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Tuesday January 27th, 2015

Grab the note sheet and sheet as you

enter!
Review yesterdays assignment
Syllabus Due Wednesday!
Daily Agenda
Review Dictators Map Questions
Notes
Expectations
Chapter 16, Section 1

Worksheet
The rest of yesterdays worksheet

Tuesday January 27th, 2015


Grab the worksheet as you enter
#TiredTuesday its a thing
Syllabus Due Wednesday!
Daily Agenda
Yesterdays worksheet
Crash Course Government
Worksheet

Chapter 16 Section 1
Worksheet
Work to complete the side with the map

first
this portion will be due at theJAPANE
start of class
BENITO
FRANCI
DICTAT tomorrow
JOSEPH
ADOLF
SE
MUSSOL
SCO
OR
STALIN
HITLER MILITAR
INI
FRANCO
ISTS
COUNTR
Y

DICTATORS THREATEN WORLD


PEACE
WHAT GEOGRAPHIC LIMITATIONS MIGHT HAVE LED

JAPAN TO EXPAND?
WHAT PROBLEMS MIGHT GERMANY FACE DURING
WWII CONSIDERING ITS LOCATION?
WHAT BENEFITS DOES GERMANY HAVE GIVEN ITS
LOCATION IN THE FUTURE WWII?
SPOILER ALERT: RUSSIA HAS TO FIGHT JAPAN AND
GERMANY (I KNOW RIGHT!?) IN WWII, WHY MIGHT
THIS BE A PROBLEM FOR RUSSIA?
CONSIDERING HOW FAR THE UNITED STATES IS
FROM THE TOTALITARIAN GOVERNMENTS, SHOULD
THE U.S. GET INVOLVED WITH THESE COUNTRIES
AFFAIRS? WHY?

The Social Studies Department


Course Offerings
SCHOOL YEAR

FRESHMAN

SOPHOMORE

JUNIOR

SENIOR

American History /
Economics
World History / Geography
Geography 1
World History / Geography
REQUIRED CLASS
1
American History /
2
Government/Civics
Geography 2
1 Semester
2 Semesters
1 Semester Each
1 Semester
CREDIT EARNED
1/2 Credit
1/2 Credit Each Semester 1/2 Credit Each Semester
1/2 Credit
AP Economics (11-12)
AP Economics (11-12)
AP Human Geography (9AP Government/Politics AP Government/Politics
ADVANCED PLACEMENT
AP American History (10)
12)
(11-12)
(11-12)
AP World History (11-12) AP World History (11-12)
2 Semesters
2 Semesters
2 Semesters Each Class
2 Semesters
CREDIT EARNED
1/2 Credit Each Semester
1 Credit
1 Credit Each Class
1 Credit
AP Human Geography (9AP Government and
ELECTIVE CHOICES*
12)
Psychology 1 (10-12)
Politics
All Electives Available
(2 Semesters, 1 Credit)*
(11-12)
AP Psychology (11-12)
Law 1: Criminal Law (9-12)

Psychology 2 (10-12)

All Electives Available


(2 Semesters, 1 Credit)*

Law 2: Human Rights and


the Law (9-12)
Mental Health (9-12)

Sociology (10-12)

Philosophy (11-12)

All Electives Available

Political Science (11-12)

All Electives Available

How notes work


Chapter
Section
Why it matters
Main Idea
Headings.
Questions
Essential question

Chapter Introduction
Main Idea: Germany invades neighboring

countries and launches the Holocaustthe


systematic killing of millions of Jews and other
non-Aryans. The Japanese attack on Pearl
Harbor ushers the U.S. into World War II.
ESSENTIAL QUESTION: COULD THE UNITED

STATES HAVE PREVENTED THE OUTBREAK OF


WORLD WAR II?

Chapter 16 Section 1
Dictators Threaten World Peace

Breaking it down
Main Idea: The rise of rulers

with total power in Europe


and Asia lead to World War II.
Why it matters now:

Dictators of the 1930s and


1940s changed the course of
history, making world
leaders especially watchful
for the actions of dictators
today.

The Road to War


ONE BLOOD DEMANDS ONE REICH. NEVER

WILL THE GERMAN NATION POSSESS THE


MORAL RIGHT TO ENGAGE IN COLONIAL
POLITICS UNTIL, AT LEAST, IT EMBRACES ITS
OWN SONS WITHIN A SINGLE STATE.
OPPRESSED TERRITORIES ARE LED BACK TO
THE BOSOM OF A COMMON REICH, NOT BY
FLAMING PROTESTS, BUT BY A MIGHTY
SWORD.
Adolf Hitler, Mein Kampf, 1925-26

What did Hitler suggest was needed for

Germany? How could/would this lead to war?

Nationalism Grips Europe and Asia


Failures of the World War I Peace Settlement
Treaty of Versailles causes anger, resentment in

Europe
Germany resents blame for war, loss of colonies,
border territories
Russia resents loss of lands used to create other
nations
New democracies flounder under social, economic
problems
Dictators rise; driven by nationalism, desire for more
territory
Joseph Stalin transforms the Soviet Union
1922 V. I. Lenin establishes Soviet Union after civil war
1924 Joseph Stalin takes over:
replaces private farms with collectives
creates second largest industrial power; famines kill millions
purges anyone who threatens his power; 813 million killed

Totalitarian government exerts almost complete

control over people

Nationalism (Continued)
The Rise of Fascism in Italy
Unemployment, inflation lead to bitter strikes, some communist-led
Middle, upper classes want stronger leaders
Fascism stresses nationalism, needs of state above individual
Benito Mussolini plays on fears of economic collapse, communism
Supported by government officials, police, army
1922 appointed head of government, establishes totalitarian state
The Nazis Take Over Germany
Adolf

Hitler leader of National Socialist German Workers Party

Mein Kampfbasic beliefs of Nazism, based on extreme nationalism

Wants

to unite German-speaking people, enforce racial


purification
1932, 6 million unemployed; many men join Hitlers private army
Nazis become strongest political party; Hitler named chancellor
Dismantles democratic Weimar Republic ; establishes Third Reich

Nationalism (Continued)
Militarists Gain Control in Japan
1931, Nationalist military leaders seize Manchuria
League of Nations condemns action; Japan quits League
Militarists take control of Japanese government

Aggression in Europe and Africa


1933, Hitler quits League; 1935, begins military buildup
sends troops into Rhineland, League does nothing to stop him
1935, League fails to stop Mussolinis invasion of

Ethiopia
Civil War Breaks Out in Spain
1936, General Francisco Franco rebels against Spanish

republic
Spanish Civil War begins

Hitler, Mussolini back Franco; Stalin aids opposition


Western democracies remain neutral
War leads to Rome-Berlin Axisalliance between Italy

and Germany
1939, Franco wins war, becomes fascist dictator

The United States Responds Cautiously


Americans Cling to Isolationism
Public is outraged at profits of banks,
arms dealers during WW I
Americans become isolationists; FDR
backs away from foreign policy
1935 Neutrality Acts try to keep U.S.
out of future wars
outlaws arms sales, loans to
nations at war
Neutrality Breaks Down
1937 Japan launches new attack on
China; FDR sends aid to China
FDR wants to isolate aggressor
nations to stop war

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