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Updated:
September 24, 2002
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History/
Social Science Standards – Grade Ten
– http://www.cde.ca.gov/standards/
Correlated
by Module
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Text
Book Pages
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pp. 2-22
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pp. 34-59
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pp. 17-27; 156-161; 183-189; 190-219
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pp.
250-283
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pp.
302-339
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pp.
360-405
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pp.
412-467
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pp. 472-557; 561-564; 587-590; 505-511
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(http://www.cde.ca.gov/standards/history/grade10.html)
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Assignment Number that Meets each standard
(2.1
would be module 2, lesson 1)
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Textbook
Pages that Meets each standard
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10.1
Students relate the moral and ethical principles in ancient
Greek and Roman philosophy, in Judaism, and in Christianity to
the development of Western political thought.
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1. Analyze the similarities
and differences in Judeo-Christian and Greco-Roman views of law,
reason and faith, and duties of the individual.
·
2. Trace the development of
the Western political ideas of the rule of law and illegitimacy
of tyranny, using selections from Plato's Republic and
Aristotle's Politics.
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3. Consider the influence of
the U.S. Constitution on political systems in the contemporary
world.
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2.04,
2.08, 209
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pp. 2-22
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10.2
Students compare and contrast the Glorious Revolution of
England, the American Revolution, and the French Revolution and
their enduring effects worldwide on the political expectations
for self-government and individual liberty.
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1. Compare the major ideas of
philosophers and their effects on the democratic revolutions in
England, the United States, France, and Latin America (e.g.,
John Locke, Charles-Louis Montesquieu, Jean-Jacques Rousseau,
Simón Bolívar, Thomas Jefferson, James Madison).
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2. List the principles of the
Magna Carta, the English Bill of Rights (1689), the American
Declaration of Independence (1776), the French Declaration of
the Rights of Man and the Citizen (1789), and the U.S. Bill of
Rights (1791).
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3. Understand the unique
character of the American Revolution, its spread to other parts
of the world, and its continuing significance to other nations.
·
4. Explain how the ideology of
the French Revolution led France to develop from constitutional
monarchy to democratic despotism to the Napoleonic empire.
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5. Discuss how nationalism
spread across Europe with Napoleon but was repressed for a
generation under the Congress of Vienna and Concert of Europe
until the Revolutions of 1848.
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5.01,
5.02, 5.03, 5.04, 5.07, 5.08
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pp. 17-27; 156-161; 183-189; 190-219
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10.3
Students analyze the effects of the Industrial Revolution in
England, France, Germany, Japan, and the United States.
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1. Analyze why England was the
first country to industrialize.
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2. Examine how scientific and
technological changes and new forms of energy brought about
massive social, economic, and cultural change (e.g., the
inventions and discoveries of James Watt, Eli Whitney, Henry
Bessemer, Louis Pasteur, Thomas Edison).
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3. Describe the growth of
population, rural to urban migration, and growth of cities
associated with the Industrial Revolution.
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4. Trace the evolution of work
and labor, including the demise of the slave trade and the
effects of immigration, mining and manufacturing, division of
labor, and the union movement.
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5. Understand the connections
among natural resources, entrepreneurship, labor, and capital in
an industrial economy.
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6. Analyze the emergence of
capitalism as a dominant economic pattern and the responses to
it, including Utopianism, Social Democracy, Socialism, and
Communism.
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7. Describe the emergence of
Romanticism in art and literature (e.g., the poetry of William
Blake and William Wordsworth), social criticism (e.g., the
novels of Charles Dickens), and the move away from Classicism in
Europe.
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6.01,
6.02, 6.03, 6.04, 6.07, 6.08, 6.09, 6.11
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pp. 250-283
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10.4
Students analyze patterns of global change in the era of New
Imperialism in at least two of the following regions or
countries: Africa, Southeast Asia, China, India, Latin America,
and the Philippines.
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1. Describe the rise of
industrial economies and their link to imperialism and
colonial-ism (e.g., the role played by national security and
strategic advantage; moral issues raised by the search for
national hegemony, Social Darwinism, and the missionary impulse;
material issues such as land, resources, and technology).
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2. Discuss the locations of
the colonial rule of such nations as England, France, Germany,
Italy, Japan, the Netherlands, Russia, Spain, Portugal, and the
United States.
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3. Explain imperialism from
the perspective of the colonizers and the colonized and the
varied immediate and long-term responses by the people under
colonial rule.
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4. Describe the independence
struggles of the colonized regions of the world, including the
roles of leaders, such as Sun Yat-sen in China, and the roles of
ideology and religion.
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7.01,
7.03, 7.04, 7.06, 7.07
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pp. 302-339
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10.5
Students analyze the causes and course of the First World War.
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1. Analyze the arguments for
entering into war presented by leaders from all sides of the
Great War and the role of political and economic rivalries,
ethnic and ideological conflicts, domestic discontent and
disorder, and propaganda and nationalism in mobilizing the
civilian population in support of "total war."
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2. Examine the principal
theaters of battle, major turning points, and the importance of
geographic factors in military decisions and outcomes (e.g.,
topography, waterways, distance, climate).
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3. Explain how the Russian
Revolution and the entry of the United States affected the
course and outcome of the war.
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4. Understand the nature of
the war and its human costs (military and civilian) on all sides
of the conflict, including how colonial peoples contributed to
the war effort.
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5. Discuss human rights
violations and genocide, including the Ottoman government's
actions against Armenian citizens.
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8.01,
8.02, 8.03, 8.07
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pp. 360-405
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10.6
Students analyze the effects of the First World War.
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1. Analyze the aims and
negotiating roles of world leaders, the terms and influence of
the Treaty of Versailles and Woodrow Wilson's Fourteen Points,
and the causes and effects of the United States's rejection of
the League of Nations on world politics.
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2. Describe the effects of the
war and resulting peace treaties on population movement, the
international economy, and shifts in the geographic and
political borders of Europe and the Middle East.
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3. Understand the widespread
disillusionment with prewar institutions, authorities, and
values that resulted in a void that was later filled by
totalitarians.
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4. Discuss the influence of
World War I on literature, art, and intellectual life in the
West (e.g., Pablo Picasso, the "lost generation" of
Gertrude Stein, Ernest Hemingway).
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8.06,
8.07
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pp. 360-405
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10.7
Students analyze the rise of totalitarian governments after
World War I.
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1. Understand the causes and
consequences of the Russian Revolution, including Lenin's use of
totalitarian means to seize and maintain control (e.g., the
Gulag).
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2. Trace Stalin's rise to
power in the Soviet Union and the connection between economic
policies, political policies, the absence of a free press, and
systematic violations of human rights (e.g., the Terror Famine
in Ukraine).
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3. Analyze the rise,
aggression, and human costs of totalitarian regimes (Fascist and
Communist) in Germany, Italy, and the Soviet Union, noting
especially their common and dissimilar traits.
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8.03,
9.01, 9.02
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pp. 360-405; 412-467
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10.8
Students analyze the causes and consequences of World War II.
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1. Compare the German,
Italian, and Japanese drives for empire in the 1930s, including
the 1937 Rape of Nanking, other atrocities in China, and the
Stalin-Hitler Pact of 1939.
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2. Understand the role of
appeasement, nonintervention (isolationism), and the domestic
distractions in Europe and the United States prior to the
outbreak of World War II.
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3. Identify and locate the
Allied and Axis powers on a map and discuss the major turning
points of the war, the principal theaters of conflict, key
strategic decisions, and the resulting war conferences and
political resolutions, with emphasis on the importance of
geographic factors.
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4. Describe the political,
diplomatic, and military leaders during the war (e.g., Winston
Churchill, Franklin Delano Roosevelt, Emperor Hirohito, Adolf
Hitler, Benito Mussolini, Joseph Stalin, Douglas MacArthur,
Dwight Eisenhower).
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5. Analyze the Nazi policy of
pursuing racial purity, especially against the European Jews;
its transformation into the Final Solution; and the Holocaust
that resulted in the murder of six million Jewish civilians.
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6. Discuss the human costs of
the war, with particular attention to the civilian and military
losses in Russia, Germany, Britain, the United States, China,
and Japan.
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9.03,
9.04, 9.05, 9.06, 9.07
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pp. 412-467
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10.9
Students analyze the international developments in the
post-World World War II world.
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1. Compare the economic and
military power shifts caused by the war, including the Yalta
Pact, the development of nuclear weapons, Soviet control over
Eastern European nations, and the economic recoveries of Germany
and Japan.
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2. Analyze the causes of the
Cold War, with the free world on one side and Soviet client
states on the other, including competition for influence in such
places as Egypt, the Congo, Vietnam, and Chile.
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3. Understand the importance
of the Truman Doctrine and the Marshall Plan, which established
the pattern for America's postwar policy of supplying economic
and military aid to prevent the spread of Communism and the
resulting economic and political competition in arenas such as
Southeast Asia (i.e., the Korean War, Vietnam War), Cuba, and
Africa.
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4. Analyze the Chinese Civil
War, the rise of Mao Tse-tung, and the subsequent political and
economic upheavals in China (e.g., the Great Leap Forward, the
Cultural Revolution, and the Tiananmen Square uprising).
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5. Describe the uprisings in
Poland (1952), Hungary (1956), and Czechoslovakia (1968) and
those countries' resurgence in the 1970s and 1980s as people in
Soviet satellites sought freedom from Soviet control.
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6. Understand how the forces
of nationalism developed in the Middle East, how the Holocaust
affected world opinion regarding the need for a Jewish state,
and the significance and effects of the location and
establishment of Israel on world affairs.
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7. Analyze the reasons for the
collapse of the Soviet Union, including the weakness of the
command economy, burdens of military commitments, and growing
resistance to Soviet rule by dissidents in satellite states and
the non-Russian Soviet republics.
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8. Discuss the establishment
and work of the United Nations and the purposes and functions of
the Warsaw Pact, SEATO, NATO, and the Organization of American
States.
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10.01,
10.02, 10.03, 10.04, 10.05, 10.07
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pp. 472-557; 505-511; 561-564; 587-590
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10.10 Students analyze instances of nation-building in the
contemporary world in at least two of the following regions or
countries: the Middle East, Africa, Mexico and other parts of
Latin America, and China.
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1. Understand the challenges
in the regions, including their geopolitical, cultural,
military, and economic significance and the international
relationships in which they are involved.
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2. Describe the recent history
of the regions, including political divisions and systems, key
leaders, religious issues, natural features, resources, and
population patterns.
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3. Discuss the important
trends in the regions today and whether they appear to serve the
cause of individual freedom and democracy.
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10.06
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pp. 472-557; 505-511; 561-564; 587-590
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10.11
Students analyze the integration of countries into the world
economy and the information, technological, and communications
revolutions (e.g., television, satellites, computers).
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10.08
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pp. 472-557; 505-511; 561-564; 587-590
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