Period 3: 1754-1800 Chapters: 6-10, Supplemental Readings Test: October 25 (F)/28 (M) Test Format: 20 MC/1 SAQ/1 LEQ (Cause Or Effect) Review: October 23 (W)/24 (R)

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Period 3: 1754-1800 Chapters: 6-10, Supplemental Readings Test: October 25 (F)/28 (M) Test Format: 20 MC/1 SAQ/1 LEQ (Cause Or Effect) Review: October 23 (W)/24 (R) Period 3: 1754-1800 Chapters: 6-10, Supplemental Readings Test: October 25 (F)/28 (M) Test Format: 20 MC/1 SAQ/1 LEQ (Cause or Effect) Review: October 23 (W)/24 (R) Learning Objectives A. Explain the context in which American gained independence and developed a sense of national identity. B. Explain the causes and effects of the Seven Years’ War (the French and Indian War). C. Explain how British colonial policies regarding North America led to the Revolutionary War. D. Explain how and why colonial attitudes about government and the individual changed in the years leading up to the American Revolution. E. Explain how various factors contributed to the American victory in the Revolution. F. Explain the various ways the American Revolution affected society. G. Describe the global impact of the American Revolution. H. Explain how difference forms of government developed and changed as a result of the Revolutionary Period. I. Explain the differing ideological positions on the structure and function of the federal government. J. Explain the continuities and changes in the structure and functions of the government with the ratification of the Constitution. K. Explain how and why competition intensified conflicts among peoples and nations from 1754-1800. L. Explain how and why political ideas, institutions, and party systems developed and changed in the new republic. M. Explain the continuities and changes in American culture from 1754 to 1800. N. Explain how and why migration and immigration to and within North America caused competition and conflict over time. O. Explain the continuities and changes in regional attitudes about slavery as it expanded from 1754 to 1800. P. Explain how the American independence movement affected society from 1754 to 1800. Key Dates: 1754, 1763, 1775, 1776, 1783, 1787, 1789, 1793, 1800 Key Terms: Seven Years War/French and Indian War: French Settlement, Ohio Valley disputes, Albany Plan of Union, British victory, changes to American and British attitudes, Pontiac’s Rebellion, Proclamation of 1763, cost of F & I War, end of salutary neglect Causes of American Revolution: salutary neglect, mercantilism, Navigation Acts, Sugar Act, Stamp Act, Admiralty Courts, reaction to Stamp Act, Declaratory Act, Townshend Taxes, Non Importation, Boston Massacre, Committees of Correspondence, Tea Act, Boston Tea Party, Intolerable/Coercive Acts, First Continental Congress The Association, Lexington and Concord, +/- for British +/- for Americans Revolutionary War: Second Continental Congress, George Washington, Thomas Paine Common Sense, Declaration of Independence, Thomas Jefferson, Patriots, Loyalists, Saratoga, French Alliance, Yorktown, Treaty of Paris 1783 Post Revolution Egalitarianism: Women’s Rights, Abigail Adams, republican motherhood, slavery, northern emancipation, southern expansion State Constitutions: republicanism, separation of powers, separation of church and state, conventions and ratification, Bill of Rights Articles of Confederation: Treaty of Paris 1783, western lands, Land Ordinance of 1785, Northwest Ordinance of 178, structure (unicameral legislature, legislative powers in A.O.C., taxation, lack of unity), foreign policy (British forts, Spanish control of Mississippi, Indian raids), economics (debt, taxation, currency, trade), Shays Rebellion Constitutional Convention: Virginia Plan, New Jersey Plan, Great Compromise, 3/5s Compromise, slave trade Constitution: separation of powers, checks and balances, Congress, House of Representatives, Senate, how a bill becomes a law, executive/president, presidential powers, Electoral College, judiciary/Supreme Court, judicial review Ratification Debate: Federalists, Anti-Federalists, Federalist Papers, ratification, Bill of Rights Origins of Political Parties: George Washington, cabinet, Alexander Hamilton, Thomas Jefferson, Report on the Public Credit (assumption of the state debts, Whiskey Tax, tariff, National Bank), strict interpretation, loose interpretation, 10th Amendment, Elastic Clause, Whiskey Rebellion, Alien and Sedition Acts, Kentucky and Virginia Resolutions, Federalists, Democratic Republicans 1790s Foreign Policy: Northwest Indian Wars, Little Turtle, Treaty of Greenville, French Revolution, Neutrality Proclamation, Citizen Genet, disputes with England, Jay’s Treaty, Pinckney’s Treaty, Washington’s Farewell, Undeclared War w/France, XYZ Affair, Convention of 1800 .
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