APUSH 2015-2016
- Be sure you have emailed your Last name, First Name and AP 15-16 to
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- View the Questions and Answers post under “Announcements”
- If you have a question about Comps, reading vocab analysis, the Critical Analysis, etc. please ask it here and wait for a response. I have never used this site but will try to check it regularly. If you want to email me your question and I have already answered it on google classroom I will direct you there to see all the OTHER questions and answers as well.
- Please be responsible and skim over what you are required to do BEFORE JULY. You will not be able to do your best work if you wait until August 9th.
Unit 1 COMPS 2015 Version
Directions: On the TOP LEFT inside cover of your composition book, label with your FIRST and LAST NAMES/APUSH 2015-2016. I will be checking your homework daily.
R.V. = “Reading Vocabulary” Beginning on the right side, put “CH:1 Vocab” on the top line. DATE and LABEL the reading vocabulary as they appear on the comps sheet. After the term, indicate the page (p.XX) where you found the most relevant information about the term. **Some terms are simply words I think you need to look up to understand. Any dictionary “app” should work fine.
Comps = Comprehensive Chapter Review Questions
Start on a fresh RIGHT page labeled “CH: 1 Comps.” Number them exactly as they are numbered on the comps sheet. Begin each chapter review question with a solid topic sentence that fully answers the prompt. Under your topic sentence, indent and bullet at least 3 items of solid, logical support from the textbook.
Make sure your handwriting is LEGIBLE. **Mark your academic, VACATION, sports, band and social calendars when you get your comps. Late work is not expected from AP students.
The Summer Assignment is the Critical Analysis Worksheet and CH:1/2 Work only. CHS 3 & 4 will begin on the first day of school, but you are welcome to read ahead into CH:3.
DateAm Pag pages
X 5/21 to W 7/29 Read your NON-FICTION book, log reading times and comments, draft worksheet
X 7/30CH:1 p. 2-11; rv.1-16
F 7/31 p. 11-18; rv.17-35
M 8/3 p. 18-25; rv. 36-46/ CH:1 COMPS/CH:1 MC
T 8/4 CH:2 p. 27-33; rv.1-16
W 8/5 p. 33-40; rv.17-39
X 8/6 p. 40-44; rv. 40-55/CH:2 COMPS/CH:2 MC
F 8/7 Finalize your Critical Analysis Worksheet over the weekend—it, along with your composition book with CH:1 and CH:2 work, is due to the main office at FDHS by 5:00 PM on Monday, August 10th.
M 8/10 to 8/14: G-School Orientation/Sports/Band Camp etc…..think about APUSH
M 8/17 After the office opens from lunch (probably 1 PM) you will be able to pick up your composition books to study for the CH:1/2 Quiz on the first day of school.
T 8/18 Enjoy your last night free of APUSH homework until Thanksgiving
W 8/19CH:3 p.46-51; rv. 1-12
X 8/20 p. 52-58; rv. 13-40
F 8/21 p. 58-64; rv. 41-49/ CH:3 COMPS/CH:3 MC
M 8/24 CH:4 p. 68-74; rv. 1-7
T 8/25 p. 74-81; rv. 8-23
W 8/26 p. 82-86; rv. 24-31/ CH:4 COMPS/CH:4 MC
X 8/27 REVIEW for Unit 1 TEST
Formal Assessment Dates:
8/19 CH:1 and 2 QUIZ, Quiz Vocab 1-20/ 2 SAQs based on CH: 1 & 2
8/27 CH:3 and 4 QUIZ, Quiz Vocab 21-40/2 SAQs based on CH: 3 & 4
8/28 UNIT 1 TEST: APUSH and VASOL portions/ FRQ or DBQ possible.
Chapter 1 Reading Vocabulary p. 1-24
- Unfettered
- Subjugate
- Pious
- Homogenous
- Intransigence
- Supercontinent
- Great Ice Age
- Canibali (pic)
- Vanguard
- Pueblo
- Mound Builders
- **note topics on map 1.2
- Cahokia
- Three-sister farming
- Hiawatha
- Iroquois Confederacy
- Christian crusaders
- Muslim middlemen
- Marco Polo
- Caravel
- Slave brokers
- Plantation system
- Marriage of Ferdinand and Isabella of Spain
- Interdependent global economic system
- Columbian Exchange
- “sugar revolution”
- Syphilis
- Treaty of Tordesillas
- Conquistadors
- Juan Ponce de Leon
- Francisco Coronado
- Francisco Pizarro
- Capitalism
- Encomienda system
- Bartolome de la Casas
- Hernan Cortes
- Tenochtitlan
- Quetzalcoatl
- Effects of the Reconquista
- Diverse motives of conquistadors
- Mestizoes as cultural bridge
- “malinchista”
- Giaovanni Caboto
- Verrazano & Cartier
- Popes Rebellion
- Black Legend
Chapter 1 Comps
- How true is the following statement: "The Great Ice Age shaped more than the geological history of North America. It also contributed to the origins of the continent's human history."Decide and discuss with evidence from the textbook..
- Did the Old World or the New World gain more from the Columbian Exchange? Explain.
- Describe the impact of Europeans on Native American (Indian) cultures and the impact of native cultures on Europeans. Then explain why it was, or was not, a good thing that European culture prevailed.
- Are the conquistadores to be considered villains or heroes for their actions in the Americas?
Practice for the Quiz: Without using your notes, number and answer the end of Chapter Multiple Choice with a CAPITAL LETTER.
Chapter 2 Reading Vocabulary p. 27-45
- European primitive outposts
- Protestant Reformation
- Roanoke Island
- Spanish Armada (see box)
- Sir Walter Raleigh
- Tudor Rulers table 2.1 **copy
- Enclosure movement
- Primogeniture
- Joint-stock company
- Charter (Va Company)
- Jamestown
- Powhatan
- Pocahontas
- Cannibalism at Jamestown
- First Anglo-Powhatan War
- Second Anglo-Powhatan War
- Lakotas
- Franklin’s commentary on how enticing Indian life was (box)
- Algonquins
- John Rolfe
- “bewitching weed”/ King Nicotine
- 1619 slaveship
- Va House of Burgesses as “seminary of sedition”
- Lord Baltimore
- Indentured servants
- MD Act of Toleration
- “rich man’s crop”
- Diaspora
- Barbados slave code
- Caribbean slave model
- King Charles I
- Oliver Cromwell
- King Charles II
- Restoration
- Carolina territory
- William Penn
- Rice
- Africans as ideal workers
- Charleston
- Big plantation gentry
- Squatters
- “a vale of humility between two mountains of conceit”
- NC and RI characteristics
- Tuscarora War
- Yamasee Indians
- GA as a buffer
- Philanthropists
- James Olgethorpe
- Savannah
- John Wesley
- Absence of free schools and Printing presses
- Soil butchery
- Tribes in the “League of the Iroquois”
- Longhouse
- “matrilineal” nature of Iroquois society
CH: 2 Comps:
- In many ways, North Carolina was the least typical of the five plantation colonies. Describe the unique features of colonial North Carolina, and explain why this colony was so unlike its southern neighbors.
- Analyze the contribution to European expansion by two of the following developments:
- Renaissance thought
- Search for new trade routes
- New development in technology
- Compare and contrast the ways in which tobacco and sugar affected the social and economic development of colonial America.
- In which of the colonies mentioned in Chapter 2 would you want to have lived? **You may use “I” for this one. Keep your gender and imagine yourself coming to the New World in about….1650.
Practice for the Quiz: Without using your notes, number and answer the end of Chapter Multiple Choice with a CAPITAL LETTER.
Chapter 3 Reading Vocabulary p. 46-64
- Effects of Protestant Reformation
- Calvinism
- Institutes of Christian Religion
- Predestination
- Conversion
- “visible saints”
- Puritans
- Separatists** PLEASE LEARN TO SPELL “SEPARATE” NOW…and ALL forms of it!!
- Dutchification
- Mayflower
- Captain Myles Standish
- Mayflower Compact
- Town meetings
- Thanksgiving Day
- William Bradford
- Massachusetts Bay Colony
- Great Migration
- “city upon a hill”
- Freemen
- John Cotton
- Protestant ethic
- Sumptuary laws
- Anne Hutchinson
- Antinomianism
- Roger Williams
- Fundamental Orders
- Squanto
- Pequot War
- Metacom
- King Philip’s War
- English Civil War
- Dominion of New England
- Navigation Laws
- Glorious Revolution
- Sir Edmund Andros
- Salutary neglect
- Dutch East India Company
- New Amsterdam
- Patroonships
- “babel of immigrant tongues” (reference)
- King Gustavus Adolphus
- Peter Stuyvesant
- Dutch place names in NYC
- Quakers
- Passive resistance
- Chief Tammany
- Blue laws
- Bread colonies
- City of Brotherly Love
Chapter 3 Comps:
- **This will be a chart:Compare and contrast the motives of their founders, religious and social orientation, economic pursuits, and political developments of each of the early colonial settlement areas. (South, New England and Middle).
- Analyze the extent to which the government of Massachusetts Bay was simultaneously theocratic, democratic, oligarchic, and authoritarian.
- State and explain whether or not political authority should be used to enforce a particular view of morality. Then finish this sentence and explain with good reasoning: “Banishing Roger Williams and Anne Hutchinson from Massachusetts Bay was justified because…(or was NOT justified because…”)
- Construct your OWN definition of Puritanism using the concepts of: predestination, calling, covenant, Protestant ethic, religious conversion and attitudes toward “sex”…use the textbook for elucidation.
Practice for the Quiz: Without using your notes, number and answer the end of Chapter Multiple Choice with a CAPITAL LETTER.
Chapter 4 Reading Vocabulary:p. 68-86
- Unhealthy Chesapeake
- Freedom dues
- Headright system
- White slaves
- Nathaniel Bacon
- African disaspora p. 73
- Bacon’s Rebellion & effects
- Royal African Company
- Middle passage
- Slave codes
- Gulah
- Ringshout
- New York slave revolt
- South Carolina slave revolt
- Stono River
- FFVs (include family names)
- Slave religion
- Negro Spirituals
- Jazz
- New England “invented grandparents” (explain)
- Property rights of women
- Midwifery
- The Scarlet Letter
- Village green
- Congregational Church
- Jeremiad
- Half-Way Covenant
- Salem witch trials
- Views of land use/ownership
- “Dukes don’t emigrate
- Leisler’s Rebellion
Chapter 4 Comps:
- Why did colonial masters first adopt the institution of indentured servitude and how did black slavery replace indentured servitude?
- Identify what YOU believe was the main cause of Bacon's Rebellion: resentment felt by backcountry farmers, Governor Berkeley's Indian policies, or the pressure of the tobacco economy? Justify your choice.
- Assess the validity of the following statement, "democracy in church government led logically to democracy in political government."
- Compare and contrast the status of women in the South with that in New England.
Practice for the Quiz: Without using your notes, number and answer the end of Chapter Multiple Choice with a CAPITAL LETTER.
Unit Quiz Vocab to learn for the Fill in the Blank/No Word Bank portion of the quiz
- Mayflower Compact
- William Bradford
- Pilgrims and Puritans (you will put ONE on the quiz not both)
- John Winthrop
- Calvinism
- Anne Hutchinson
- Roger Williams
- Half-way covenant
- Thomas Hooker
- Fundamental Orders of Connecticut
- Sir Edmund Andros
- Joint stock company
- Headright system
- John Smith
- John Rolfe
- Virginia House of Burgesses
- Cavaliers
- James Oglethorpe
- John Locke
- William Penn
1-20 will be on the CH:1/2 Quiz on the first day of school
- Magna Carta, 1215
- Petition of Right, 1628
- English Bill of Rights, 1689
- Five Nations
- Great Awakening
- Jonathan Edwards
- George Whitefield
- Maryland Act of Religious Toleration
- Deism
- Huguenots
- Mercantilism
- Navigation Acts
- Admiralty courts
- Salem Witch trials
- Primogeniture
- Robert Walpole
- Salutary neglect
- The Enlightenment
- Virtual representation
- Town meetings
21-40 will be on the CH:3/4 Quiz
- Mayflower Compact
Signed in 1620, this document set up a government for the Plymouth colony and became the first agreement for self-government in America.
- William Bradford
This person served as the second governor of the Plymouth colony (1621-1657) and developed private land ownership and helped colonists get out of debt. He helped the colony survive droughts, crop failures, and Indian attacks.
- Pilgrims and Puritans contrasted
The Pilgrims These people were separatists who believed that the Church of England could not be reformed. Because separatist groups were illegal in England, this group fled to America and settled in Plymouth. The Puritans were non-separatists who wished to adopt reforms to purify the Church of England. They received a right to settle in the Massachusetts Bay area from the King of England.
- John Winthrop (1588-1649), his beliefs
1629 – This person became the first governor of the Massachusetts Bay colony, and served in that capacity from 1630 through 1649. A Puritan with strong religious beliefs, he opposed total democracy, believing the colony was best governed by a small group of skillful leaders. He helped organize the New England Confederation in 1643 and served as its first president.
- Calvinism
This Protestant sect emphasized a strong moral code and believed in predestination (the idea that God decided whether or not a person would be saved as soon as they were born). Followers supported constitutional representative government and the separation of church and state.
- Anne Hutchinson, Antinomianism
This person preached the idea that God communicated directly to individuals instead of through the church elders. Forced to leave Massachusetts in 1637, her followers (the Antinomianists) founded the colony of New Hampshire in 1639.
- Roger Williams, Rhode Island
1635 –
This person left the Massachusetts colony and purchased the land from a neighboring Indian tribe to found the colony of Rhode Island. Rhode Island was the only colony at that time to offer complete religious freedom.
- Half-way Covenant
This concept applied to those members of the Puritan colonies who were the children of church members, but who had not achieved grace themselves. This allowed them to participate in some church affairs.
- Thomas Hooker
This clergyman was one of the founders of Hartford who was called "the father of American democracy" because he said that people have a right to choose their magistrates.
- Fundamental Orders of Connecticut
This first written constitution in America set up a unified government for the towns of Windsor, Hartford, and Wethersfield.
- Sir Edmond Andros
This person was the governor of the Dominion of New England from 1686 until 1692, when the colonists rebelled and forced him to return to England.
- Joint stock company
This is a company made up of a group of shareholders. Each shareholder contributes some money to the company and receives some share of the company’s profits and debts.
- Headright system
This describes a process in which parcels of land consisting of about 50 acres which were given to colonists who brought indentured servants into America. They were used by the Virginia Company to attract more colonists.
- John Smith
This person helped found and govern Jamestown. His leadership and strict discipline helped the Virginia colony get through the difficult first winter.
- John Rolfe, tobacco
This person was one of the English settlers at Jamestown . He discovered how to successfully grow tobacco in Virginia and cure it for export, which made Virginia an economically successful colony. He is famous for being the man who married Pocahontas.
- VA House of Burgesses, 1619 - The Virginia House of Burgesses
Formed in 1619, this was the first legislative body in colonial America. Later, other colonies would adopt
similar bodies.
- Cavaliers
In the English Civil War (1642-1647), these were the troops loyal to Charles I. Their opponents were the Roundheads, who were loyal to Parliament and Oliver Cromwell.
- James Oglethorpe
This person was the founder and governor of the Georgia colony. He ran a tightly-disciplined, military-like colony. Slaves, alcohol, and Catholicism were forbidden in his colony. Many colonists felt that he behaved as a dictator, and that (along with the colonist’s dissatisfaction over not being allowed to own slaves) caused the colony to break down and he eventually lost his position as governor.
- John Locke
This person was a British political theorist who wrote the Fundamental Constitution for the Carolinas colony, but it was never put into effect. The constitution would have set up a feudalistic government headed by an aristocracy which owned most of the land. He is most known for arguing for justifiable rebellion when a government fails to protect the natural rights of its citizens.
- William Penn
In 1681 this person received a land grant from King Charles II and used it to form a colony that would provide a safe haven for Quakers. His colony, named after him, allowed for religious freedom.
- Magna Carta, 1215
An English document draw up by nobles under King John which limited the power of the king. It has influenced later constitutional documents in Britain and America.
- Petition of Right, 1628
A document drawn up by Parliament’s House of Commons listing grievances against King Charles I and extending Parliament’s powers while limiting the king’s. It gave Parliament authority over taxation, declared that free citizens could not be arrested without cause, declared that soldiers could not be quartered in private homes without compensation, and said that martial law cannot be declared during peacetime.
- English Bill of Rights, 1689
Drawn up by Parliament and presented to King William II and Queen Mary, it listed certain rights of the British people. It also limited the king’s powers in taxing and prohibited the maintenance of a standing army in peacetime.
- Five Nations
The federation of tribes occupying northern New York: the Mohawk, the Oneida, the Senecca, the Onondaga, and the Cayuga. The federation was also known as the "Iroquois," or the League of Five Nations, although in about 1720 the Tuscarora tribe was added as a sixth member. It was the most powerful and efficient North American Indian organization during the 1700s. Some of the ideas from its constitution were used in the Constitution of the United States.
- Great Awakening (1739-1744)
Puritanism had declined by the 1730s, and people were upset about the decline in religious piety. The Great Awakening was a sudden outbreak of religious fervor that swept through the colonies. One of the first events to unify the colonies.
- Jonathan Edwards, Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God, a Careful and Strict Inquiry Into...That Freedom of Will
Part of the Great Awakening, Edwards gave gripping sermons about sin and the torments of Hell.
- George Whitefield
Credited with starting the Great Awakening, also a leader of the "New Lights."
- Maryland Act of Toleration (Act of Religious Toleration)
1649 - Ordered by Lord Baltimore after a Protestant was made governor of Maryland at the demand of the colony's large Protestant population. The act guaranteed religious freedom to all Christians.
- Deism