March 2014, Mrs. Watkins
Dear Future AP U.S. History Student,
I am excited that you are considering AP US History for the 2014-2015 school year! It should be understood that AP classes are challenging. They require hard work, dedication and time. You should plan to spend 5-8 hours a week completing APUSH homework including (but not limited to) Chapter readings, key term flash cards and President Charts. In order to make the most of the time that we have, you will be required to complete the summer assignments listed below.These assignments will be due on the first day of the new school year that your class meets (August 18th-A Day or August 19th-B Day).
You will need to pick up an AMSCO text book before you leave for summer break.
Part 1: Chapters 1-3 of AMSCO (200 points)
Onceyouhave thebookyou are tocompletethe followingfor the1stunit:
Chapter1-Exploration,Discovery,andSettlement,1492-1700
Completethe chaptersummary attached(1grade)
Chapter2-TheThirteenColoniesandtheBritishEmpire,1607-1750
Completethe chapter summary attached (1grade)
Chapter3-ColonialSocietyintheEighteenthCentury
Completethe chapter summary attached (1grade)
Unit1Indexcards:(100 points)
In thecourseof theyear studentsmake flash cardsforeachimportant term on 3x5 indexcards. Thisserves as avaluable reviewtool beforethe AP exam.These indexcardsmust:
comefrom the Amsco book or theclasstext (nota Googlesearch) be handwritten
have only1 term ononeside and thedefinitionor importanceontheotherside. Fullyexplain ordefinethe term in yourown words.
Chapter1
1.Ferdinand and Isabella
2.Protestant Reformation
3.Christopher Columbus
4.conquistadors
5.encomienda system 6.joint-stock company 7.Jamestown
8.Captain John Smith 9.Pocahontas
10.Puritans
11.Plymouth colony 12.Separatists
13.Pilgrims
14.Mayflower Compact 15.MassachusettsBay
Colony
16.JohnWinthrop 17.GreatMigration
Chapter2
18.corporate colonies 19.royal colonies
20.proprietary colonies 21.Chesapeakecolonies 22.Actof Toleration
(1649)
23.Bacon’s Rebellion 24.indentured servant 25.headrightsystem
26.RogerWilliamsChapter3
27.Anne Hutchinson40.hereditary aristocracy 28.FundamentalOrders41.social mobility
ofConnecticut (1639)42.colonial families29.halfwaycovenant43.established church 30.KingPhilip’sWar 44.GreatAwakening 31.Restoration colonies 45.Jonathan Edwards 32.WilliamPenn 46.GeorgeWhitefield 33.JamesOglethorpe 47.Cotton Mather
34.mercantilism48.PoorRichard’s 35.Navigation Acts Almanac
36.Dominion ofNew49.Zengercase England
37.Glorious Revolution 38.triangulartrade
39.Middle Passage
DIFFERENCES BETWEEN TRADITIONAL CLASSES AND APUSH
Traditional Honors or Regular Classes / Advanced Placement ClassesTeacher centered. Teacher is primarily responsible for student achievement. / Student centered. Students are responsible for ensuring their success in the class. Teacher role is as facilitator of learning.
Homework assigned regularly that is collected for a grade.
Students complete homework generally in order to earn a grade or maintain a grade. / Homework is assigned, but not all may be graded. The purpose of homework is to reinforce classroom activities and to fill gaps in knowledge. Student is expected to complete this individually. Generally, 5-8 homework assignments are collected each quarter.
Homework in AP U.S. History, while copious at times, is designed to impart the knowledge necessary to take the AP Exam in U.S. History and to reinforce the skills needed to pass the exam.
Resembles traditional high school classes. / Resembles what is seen in university classrooms. Students are provided a college-level textbook and supplemental readings. Grades rely on written work, quizzes, tests, and major projects. Flash cards and President charts collected regularly for homework grade.
Varying standards and expectations regarding evaluation and achievement. Demanding nature of coursework varies according to instructor or course. / Students held to high standards of evaluation and achievement. These standards are consistently enforced as a way to prepare students for real-world demands and the demands of a collegiate setting.
Examples: Cumulative testing, free response essays, document-based questions, daily reading quizzes, etc.
********SKIM…READ…ThenTAKENOTES in the charts below********
AMSCOCH1ExplorationNAME______
Thusoutofsmallbeginningsgreaterthingshavebeenproducedbyhishandthatmadeallthingsofnothingandgivesbeingtoallthingsthatareandasonesmallcandlemaylightathousandsothelightherekindlehathshoneuntomany,yeainsomesorttoourwholenation.~WilliamBradford
First people cametoNorthAmericaWAaaaaay beforeColumbuswas bornvia a land bridge. Millionsof people came and lived avarietyof ways.
CULTURESOFNORTHAMERICA
CULTUREOFCENTRALANDSOUTHAMERICAMayas
Incas
Aztecs
EUROPEMOVESTOWARDSEXPLORATION
EARLYEXPLORATIONS
Columbus-lookingthe“Indies”LEGACY-
EXCHANGE- / DividingtheNewWorld
TreatyofTordesillas
EARLYENGLISHSETTLEMENTS
EARLYPOLITICALINSTITUTIONS
SPANISHSETTLEMENTSINNORTHAMERICA
NOT successful, NOresources. STRONG Natives.*FL-StAugustine OLDEST*NM- Sante Fe,harshtreatment leadsto PEUBLO REVOLT. TX &CA- bc Russia was in AK
EUROPEANTREATMENTOFNATIVEAMERICANS
HISTORICALPERSPECTIVE:Alwaystakenotesonthissection.Keytounderstandingthe“bigpicture”ofeachchapter.TakenotesonthissectionmuchlikeIdidbelow (you do not need to take additional notes for this section)
Columbus,fromdiscoverytobadguy…over time historians“revise” history.
Historicalrevisionism, the criticalre-examination ofpresumed historical facts andexistinghistoriography Revisionistswere particularly harshof Columbus in 1992,the500yearanniversary ofthe“discovery”
Revisionist referto Columbus NOT as discoverer BUT as “conqueror” The debate (good guy vs badguy)continues
One thingis notdebatable;Columbus’ contactbrought twoworldstogetherandforeverchanged theworld.
AMSCO CH2The13Colonies &the BritishEmpire 1607-1750
IftheydesirethatPietyandgodlinessshouldprosper;accompaniedwithsobriety,justiceandlove,letthemchooseaCountysuchasthisis;evenlikeFranceorEnglandwhichmayyieldsufficiencywithhardlaborandindustry…JohnWhite
FromVirginiain1607toGeorgiain1733,ALLENGLISHcolonieswereestwithacharter(likeacontractwiththeKingsettingtheirrelationshipwiththeKing)
Corporate-
Royal-
Proprietary-
Englishcoloniesbroughttraditionsofindependenceandrepresentativedemocracy,conflictsinEuropeledtofeelingsforindependencehereandeventuallytensionbetweentheKingandcolonistgrew.Readhoweachcolonygrewdistinctpolitical,economicandsocialinstitutions.
CHESEAPEAKECOLONIES
DEVELOPEMENT OF NEW ENGLAND
RhodeIslandRogerWilliamsAnne Hutchinson (antinomianismmeans: faith=heaven) / Connecticut
Ordersof CN
NewHampshire
Halfwaycovenant / NewEnglandConfederation
KingPhilips War
RESTORATIONCOLONIES
MERCANTALISMANDTHEEMPIRE
INSTITUTIONOFSLAVERY
IncreasedDemand1-
2-
3- / SlaveLaws / TriangularTrade
On a separate sheet of paper, take notes on the “Historical Perspectives” of this chapter.
AMSCOCH3ColonialSocietyinthe18thCentury
TheAmericanisanewman,whoactsuponnewprinciples;hemustthereforeentertainnewideasandformnewopinions.Frominvoluntaryidleness,serviledependenceanduselesslabor,hehaspassedtotoilsofverydifferentnature,rewardedbyamplesubsistence.ThisisanAmerican.~Crevecoeur,1782
POPULATIONGROWTH
STRUCUTREOFCOLONIALSOCIETY
ECONOMY
RELIGION
ProtestantDominanceGREATAWAKENING / JohnEdwards / GeorgeWhitefield / IMPACT / PoliticalInfluence
CULTURE
POLITICS
HistoricalPerspective:WascolonialSocietyDemocratic?READ,SUMMARIZEANDANSWER