HIS30S Unit 2 Review

HIS30S Unit 2 Review

<p> HIS30S Unit 2 Review Defining Settler Canada to 1945</p><p>Review the topics/ideas/events in the chart below.</p><p>For the closed book portion: know, in general terms, what it is and why it matters.</p><p>For the open book portion: be able to use the detailed information to make arguments about perspective, historical significance, consequences, turning points, etc. Ask yourself: </p><p> Why did we study each of these topics? Why is each topic historically significant?</p><p> What are the causes of each major event? What are the direct and indirect consequences?</p><p> Which moments mark major turning points? Which moments mark major change? </p><p> Within this change, where do we find continuity in this history?</p><p> Which primary sources did we study? What type of evidence did they provide?</p><p> What would be the perspective of those who lived through these changes and events.</p><p>Finally, consider the key unit question: Where did people’s loyalties lie? What type of Canada did think they were a part of? How is it similar or different from how we imagine Canada today?</p><p>Documents/Lessons Topics/Ideas/Events Unit 2 Key Terms  Peasant farming  Monarchism  Catholicism  Protestantism  Imperialism  Republicanism  Responsible Government  Nationalism  Biculturalism  Multiculturalism  Fascism  Citizenship</p><p>Conquest in French Canada  Oath of allegiance to Britain  New France vs. Acadia  Acadian Expulsion conquest notes  Royal Proclamation  Quebec Act</p><p>French Canada  Les Filles du Roi  New France notes and images  Seigneurial System (Seigneur, Habitant)  New France video clips  Coureur de Bois/Voyageur  Jesuits and Nuns  Louis XIV  Controversy in NF: expansion vs consolidation  Controversy in NF: are the people of Quebec too independent? British Canada – Beginnings  American War of Independence  Loyalist notes – textbook and  United Empire Loyalists video  Iroquois/Six Nations  Loyalist stories  Black Loyalists  New Brunswick, Upper Canada</p><p>French and British Canada  Constitutional Act 1791  Chart completed in class  The War of 1812  Upper and Lower Canada rebellions  Act of Union 1841  Robert Baldwin, Louis Hippolyte-Lafontaine  Responsible Government 1848  Confederation  John A MacDonald and George Etienne Cartier</p><p>Post-Confederation Developments  Red River Resistance & the Execution of Thomas Scott  Class presentations (1869); Louis Riel  The Manitoba Act (1870)  Dominion Lands Act (1872)  Northwest Resistance (1885)  Execution of Louis Riel (1885)  Manitoba Schools Question (1890-1896)  Sifton’s Immigration Campaign (1896-1905)  QUEBEC NATIONALISM</p><p>Immigration Experiences  Clifford Sifton  Notes on Sifton’s immigrants  The Last Best West and Chinese immigration  Petros Svarich  Petros Svarich video and  Head Tax notes  Chinese Exclusion Act  Chinese Canadian migration stories videos and notes</p><p>Immigration Regulations  Frank Oliver  Class notes  Canadian Immigration Act of 1910  Quotes handout  ‘Continuous Journey’ regulation  Refugee history notes  Komogatu Maru incident  Canadian Immigration Act of 1967 (Point System)  Refugee: definition & general history Minorities in Wartime  Conscription Crisis WWI and WWII  Class chart  War Measures Act  Italian internment videos and  Enemy Aliens documents  Internment in WWI (Ukrainian & German)  Internment in WWII (Japanese & Italian)  Robert Borden (Prime Minister)  William Lyon Mackenzie King (Prime Minister)</p>

View Full Text

Details

  • File Type
    pdf
  • Upload Time
    -
  • Content Languages
    English
  • Upload User
    Anonymous/Not logged-in
  • File Pages
    3 Page
  • File Size
    -

Download

Channel Download Status
Express Download Enable

Copyright

We respect the copyrights and intellectual property rights of all users. All uploaded documents are either original works of the uploader or authorized works of the rightful owners.

  • Not to be reproduced or distributed without explicit permission.
  • Not used for commercial purposes outside of approved use cases.
  • Not used to infringe on the rights of the original creators.
  • If you believe any content infringes your copyright, please contact us immediately.

Support

For help with questions, suggestions, or problems, please contact us