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About the Test • Location & Date: Aux Gym @ 7:15AM on Friday 5/8 • Bring – Several sharpened #2 pencils with erasers – Black/Blue pens – Conventional watch – Photo ID – A note if you are leaving after the exam (no phone calls) DO NOT BRING ANY electronic devices, books, paper, watches that make noise, food or drink Exam Format Section I 55 Multiple Choice Test 55 mins 4 Short Answer Questions 50 mins 40% of grade 20% of grade Section II 1 DBQ (not period 1 or 9) 55 mins 1 Long Essay (choice of 2) 35 mins Total 3 hours 15 mins 25% of grade 15% of grade Test Taking Suggestions • Multiple Choice – Question sets – start with the easiest for you – Not chronological and not increasing in difficulty – Fill in the scantron as you go along (carefully!) – Guess if you must and don’t change answers • Short Answers – Start with the easiest – Label each part and answer sequentially – Directly answer the question (no fillers) – Write in full sentences – Show you know some history! DBQ Essay (“COATS”) Rubric Points Thesis must do more than restate the question 1 Analysis of Analyzes the content of the all or all but one the documents documents AND one of the following (Context, Audience, POV or Purpose) 3 Outside • Offers historical examples beyond the documents to support Information the thesis 1 Contextualization Synthesis • Connects the historical phenomena to relevant broader historical events 1 • Recognizes and accounts for contrary historical evidence • Connects the topic to other periods or geographic areas 1 DBQ Essay Compare and contrast views of United States overseas expansion in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Evaluate how understandings of national identity, at the time, shaped these views. • Outside Information – Monroe Doctrine, Dollar Diplomacy, Moral Diplomacy. • Contextualization – Social Darwinism, Jim Crow, Social Gospel, Progressivism – Yellow journalism, Philippine Insurgency, Roosevelt Corollary, missionary activity. • Synthesis – Linking the argument to Washington’s Farewell Address; manifest destiny, rise of US power after WWII Long Essay (“THES”) Rubric Points Thesis must do more than restate the question 1 Evidence Uses specific evidence to clearly and consistently supports thesis • • Historical • thinking skill • 2 Continuity and Change (do both) Comparison (similarities and differences) Causation (causes and/or effects of historical development) Periodization (how was this the historical development similar and different from events that preceded and followed it) 2 • Uses an added category of analysis Synthesis • Connects the argument to another historical period or geographic areas 1 Long Essay Evaluate the extent to which trans-Atlantic interactions from 1600 to 1763 contributed to maintaining continuity as well as fostering change in labor systems in the British North American colonies • Argument – Demand for labor but a change in labor systems – Labor systems changed but the conditions of the labor system remained the same • Support for Argument – Coercive labor (Indentured servitude, slavery), Bacon’s Rebellion, Middle passage, Cash crops (indigo, tobacco, rice), ideas of racial superiority • Application of Historical Thinking Skills – The high demand for labor in the colonies (continuity) the shift to African slaves (change) • Synthesis – Exploitation of labor (connect to late 19th C industrialization – Race-base labor system (connect to cause of Civil War) 1600-1776 1776-1789 1789-1828 1828-1836 1840’s 1861-1865 1865-1877 1865-1890 1870-1896 1870-1900 1898-1920 1900-1920 1917-1918 1918-1924 1919-1929 1929-1940 1941-1945 1948-1990 1954-1972 1963-1968 1968-1974 1974-1980 1980-1988 A. Great Depression & New Deal B. Reconstruction & Southern Redemption C. Reagan & New Federalism D. Gilded Age E. First Red Scare F. World War II G. American Imperialism H. Colonial Era I. Civil Rights Movement J. Granger & Populist Movements K. Nixon & Watergate L. Settlement of the West M. Roaring Twenties N. World War I O. Ford and Carter Presidencies P. Formation of the US Government Q. Federalist/Early National Era R. Progressive Movement S. Age of Jackson T. Cold War U. Age of Manifest Destiny V. Civil War W. LBJ & The Great Society http://ap.gilderlehrman.org/