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Canadian Hisory 1201-1

Test Moved- May 9, 2012

The Canadian History test has been moved to Wednesday May 9, 2012 to best accommodate all students. 


Chapter 8 Test

Students are responsible  for the following information for their test on Chapter 8:

-Politicking 1970-1980's

Pierre Trudeau, Joe Clark, NDP pgs. 323-326

- October Crisis, 1970

FLQ, War Measures Act "Just Watch Me" pgs. 328-329

-Parti Quebecois comes to power, 1976

Rene Lesvesqes, Bill 22 v. Bill 101 pgs. 330-332 (October Crisis and PQ Sections will have an essay question derived from them)

-First Nations Peoples Rights

White paper v. Red paper, Harold Cardinal, James Bay Hydroelectric Project, Mackenzie Valley Pipeline pgs. 347-351 (essay question from this section)

-Canada US Relations

Manhattan Incident, FIRA pgs. 353-356

-Multiculturalism

CIDA, CUSO, refugees,peacekeeping, immigration pgs. 357-360; 367

Test Format

10 Multiple Choice

5 Short Answer Questions

1 Essay Questions


The Great Canadian Research Project

Students in Canadian History 1201 are being asked to do a major research project on What Does It Mean To Be Canadian?

Is it playing hockey? Or speaking two official languages? Is it having a prime minister? Are we defined by our natural resources? Is Canada increasingly coming to mean providing the world with energy (Ft. MacMurray?)

To this end we watched several video clips- I Am Canadian (Molson Canadian beer commercial); Logdriver's Waltz (Film Board of Canada); The Blackfly Song (Film Board of Canada) and a movie, Being Caribou, also from the Film Board of Canada.All can be found at Youtube.com. Students can certainly include these videos in their project. 

I, as the teacher, have left it up to students to decide what, exactly, it means to be Canadian. However, they will have to present their findings in a report (3-5 pages double spaced), a powerpoint demonstration (10 slide minimum), poster, oral presentation (3 minutes) , film (1-2 minutes), etc. They must conclusively say what it means to be Canadian from their point of view.

These projects are due Monday April 30, 2012. Please forward any and all questions to me at cpeters@stbonaventurescollege.ca


Chapter 7 Test!

Test on Chapter 7

Tuesday March 20, 2012 Day 5

Matching, Multple Choice, Short Answer, Essay

Content: 7.1, 7.2, 7.3 p. 250-263; 7.5 p.272-274; 7.6, 7.7 p. 275-283; 7.8 p. 284-5; 7.9, 7.11p. 301-314


Chapter 6 TEST

Content for the upcoming test in Chapter 6

League of Nations, Appeasement (munich Pact), Non-Intervention (Spain); Lebensraum; War in Europe; Nazi-Soviet Pact of non-Aggression; Japanese attack on Pearl harbour, Hawai'i; Dieppe Raid, italian Campaign, D-Day; Canadian Liberation ofthe Netherlands; Defense of Hong Kong; War at Sea; War in the Air; Camp X; Women in WW2, at home and abroad; War at Home- production, propaganda and conscription crisis; Wartime Excesses and Restrictions- pacifists, conscientious objectors, refugees, treatment of Japanese-Canadians (Joy Kogawa); the war ends; bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki with nuclear weapons 


Ch. 6 Content for Exam

Crucial to exam success:

6.1 Lead up to the war; League of Nations, Canadian isolationism, Manchurian Crisis, 1932; invasion of Abyssinnia, Failure of the League; Sanish Civil War; Mac-pap Battalion; Non-Intervention 


Chapter 5 Material for Exam!

The following is crucial for Chapter 5 studying in light of the exam Friday December 9, 2011:

vulnerable economy; reliance of staples; reliance on exports; stcks bought 'on margin'; causes of Great Depression page 142; business cycle; Palliser triangle; HOBO; SHANTY TOWNS/ HOBOJUNGLES; riding the rails; inequality and intolerace during the Depression; movies, radio, Dionne Quintuplets- distractions from the Depression; relief camps; On To Ottawa Trek; Bennett coffee- roasted wheat; Communist Party, CCF-J.S. Woodsworth; Social Credit; Union Nationale-Marice Duplessis

 


Chapter 4 Content- Exam

Following is considered integral to any study of Chapter 4 for the Canadian History exam on December 9, 2011:

4.2 Boom Times- manufacturing sector grows; 4.4 Barriers for Women- whyweren't women part of the economic 'good times', Charlotte Whitton 


Chapter 3 Content for exam

World War One-Ch. 3

Alliance system, 28 June 1914- assassination of Archduke Ferdinand by Gavrilo Princip; 5 August 1914;Sam Hughes; Valcartier; NL regiment- beaumont Hamel; technology- airplanes, submarines (underseeoten),tanks, machine guns, trench; Capt. Scrimger- Cluny macPherson; John Mccrae; CEF; Battles of Ypres, omme and Vimy Ridge; Arthur Currie; Canadian nationalism; Halifax explosion; enemy aliens; conscription crisis, 1917; Robert Borden; union Government; Wartime elections Act; Nov.11, 1918

 


Exam-Ch. 2 Material

The following material from Chapter 2 is crucial in one's study for the exam, Friday December 9,2011:

Clifford Sifton, open door policy, closed door policy, Doukhobours, rail routes, multiculturalism, Alberta, saskatchewan 1905, changing economy of the early 20th Century, Sam McLaughlin, Max Aitken, urban poor, child labour, discrimination, racism, Home Children, railways, CPR, patterns of settlement, Adelaide Hoodless, Boer War 1899-1902, Naval Issue 1911, Alaskan boundary Dispute  


Chapter 5 Test

Test scheduled for Tuesday November 29, 2011 on Ch. 5- The Great Depression.

Format: 20 Multiple Choice, 1 essay question

Material: Vulnerable Economy; stock market crash, reliance on staple products,reliance on exports, weakness of European economies, overdepedence on US as a market, overproduction of goods, drought in Prairies; hard times- the Palliser Trangle destryed by overproduction of wheat in Sasatchewan, Alberta, Dust Bowl; depression less pervasive in Maritimes, British Columbia; hoboes; hobo jungles; riding the ails; looking for work; Canadian helping Canadians; intolerance towards foreigners, Aboriginal peoples, Jews, Blacks, Chinese and Japanese immigrants; destractions from economic plight- movies, Dionne Quintuplets, radio, fairs, exhibitions, Aimee Semple Mcherson; Emil Carr; fighting the depression; private and public relie, R.B. Bennett- public works,relief camps, On To Ottawa Trek, and the respose to it by the government; R.B. Bennett slow response to Depression; 1935 election defeat (first past the post electoral system); New politcal parties- CCF (JS Woodsworth), Communist, Social Credit, Union Nationale, Maureice Duplessis   


Essay- Due October 26, 2011

Essay question. Develop one of the following in 5 paragraph format for wednesday.

-Explore and explain the effects new technology had on World war 1.

- How did the assassinaion of Archduke Franz Ferdinand start WW1 and bring Canada into 4 years of bloody war?


Chapter 3 Test- October 28, 2011

Students in Grade 9 are responsible for the following material on their test on Chapter 3- World War 1:

alliance system, Triple Alliance (Italy, Austria-Hungary, Germany), Triple Entente (France, Britain, Russia), assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand by Gavrilo Princip, war begins of 28 June 1914, Schlieffen Plan, Canada in WW1, Valcartier, Sam Hughes, technology in WW1- trench warfare, aeroplanes, submarines, tanks; Canadian Expeditionary Force (CEF), Ypres, Le Somme, Vimy Ridge, Arthur Currie, Battles at Sea, in the air; War Measures Act, enemy aliens, Conscription Crisis, Robert Borden, Wilfred Laurier, Union Government, Henri Bourassa, Talbot Papineau, Women- suffrage success fig 3.8.d, propaganda, legacy of the war, autonomous nations, Treaty of Versailles 

Students can expect 20 Multiple Choice questions, a choice of 8, of which they develop 5, short answer questions and a choice of 2, develop one essay response.


Major Research Project

Please have a look at, and sign up for SBC-Net Canadian History for details on your Major Research Project! 


Material for Ch.2 Test

Students should be preparing for a test on Monday Oct. 3. The test will be made up of 20 Multiple Choice (20 Marks), 5 Short answer (20 Marks) and 1 essay (10 marks)

In themes this chapter breaks up into

1. Immigration- Clifford Sifton, open-door immigration policy; closed-door immigration policy; Doukhobours; mennonites; Westerm Canada; Saskatchewan; Alberta; Ukranians, Russians, Polsh, Germans; Canadian Cultural mosaic; railways; urbanization

2. Changing Economy- Primary sector; farming, fishing, mining, logging; manufacturing and service sectors; corporations; Sam McLaughlin; changing technology- electricity, radios, etc; Max Aitken; labour unions; TLC, Grain Growers association, FPU; child labour; immigrant labour; women's rights; suffragettes, Adelaide Hunter Hoodless

3. Canadian Nationalism- The 20th Century is Canada's- Wilfred Laurier; Alaskan Boundary Dispute; Naval Service Issue; French anger at Britsh imperialism; The Boer War inSouth Africa; Laurier's comprmise

This is the important material for this test.

remember, your essay needs a clearly defined thesis statement. This is turn must be supported by supporting arguments! And your conclusion proves your thesis statement- your main idea- correct.


Thursday September 29

Students are to choose, and develop one of the following two questions in proper historical essay format. Use textbooks for information,plus class notes.

1. Canada was too closely allied with Great Britain and should become its own country. Agree/ disagree

2. Canada was becoming more ethnically diverse and thus a stronger country. Agree/ disagree 


Canadian History 1201 Course Outline

 

Canadian History 1201

 

Term 1- 40%

 

Participation 5%

Essay Writing 20%

Term 1 Major Research Project 20%

Tests 30%

Midterm Exam 25%

 

Term 2- 60%

 

Participation 5%

Essay Writing 15%

Term 2 Major Research Project 20%

Tests 30%

Final Exam 30%


Readings and Questions

Please have read pages 32-33 on Industrial Growth and page 35 on sam McLaughlin. Please do questions 1,2 and 4 on page 35 which correspond to the readings.

Due Monday Sept. 19,2011. 


Essay Due Monday

Students are reminded to finish their essay main idea and supporting ideas on the blatant injustice o f the SBC School Uniform policy for Monday morning first period. They are also reminded that we will work on the concluding paragraph in class on Monday. 

Essays should be approximately three quarter-one full page in length