity

ii.    Suggesting solutions to the problem (include role of international organizations)

4.   The democratization of the globe (180 minutes)

i.    The collapse of the ‘Soviet’ system

ii.    The barriers to the spread of democracy

iii.   Women participating in the political process, 1945-present

5.   Defining Human Rights (180 minutes)

i.    International organizations, and legislation which promote human rights

ii.    Barriers to extending human rights

iii.   Selected case studies of genocide: Holocaust to Rwanda

iv.   Responsibilities of the global community in human rights abuse

6.   Contemporary global dilemmas: identifying the issue, considering solutions (240 minutes)

i.    Urbanization

ii.    Immigration, refugees and the movement of peoples

iii.   The growing disparity in education and modern technology among nations

iv.   Feeding the hungry

v.   Dealing with disaster

7.   National Portfolio Integration: Developing the “informed commentary” (75 minutes)

Unit 5 Overview Chart

Activity

Expectations

Assessment

Focus

1

CCV.01, CC1.01, CC1.02, CC1.04, CC2.03, CH1.02, CHV.02, CH2.01, CH2.03, CHV.03, SEV.01, SE1.01, SE1.03

CGE1d, 4a, 5e, 6b, 6c

Knowledge/ Understanding

Thinking/Inquiry

Effect of 20th Century on Women, Families, and Gender Roles

-Family size

-Working mothers

-Television/movies

-Technology

-Mobility

2

CO1.03, CC2.01, CHV.01, CH1.02, CHV.02, CH2.02, CHV.03, CH3.03, CH3.04, SE1.04, SE1.05, SE2.04

CGE4a, 5e, 7e

Knowledge/ Understanding

Thinking/Inquiry

Communication

Effect of Modern World Events on Indigenous Societies

-Economic dislocation

-Loss of culture-clash of values

-Exploitation of resources

-Advanced health care

3

CCV.01, CC1.02, CC2.01, CC2.02, CC2.03, CC3.03, SEV.01, SE1.01, SE1.03, SE1.05, SEV.02, SE2.04, SE2.05, SEV.03, SE3.04

CGE1d, 3a, 5e, 7e, 7e, 7f, 7i

Knowledge/ Understanding

Thinking/Inquiry

Increased Disparity in the Human Condition

-Identifying contributing causes

-Role of international organizations in alleviating and solving this disparity (Red Cross, UNESCO, Doctors without Borders, WHO, religious organizations)

4

COV.01, CO1.03, CO2.06, COV.03, CO3.03, CC1.02, CC1.03, CC1.04, CC2.01, CC3.03, CHV.01, CH1.02, CHV.02, CH2.02, CH2.03, SEV.01, SE1.04, SE1.05, SE2.02, SEV.03, SE3.02, SE3.03, SE3.04

CGE4f

Knowledge

Application

The Democratization of the Globe:

-Collapse of the Soviet Union

-Barriers to spread of democracy

-Case studies of representative nations in struggle to democratize

-Expanding the franchise, women, and minority groups

5

CO2.01, CO2.02, CO2.06, CC1.02, CC1.03, CC3.03, CHV.01, CH1.02, CH1.03, CHV.02, CH2.01, CH2.02, CH2.03, CHV.03, SE1.04, SE1.05, SE2.04, SE3.03

CGE3b, 3c, 3f, 4a

Knowledge/ Understanding

Thinking/Inquiry

Communication

Application

Defining Human Rights

-International Organizations promoting human rights

-Barriers to extending human rights

-Selected case studies of human rights struggles

-Responsibilities of global communities in human rights abuses

6

COV.03, CO3.01, CO3.02, CO3.03, CC1.01, CC1.02, CC1.03, CC1.04, CC2.02, CC2.03, CC3.03, CH1.04, CH2.01, CH2.03, CH3.03, SE1.01, SE1.02, SE1.04, SE1.05, SE2.04, SE3.04

CGE3b, 3d, 3f, 4a, 4d

Knowledge/ Understanding

Thinking/Inquiry

Communication

Application

Contemporary Global Dilemmas:

-Issues of urbanization

-Issues of population relocation

-Issues of education and technology

-Feeding the hungry

-Dealing with disaster

7

HIV.01, HIV.02, HIV.03, HIV.04

Communication

National Portfolio

 

Unit 6:  The National Portfolio Activity – A Synthesis (20th Century)

Time:  8 hours

Unit Description

Unit 6 provides both a synthesis of the course and an opportunity for students to demonstrate, for summative purposes, the result of work done throughout the course on their National Portfolio. Students present their portfolios for evaluation as an independent piece of work. As well, students demonstrate knowledge and relationships by involvement in an informal regional assembly and a subsequent formal UN simulation. The purpose of this unit is to allow the teacher to summarize course content, allow students to present their National Portfolio, and prepare for summative evaluation.

Unit 6 Activity Titles (Time and Sequence)

1.   Presentation of National Portfolio for summative evaluation (30 minutes) *

2.   Participation in Informal Regional Assemblies and UN simulation (450 minutes)*

3.   Course summation/course evaluation by students and teacher (60 minutes)

* Options: The teacher may choose to have students introduce their portfolio to the class individually or have it handed for evaluation. Timing of UN simulation is necessarily affected.

Unit 6 Overview Chart

Activity

Expectations

Assessment

Focus

1

COV.03, CO3.02, C03.03, CCV.02, CC2.01, CC2.02, CHV.01, CH1.02, CH1.03, CH1.04, SEV.01, SE1.05, SEV.02, SE2.04, SE2.05, SEV.03, SE3.03, SE3.04, HIV.01, HIV.02, HIV.03, HIV.04

Knowledge/ Understanding

Thinking/Inquiry

Communication

Application

The National Portfolio-Knowing your nation-An Informed Commentary

2

same as above

same as above

Participation in Regional Assembly and UN Simulation

Teaching/Learning Strategies

A wide variety of teaching strategies are used in order to accommodate the differing learning styles. Lessons may incorporate Socratic lessons, role-playing, simulations, timeline constructions, cooperative learning, ‘Great Persons’ study, debates, or other acknowledged pedagogical techniques. Throughout the course, students undertake an extensive individualized project, the National Portfolio. This assignment is assessed regularly to support the independent study and is linked to core material through a variety of methods.

The study of history requires skills; students develop an understanding of those skills and are given opportunities to develop them. Such skills may involve enhancement of academic writing skills, report writing, oral reporting, inquiry techniques, content analysis, and other skills as outlined in the Methods of Historical Inquiry Strand of The Ontario Curriculum, Grades 11 and 12, Canadian and World Studies, 2000.

Content and skills are integrated, and scaffolding systems are created to support prior learning and to reinforce present learning. Peer consultation and assessment is significant to this process.

Assessment & Evaluation of Student Achievement

The Ontario Curriculum, Grades 9 to 12, Program Planning and Assessment, 2000 outlines the philosophy and guiding principles concerning assessment and evaluation for Ontario teachers.

The Achievement Chart, which is the basis for assessment and evaluation in this course, can be found on p. 246 of The Ontario Curriculum, Grades 11 and 12, Canadian and World Studies, 2000. The chart identifies four major categories - Knowledge/Understanding, Thinking/Inquiry, Communication, and Application. These categories encompass the curriculum expectations in all courses in Canadian and World Studies. The descriptions at level 3 represent the provincial standard for student achievement.

ESL/ELD students, like all learners, have different learning styles; therefore, using a variety of teaching/learning strategies and assessment/evaluation techniques will assist them in any classroom. Many assessment tools for ESL/ELD students will be formative, both in assessment of understanding of concepts and the acquisition and practice of the specifically identified language forms necessary to express those concepts.

Activities in this course profile suggest formative and summative assessment strategies and tools. The diagnostic element of assessment in Unit 1 is necessitated by the expectation that this course may draw students with diverse skills and knowledge and who may represent the widest range of cultural, ethnic, religious, and language backgrounds.

Each unit contains a variety of formative assessments. A summative evaluation of each unit is achieved through one of two methods: an evaluation of the highest consistent level of assessment throughout the unit or by a summative assessment activity. In the two developed units, summative evaluation activities have been prepared.

Seventy per cent of the grade will be based on assessments and evaluations conducted throughout the course. Thirty per cent of the grade will be based on a final evaluation in the form of an examination, performance, essay, and/or other method of evaluation.

v Unit 6: A National Portfolio in a Global Context (20th Century)

Activity Description

Each student in the class shall be assigned (or, preferably, will choose) a nation of the world from a list presented by the teacher. The list represents five distinct regions: Central and South America (including the Caribbean), Africa, Australasia, Europe, and the Middle East. Each region should be represented equally, in order to create a ‘balance’ of global considerations.

The student is responsible for two activities during this unit:

1.   The National Portfolio: The student creates a Portfolio comprised of two parts:

a)   an essential guide to knowing the nation. Suggested elements are geographic orientation, resources, neighbouring nations, political and economic structures, predominant languages, races, religions, and history. The student identifies the significant expressions of the nation, through its traditions, dress, music, food, literature, and art. The student becomes the class ‘expert’ on the nation.

b)   An informed commentary on the condition of the nation at the present time, including an analysis of problems, personalities, economic conditions, foreign relations, etc. This commentary may be presented in a variety of ways: through essay, poster, project, debate, video/computer illustration, creative writing, or as an independent oral exercise.

2.   The United Nations Simulation

Students first sit in an informal ‘assembly’ of nations from their region of world. After presenting their material to their peers in regional groupings, the groups gather in a mini-UN simulation in order to discuss resolutions brought forth either by individual nations as represented by the student, regional assemblies of students, or by the teacher. Students represent the interests of their nation/regions as they understand them rather than present personal views. Resolutions should be varied, and it is suggested they ‘align’ with Units 3, 4, and 5. Resolutions could involve conflict resolution in a designated area, the implementation of economic sanctions against a ‘rogue state’, and famine relief strategies.

Activity Resources

Urban students often have access to four or five daily newspapers, while rural or northern students may have access only to weekly papers. Online newspaper websites should be identified. School library staff may become involved in photocopying periodicals and newspapers delivered to school, and accommodations made to link students to resources on regular basis. A daily ‘current affairs’ component would be valuable. Encourage students to use travel literature, websites, video, and film, as well as current periodicals. An exemplar is available in the Lands, Peoples and Culture series of books. (See overview Resources.)

Activity Teaching/Learning Strategies

·         The teacher may restrict choice of nations, particularly in small classes, to ensure adequate regional and global representation. The teacher introduces an outline of structure and function of United Nations and develops a template to record instances of UN action taken from study in Units 3, 4,
and 5.

·         The teacher outlines the resolutions to be discussed in the simulation, which have been previously created in discussion with the class. The teacher outlines the format of the UN simulation.

·         The regional assemblies are informal forums created to share points of view, develop regional responses to the resolutions, and to enhance student confidence before the formal UN simulation. Students should be encouraged to adopt traditional dress, use traditional greetings, etc., while engaged in the simulation.

·         The UN simulation begins with an official introduction and reading of the proposed resolutions by the Secretary General. Each resolution is debated in turn, with each nation presenting a formal statement and perhaps amendments to the proposal. General debate continues, followed by a vote.

·         The concluding session, a debriefing, could begin with the CBC News in Review, “The U.N. at Fifty”.

Accommodations

Every effort is made to assist all students in achieving success in Twentieth-Century History: Global and Regional Perspectives. Specific adaptations and accommodations are recommended.

Teachers are encouraged to work with the Special Education teacher to review students’ Individual Education Plans (IEPs) and decide upon the best course of action to assist them in meeting the expectations of this course. There are many enrichment opportunities for students to explore the issues, personalities, literature, and arts in greater depth and from quite different, and more complex, global perspectives.

The proficiency levels, outlined in The Ontario Curriculum, Grades 9 to 12, English as a Second Language and English Literacy Development, 2000, provide teachers with a guide to receiving and accommodating these learners in the regular classroom.

No assumption can be made of ESL/ELD learner’s prior knowledge and skill levels as described by the History curriculum for Grades 1-8 and Grade 10 (History and Civics); relevant historical and cultural background knowledge may need to be taught. The ESL/ELD learner’s self-esteem and motivation to learn benefit greatly when courses allow expression of their individual skills, interests, and varied life experiences in the family, communities, and countries of origin; sensitivity to the diversity of cultural, ethnic, religious beliefs and customs, socio-economic levels, and family structures of newcomer students entails accommodations to the structuring of learning experiences and resources. This course, with its global and regional perspective, should provide those students with an opportunity to enrich the classroom.

Resources

Note Concerning Permissions

Units in this profile make reference to the use of specific texts, magazines, films, and videos. Before reproducing materials for student use from books and magazines, teachers need to ensure that their board has a Cancopy licence and that resources they wish to use are covered by this licence. Before screening videos for their students, teachers need to ensure that their board/school has obtained the appropriate public performance videocassette licence from an authorized distributor (e.g., Audio Cine Films Inc.). Teachers are also reminded that much of the material on the Internet is protected by copyright. That copyright is usually owned by the person or organization that created the work. Reproduction of any work or a substantial part of any work on the Internet is not allowed without the permission of the owner.

Print

Arment, James, ed. Encyclopedia of Conflicts Since World War II. Armonk: Sharpe Reference, 1999.

Canada: World View - From Sir Wilfred Laurier to Jean Chretien, Issue 6. Canadian Dept of Foreign Affairs and International Trade, 1999.

Cook, Chris. World Political Almanac. New York: Facts on File, 2001.

Derbyshire, Dennis and Ian Derbyshire. Encyclopedia of World Political Systems. Armonk: Sharpe Reference, 2000.

Gibbins, Roger and Loleen Youngman. Mindscapes: Political Ideologies Towards the 21st Century. Toronto: McGraw-Hill Ryerson, 1996.

Global Profiles Series. New York: Facts on File, 1999.

Goff, Moss, Terry, and Upshur. The Twentieth Century: A Brief Global History, 5th Ed. New York: McGraw-Hill, 1998. ISBN 0-070023566

Grun, Bernard. The Timetables of History, 3rd Ed. Toronto: Simon and Schuster, 1990.
ISBN 0-671-74271

Hammond Atlas of the 20th Century. Windsor: World Almanac Education, 1995.

Harshman, R. and C. Hannell. The Human World: A Changing Place. Toronto: John Wiley and Sons, 1985. ISBN 0-471-79796-0

Howard, M. and W.R. Louis. The Oxford History of the Twentieth Century. Toronto: Oxford, 1998.
ISBN 0-19-820428-03

Jarvis, Aliphat, Bain, and DesRivieres. War and Peace. Toronto: Prentice Hall/Ginn, 1996. (from: A History and Geography Sourcebook Series) ISBN 0-13-459439-84

Jennings, Peter and Todd Brewster. The Century. Toronto: Doubleday, 1998. ISBN 0-385-48327-9

Lands, Peoples and Cultures Series (National Profiles). St. Catherines: Crabtree, 1997.

Powell, John. Biographical Encyclopedia of 20th Century World Leaders. Tarrytown: Marshall Cavendish, 2000.

Roberts, J.M. The Penguin History of the Twentieth Century: The History of the World, 1901 to the Present. Toronto: Penguin, 1999. ISBN 0-71-399257-3

Townley, Edward, ed. Dictionary of 20th Century European History. Chicago: Fitzroy-Dearborn, 1999. ISBN 1579581277

The Twentieth Century Great Events. Magill, 1992 and 1996.

Zelinski, Draper, Quinlan, and McFadden. Twentieth Century Viewpoints: An Interpretive History. Toronto: Oxford University Press, 1996. ISBN 0-19-541114-5

Westell, Ian. E. World in Conflict 1914-1945. Chicago: Fitzroy-Dearborn, 1999. ISBN 1579582125

Catholic Print Resources

Alhers, Julia and Michael Wilt. Christian Justice: Sharing God’s Goodness. Minnesota: St. Mary’s Press, 1995. ISBN 0-88489-330-8

Catechism of the Catholic Church. Ottawa: Publication Service Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops, 1992. ISBN 0-88997-281-8

The Jerusalem Bible. New York: Doubleday and Company Inc., 1968. ISBN 0-385-01156-3

“The War Reports,” Backgrounder, Canada and the World. April 1995.

Websites

Note: The URLs for the websites have been verified by the writer prior to publication. Given the frequency with which these designations change, teachers should always verify the websites prior to assigning them for student use.

 

Centre for International Health Studies – www.cihi.com (needs Adobe Acrobat reader)

CNN – www.cnn.com/world/index

Education Planet Resource list – www.educationplanet.com/search/history

Encyclopedia Britannica – www.britannica.com

Encyclopaedia of Women’s History – http://teleportcom/~megaines/woman.html

Hague International Model United Nations – www.thimun.org/

History Channel – www.historychannel.com/index

Holocaust – www.ushmm.org/misc_bin/add-goback/education/guidelines.html

Holocaust Museum – www.ushmm.org/index.html

Index of Resources for History – http://Kuhttp.cc.ukans.edu/history.index.html

Links to Events of 20th Century – www.cannylink.com/history20thcentur.html

Links – www.studyweb.com

Model United Nations – www.imuna.org/current

NATO – www.nato.org

National Conference of Catholic Bishops – www.nccbusc.org

Newspaper Links – www.intercom.com.au/intercom/newsprs/index.html

Recent History; Up Close and Personal – http://library.thinkquest.org/3483

Smithsonian Institute – http://educate.si.edu

Statistics Canada – www.statscan.ca

Statistics Canada: comparative health guide – www.statscan.ca/english/kits/health5.htm

St. Peter’s College Library – www.spc.edu/lib/peace

United Nations – www.un.org

UN listings of social indicators – www.un.org/depts/unsd/social/

UN Population Studies – www.popin.org.pop.

20th-Century Eras – www.kenmoreshs.qld.edu.au/resourcecentre/era20c.html

20th Century by Decades – http://dewey.chs.chico.kit.ca.us.decs.html

Film/Video/CD-ROM

CBC News in Review.

20th Century History. BBC video, 1986.

The Cold War Series. CCN video, 1998.

Battlefield series. Time/Life Video, 1996.

World War II series. CBS Video, 1986.

Human Resources

Local branches of Canadian Legion, community churches, ethnic and religious organizations, school guidance department, historical societies, service clubs, visiting dignitaries, missionaries, representatives of local businesses.

OSS Considerations

This course profile is designed to assist teachers in the implementing of Twentieth-Century History: Global and Regional Perspectives, Grade 11, Open, and is based on curriculum outlined in The Ontario Curriculum, Grades 11 and 12, Canadian and World Studies, 2000. This course meets the requirements as an additional compulsory credit for graduation purposes as outlined in Ontario Secondary Schools, Grades 9-12, Program and Diploma Requirements, 1999. The foundation for assessment, evaluation and reporting practices is outlined in The Ontario Curriculum, Grades 9 to 12, Program Planning and Assessment, 2000. This course offers opportunity for implementing guidance/career and cooperative education policies that relate to sensitivity to cultural interchange, such as teaching, media, policing, service industry, and international work. As well, cross-curriculum development in computer skills and community resource utilization is significant.

 


Coded Expectations, Twentieth-Century History: Global and Regional Perspectives, Grade 11, Open, CHT3O

Communities: Local, National, and Global

Overall Expectations

COV.01 · demonstrate an understanding of the nature of and relationships between communities and nations throughout the world at the beginning of the twentieth century;

COV.02 · describe the effects of World War I, World War II, the Cold War, and selected regional conflicts on the nations of the world and on international relations over the course of the twentieth century;

COV.03 · describe significant characteristics of the world community at the end of the twentieth century.

Specific Expectations

A Century Begins

CO1.01 – identify the major blocs of empires and former empires throughout the world as they existed at the beginning of the century (e.g., British, Chinese, French, German, Russian, Spanish);

CO1.02 – describe significant nations and communities and the relationships between them at the beginning of the century (e.g., Britain and the Boers, Spain and Cuba, the United States and Panama, Japan and Manchuria);

CO1.03 – describe the relationship between the developing world and the European powers at the beginning of the century (e.g., “the White Man’s Burden”, resource exploitation, spread of European “civilization”).

A Century of Conflict and Cooperation

CO2.01 – describe the causes, course, and results of significant local and regional conflicts (e.g., in Serbia in 1914, Northern Ireland, India and Pakistan, Castro’s Cuba, the Falkland Islands, Afghanistan);

CO2.02 – evaluate the effectiveness of various processes used to promote peace in regional disputes (e.g., the League of Nations’ oil sanctions against Italy in 1935, Neville Chamberlain’s diplomatic intervention at Munich, L.B. Pearson’s “peacekeepers” in Cyprus, NATO military intervention in Kuwait);

CO2.03 – demonstrate an understanding of the causes, course, and results of World War I and World War II (e.g., alliance systems, rise of fascism; Vimy, Normandy; Treaty of Versailles, economic dislocation);

CO2.04 – demonstrate an understanding of the causes, course, and results of the Cold War (e.g., Stalinism; Cuban missile crisis, Olympic boycotts; destruction of the Berlin Wall);

CO2.05 – describe shifts in the international balance of power that took place during the twentieth century (e.g., the rise to prominence of the United States, the rise and collapse of the Soviet Union, the rise of Asian nations);

CO2.06 – describe Canada’s changing role in international affairs during the twentieth century (e.g., as a colonial adjunct, a newly independent nation, a major partner in war efforts, a peacekeeper and middle power, a leader in humanitarian causes).

The End of the Century

CO3.01 – describe and assess the impact of significant local and regional conflicts that occurred at the end of the twentieth century (e.g., in East Timor, Sri Lanka, Somalia, Rwanda; in connection with the North Atlantic fishery);

CO3.02 – demonstrate an understanding of the nature of the world’s power structure at the end of the Cold War (e.g., dominance of the United States, economic strength of Europe and Asia, role of religious fundamentalism in the Middle East, Russian assertion of territorial hegemony);

CO3.03 – demonstrate an understanding of the influence of international organizations in defining new concepts of “global communities” (e.g., United Nations, North Atlantic Treaty Organization, la Francophonie, World Trade Organization).

Change and Continuity

Overall Expectations

CCV.01 · describe key factors that facilitated change during the twentieth century, and describe the nature of that change;

CCV.02 · describe key factors that tended to maintain continuity during the twentieth century;

CCV.03 · demonstrate an understanding of the use and importance of chronology and cause-and-effect relationships in the study of twentieth-century history.

Specific Expectations

The Process of Change

CC1.01 – demonstrate an understanding of the nature and magnitude of technological and economic change during the twentieth century (e.g., the automobile, electrification, computerization; progressive taxation, consumerism, global capitalization);

CC1.02 – describe the nature and magnitude of social and political change in the twentieth century (e.g., demographic developments, changes in gender roles, urbanization; expansion of the franchise, acceptance of democratic ideals, emergence of new national powers);

CC1.03 – describe the role of individuals and groups who facilitated the process of change in the twentieth century (e.g., Henry Ford, J.M. Keynes, Joseph Stalin, Mao Zedong, Nelson Mandela, Bill Gates; suffragists, the American and international film industry, Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries);

CC1.04 – demonstrate an understanding of the effectiveness of different processes of change in the twentieth century (e.g., planned versus spontaneous change, slow versus rapid change, the use of violent or pacifist strategies).

The Process of Continuity

CC2.01 – demonstrate an understanding of the ongoing movement towards decolonization and national independence throughout the twentieth century (e.g., in Ireland, Egypt, India, Zimbabwe, Panama);

CC2.02 – demonstrate an understanding of the efforts of organizations and agencies to improve the human condition throughout the world (e.g., International Red Cross/Crescent, Roman Catholic Church, United Nations social and economic agencies, Médecins Sans Frontières, International Court of Justice);

CC2.03 – explain how belief in progress and technological improvement provides a framework for understanding the history of the twentieth century (e.g., developments in agriculture, social welfare legislation, growth of education, more effective communication, genetic engineering).

Chronology and Cause and Effect

CC3.01 – demonstrate an understanding of the significance of timelines in the study of selected subjects in twentieth-century history (e.g., the course of the Russian Revolution, the sequence of migrations of people to the United States, the decolonization of Africa);

CC3.02 – demonstrate an understanding of the cause-and-effect relationship between decisions taken in history and their consequences in helping to shape significant historical events (e.g., the conditions imposed by the Treaty of Versailles in 1919 and the outbreak of World War II, the decision to create the state of Israel and subsequent tensions in the Middle East, the formation of trading blocs and their possible effect on national autonomy);

CC3.03 – explain the interplay among political, social, economic, and cultural issues, using key examples from the twentieth century (e.g., World War I and isolationism, the Great Depression and social welfare legislation, fishing practices and territorial waters, civil disobedience and economic disruption).

Citizenship and Heritage

Overall Expectations

CHV.01 · demonstrate an understanding of the importance of nationalism and internationalism in twentieth-century societies;

CHV.02 · analyse the relationship between the individual and those in authority in various societies during the twentieth century;

CHV.03 · demonstrate an understanding of the variety of cultural expressions throughout the world in the twentieth century.

Specific Expectations

Nationalism and Internationalism

CH1.01 – describe key elements that have contributed to the development of national identities in the twentieth century (e.g., language, traditions, perceived history, religion);

CH1.02 – demonstrate an understanding of how nationalism has affected existing institutions and the lives of average citizens (e.g., growth of Basque and Québécois identities, efforts to establish Jewish and Palestinian homelands, Sikh and Hindu clashes, Islamic fundamentalism and Cold War rivalries);

CH1.03 – describe key elements that have helped to create a sense of international and global unity in the twentieth century (e.g., political ideologies such as pacifism, communism, and socialism; international women’s movements; humanitarian idealism; global environmental concerns);

CH1.04 – demonstrate an understanding of how internationalism has affected existing institutions and the lives of average citizens (e.g., idealism in League of Nations agencies, anti-war and anti-nuclear protests, the Green movement);

CH1.05 – analyse how and why certain individuals have become the accepted symbols of national or international movements (e.g., Lenin, Gandhi, Eva Peron, Eleanor Roosevelt, Albert Einstein, Ho Chi Minh, Margaret Thatcher, Nelson Mandela, Mother Teresa).

The Rights of Individuals and Groups

CH2.01 – demonstrate an understanding of the variety of interpretations concerning the position of the individual in society (e.g., labour and class solidarity, racial consciousness, Islamic and Christian fundamentalism, national conformity, the “Me” Generation);

CH2.02 – analyse key factors that have interfered with individual and group rights during the twentieth century (e.g., secret police and rigid censorship, policies of racial and ethnic exclusion and cleansing, gender-role restrictions, poverty);

CH2.03 – demonstrate an understanding of the growth of individual and group democratic rights in many societies during the twentieth century (e.g., extension of the secret ballot, reduction of gender and age restrictions, efforts to improve global literacy and health, spread of ideas via global telecommunications technologies).

Art and Culture

CH3.01 – describe critically selected forms of artistic expression that were maintained, altered, or developed during the twentieth century (e.g., classical, minimalist, and atonal music; Kabuki theatre; Chinese revolutionary opera; traditionalist and abstract-expressionist art; modern architecture and design);

CH3.02 – demonstrate a critical understanding of key connections between artistic expression and its socio-political context in the twentieth century (e.g., blues and Black America, Soviet socialist realism in art and music, Fascist and Nazi martial pageantry, beat poetry and atomic angst, Asian martial arts film genre);

CH3.03 – analyse the spread of and reaction to American pop culture during the twentieth century (e.g., Hollywood movies, jazz, rock ’n’ roll, blue jeans, McDonald’s and Disney);

CH3.04 – explain the development of modern indigenous art forms (e.g., cinematic styles and music in India and Latin America, use of traditional costumes and fashions in Africa and Asia, revival and restoration of traditional cultural sites such as Angor Wat, Xi’an, and Machu Picchu).

Social, Economic, and Political Structures

Overall Expectations

SEV.01 · describe key changes in the structures and activities of everyday life during the twentieth century;

SEV.02 · describe the essential features of economic life in the twentieth century;

SEV.03 · demonstrate an understanding of the variety of political structures experienced during the twentieth century.

Specific Expectations

Everyday Life

SE1.01 – describe the effect of the twentieth century on the structure of the family and on the individual within the family (e.g., broadening of gender roles, increased participation of mothers in the labour force, increased influence of youth peer groups, China’s one-child policy, absentee family members in migrant labour markets);

SE1.02 – demonstrate an understanding of how the genocides of the twentieth century (e.g., the Nazi Holocaust, mass executions under Pol Pot, the Rwandan genocide, ethnic cleansing) have affected not only the victims and victimizers, but also the world at large;

SE1.03 – describe the nature and effect of changes in the world of work during the twentieth century (e.g., shift from agriculture to industry, rise of the service industry, need for technical knowledge, development of labour-saving devices, use of assembly lines and robotics in industry, shortened work week and the concept of leisure time);

SE1.04 – demonstrate an understanding of the relationship between the individual and religion in the Western and non-Western worlds during the twentieth century (e.g., Creationist debates, decreased church attendance, cults, theocratic governments, clashes of religions);

SE1.05 – demonstrate an understanding of the effects on daily life of increased interaction between peoples of the world (e.g., exposure to new ideas, foods, and fads; fear of newcomers; creation of ethnic ghettos; westernization of language).

Economic Structures

SE2.01 – identify the primary characteristics of economic structures in developed nations (e.g., the belief in free enterprise, competition, private property; Keynesian and post-Keynesian economic theory; liberalized world trade);

SE2.02 – analyse the successes and failures of command economies (e.g., the Soviet Union, the People’s Republic of China, Cuba, Tito’s Yugoslavia);

SE2.03 – describe and assess the local, national, and global implications of the major economic crises of the twentieth century (e.g., the Great Depression, China’s Great Leap Forward, the 1973 OPEC crisis, eastern Europe and the collapse of the Soviet Union, the Asian financial crisis of the 1990s);

SE2.04 – demonstrate an understanding of the problems that face the underdeveloped world in achieving economic stability and prosperity (e.g., lack of capital investment, exploitation of citizens as cheap labour, fragile taxation basis, political corruption, foreign ownership, debt load);

SE2.05 – demonstrate an understanding of the reasons for and the implications of the growth of global economic relationships (e.g., European Community, North American Free Trade Agreement, General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade, World Trade Organization).

Forms of Government

SE3.01 – describe various ideological positions that are represented in the “political spectrum” (e.g., communism, socialism, liberalism, conservatism, fascism);

SE3.02 – describe the key elements of a variety of systems of government (e.g., Western congressional and parliamentary systems, African single-party systems, Swiss federalism, Swedish social democracy, Russian and Chinese communism, Islamic theocracies);

SE3.03 – demonstrate an understanding of obstacles to the implementation of stable forms of government in developing nations (e.g., low literacy rate, poor communications, absence of liberal tradition, economic challenges, concentration of wealth and power);

SE3.04 – demonstrate an understanding of the structure and function of international governmental organizations and agreements that have attempted to provide global leadership (e.g., League of Nations, United Nations, North Atlantic Treaty Organization, Geneva Conventions, Hague conferences).

Methods of Historical Inquiry

Overall Expectations

HIV.01 · demonstrate an ability to locate, select, and organize information from a variety of sources;

HIV.02 · demonstrate an understanding of the steps in the process of historical interpretation and analysis;

HIV.03 · communicate opinions based on effective research clearly and concisely;

HIV.04 · demonstrate an ability to think creatively, manage time efficiently, and work effectively in independent and collaborative study.

Specific Expectations

Research

HI1.01 – formulate relevant questions for research and inquiry, drawing on examples from twentieth-century history (e.g., What were the technological innovations that altered the nature of war in the twentieth century? What were the motives behind the conditions set in the Treaty of Versailles? How did the enfranchisement of women alter twentieth-century society?);

HI1.02 – conduct organized research, using a variety of information sources (e.g., textbooks and reference books, audio-visual materials, Internet sites);

HI1.03 – organize research findings, using a variety of methods and forms (e.g., note taking; graphs and charts, maps and diagrams).

Interpretation and Analysis

HI2.01 – demonstrate an ability to distinguish bias, prejudice, stereotyping, or a lack of substantiation in statements, arguments, and opinions;

HI2.02 – identify key interpretations of twentieth-century history (e.g., Marxist, liberal, neo-conservative);

HI2.03 – describe key relationships in the data studied (e.g., chronological ties, cause and effect, similarities and differences);

HI2.04 – demonstrate an ability to develop a point of view that reflects effective research into diverse sources.

Communication

HI3.01 – communicate effectively, using a variety of styles and forms (e.g., reports or essays, debates, seminars, interviews, group presentations);

HI3.02 – use an accepted form of documentation to acknowledge information sources (e.g., footnotes, endnotes, or author-date citations; bibliographies or reference lists);

HI3.03 – express opinions and conclusions clearly and in a manner that respects the opinions of others.

Creativity, Collaboration, and Independence

HI4.01 – demonstrate an ability to think creatively in reaching conclusions about both assigned questions and issues and those conceived independently;

HI4.02 – use a variety of time-management strategies effectively;

HI4.03 – demonstrate an ability to work independently and collaboratively and to seek and respect the opinions of others;

HI4.04 – identify various career opportunities related to the study of history (e.g., researcher, museum curator, archivist, teacher, journalist, writer).

 

 

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