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STAAR REVIEW FOLDABLE 2013-2014

STAAR Review Foldable

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2013-2014. STAAR Review Foldable. Page 1 – Vocabulary . Find the full-page of vocabulary (starts with checks and balances) Cut apart the long sections, giving you a blank glue-tab column and a vocab column in each. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: STAAR Review Foldable

STAAR REVIEW FOLDABLE

2013-2014

Page 2: STAAR Review Foldable

Page 1 – Vocabulary Find the full-page of vocabulary

(starts with checks and balances) Cut apart the long sections,

giving you a blank glue-tab column and a vocab column in each.

Cut horizontally along each definition, but DO NOT cut through the glue tab. (Will look like “fringe.”

Glue onto envelope along glue-tab

Write vocabulary term under the definition

Page 3: STAAR Review Foldable

Vocabulary – p. 1 Checks and Balances Separation of Powers Amend Unalienable Rights Tyranny Democracy Ratify Judicial Review Civil Disobedience

Federalists Antifederalists Nullification Primary Source Individual Rights Abolitionist Sectionalism Manifest Destiny Temperance

Page 4: STAAR Review Foldable

Vocabulary – p. 1 Republic –

representative democracy

Republicanism Popular Sovereignty Legislative; Judicial;

Executive House of Burgesses Capitalism; Free

Enterprise

Federalism Limited Government

Page 5: STAAR Review Foldable

Page 2 – Vocab, Presidents, Map

Upper Left - continue Vocabulary

Lower half of page – glue in US map, trimmed to fit.

Upper Right – Presidents1. George Washington2. John Adams3. Thomas Jefferson4. James Madison5. James Monroe6. John Quincy Adams7. Andrew Jackson8. Martin van Buren9. William Henry Harrison10. John Tyler11. James K. Polk12. Zachary Taylor13. Millard Fillmore14. Franklin Pierce15. James Buchanan16. Abraham Lincoln17. Andrew Johnson18. Ulysses S Grant

Page 6: STAAR Review Foldable

Page 2 – Vocab, Presidents, Map

Upper Left - continue Vocabulary

Secondary sourceIndustrial RevolutionInterchangeable parts49ersPolitical partiesRepresentative government/republicPilgrims (Separatists), Puritans, Quakers,

Catholics and others

Page 7: STAAR Review Foldable

Page 3 – Documents and Policies

Glue in the 3 notecards, lined side up. Copy the information from the next 3

slides onto the notecards.

Page 8: STAAR Review Foldable

Notecard 1 Mayflower Compact-Pilgrims signed this

document agreeing to obey laws that were for the general good of the colony

Treaty of Paris 1763- ended the French and Indian War

Proclamation of 1763- forbid colonists to settle west of the Appalachian Mountains

Common Sense- written by Thomas Paine. Encouraged patriots to declare independence.

Treaty of Paris 1783- ended the American Revolution. U.S. extended to the Mississippi River.

Page 9: STAAR Review Foldable

Notecard 2 Northwest Ordinance-organized the Northwest Territory.

Decided how territories would become states..no slavery! Great Compromise- dealt with the issue of representation in

Congress during the Constitutional Convention. Big and Small States

Washington’s Farewell Address- Washington warned the nation to avoid permanent alliances (stay neutral) and to avoid political parties because they would divide the nation.

Kentucky/ Virginia Resolutions- suggested that states might nullify federal laws considered unconstitutional. Affirmed the principle of states’ rights

Monroe Doctrine-issued by Pres. Monroe to tell European nations that the Western hemisphere was closed to colonization. KEEP OUT!

Page 10: STAAR Review Foldable

Notecard 3 Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo- Treaty that ended the Mexican

War. Mexico ceded the Mexican Cession to the U.S. Lincoln’s 1st Inaugural Address- Lincoln’s speech.

Reassured South but stated he would act to preserve the Union, by force if needed.

Emancipation Proclamation- Lincoln’s speech. Freed all slaves living in rebelling states.

Gettysburg Address-speech by A. Lincoln dedicating the cemetery for the people who died at Gettysburg. “Four score and 7 years ago…”

Lincoln’s 2nd Inaugural Address- Lincoln’s speech. Focus was on the end of slavery and trying to bind the wounds that were caused by the Civil War.

Page 11: STAAR Review Foldable

Page 4 – Important People Cut apart the long

sections, and separate the descriptions, just as you did with the vocabulary.

Glue onto envelope along glue tab

Write name under the description

Page 12: STAAR Review Foldable

Page 4 – Important People Samuel Adams King George III

Thomas Paine Phyllis Wheatley Patrick Henry James Armistead Haym Solomon Wentworth Cheswell George Washington Ben Franklin James Madison Thomas Jefferson

Alexander Hamilton James Monroe Andrew Jackson John C Calhoun Henry Clay Daniel Webster Frederick Douglass Elizabeth Cady Stanton Jefferson Davis Abraham Lincoln Clara Barton Ulysses S Grant Robert E Lee

Page 13: STAAR Review Foldable

Page 5 – Major DocumentsWatch the demonstration of the set up of the foldable.On each tab, you will copy the following information.1st tab – MAJOR U. S. DOCUMENTS Magna Carta- England 1215

1st Document to limit the power of the King; King is not above the law

Page 14: STAAR Review Foldable

Page 5 – Major Documents 2- English Bill of Rights- 1689

- Power to make laws belonged to the people ( Parliament)

Right to Petition and Free Speech; trial by jury

Page 15: STAAR Review Foldable

Major Documents - 3Declaration of Independence- July 4, 1776 in Philadelphia ( Thomas Jefferson) Reasons why colonist sought Independence Protection of Unalienable Rights – Life,

Liberty and the Pursuit of Happiness List of grievances to King George III Inspired by Locke and that government was a

social contract and protected individual rights Natural rights unalienable rights

Page 16: STAAR Review Foldable

Major Documents - 4Articles of Confederation- written in 1776-77- Second Continental Congress 1st government of the United States Weak central government; strong state

government No executive or judicial branch Not able to tax Ordinance of 1785- set up Northwest Territory

( Ohio River Valley) Northwest Ordinance- set up procedures oh how

states will enter union.

Page 17: STAAR Review Foldable

Major Documents 5US Constitution- Philadelphia 1787 Preamble- “We the People….” lists goals Article 1- sets up Legislative Branch, Article 2 – Executive branch,

Article 3- Judicial Branch, Article 4- Obligations of states to each other, Article 5- Amendment process, Article 6- Supreme Law of the Land.

Baron de Montesquieu believed that power should be separated, checks and balances

Great Compromise- Roger Sherman-2 House Legislature – House of Representatives based on Population (VA Plan); Senate- Based on Equal Representation ( NJ Plan)

3/5 Compromise- James Wilson- For every 5 slaves, 3 will be counted in terms or taxation and representation. Gives the north and south a little bit of what they want.

Page 18: STAAR Review Foldable

Major Documents 6Federalist Papers Written by John Jay, James Madison and

Alexander Hamilton written so that the people understood the

principles of government Needed a strong central government Baron de Montesquieu believed that liberty

was safe with small legislatures Federalist papers were written so that states

would ratify the Constitution

Page 19: STAAR Review Foldable

Major Documents 7Bill of Rights- 1791 Guarantees Individual rights 1st 10 Amendments Anti-Federalist (Patrick Henry and

George Mason) wanted Bill of Rights added to Constitution

Page 20: STAAR Review Foldable

Page 6 – Wars and TimelineLabel these events – 1607 – Jamestown 1620 – Pilgrims @ Plymouth; Mayflower

Compact 1630 – 1640 – Puritan Great Migration 1776 – Declaration of Independence 1787 – Constitution; Northwest Ordinance 1803 – Louisiana Purchase 1861-1865 – Civil War

Page 21: STAAR Review Foldable

Page 6 – Wars and TimelineCenturies – Draw a long, vertical line at

approximately 1700 and at 1800. Label the 1600s as 17th century Label the 1700s as 18th century Label the 1800s as 19th century

Page 22: STAAR Review Foldable

Page 7 – Court Cases, Inventions and Events

Fold each post-it in half, like a book, with the glue strip on the back.

Place the 6 post-its at the top of the page.

Glue the Chart at the bottom of the page.

Page 23: STAAR Review Foldable

Page 7 Label the outside of each post-it as shown. (2 items

per post-it.)

Cotton Gin

Erie Canal

Worcester v Georgia

Dredd Scott v Sanford

Marbury v Madison

Mechanical Reaper

Bessemer Steel

Process

Steamboat

Telegraph

McCulloch v Maryland

Gibbons v Ogden

Page 24: STAAR Review Foldable

Page 7 – Court Cases, Inventions and Events Post it #1 – Outside – Cotton Gin, Erie Canal Inside – Eli Whitney, pulled seeds from cotton fiber,

increased need for slaves; connect Northeast and West – transported goods and people

Post it #2 – Outside – Steamboat, telegraph Inside – Robert Fulton, made manufactured goods

more accessible; Samuel Morse – rapid communication over distances

Post it #3 – Outside Mechanical Reaper , Bessemer Steel Process

Inside – Cyrus McCormick, harvesting wheat, became more efficient, less labor; made cheap, high quality steel - railroads

Page 25: STAAR Review Foldable

Page 7 Post it #4 - Outside – Marbury v. Madison, Inside

– established judicial review, the right of the Supreme Court to declare a law unconstitutional

Post it #5 – Outside – Dred Scott v. Sandford, Worcestor v. Georgia, Inside - Supreme Court states slaves are property – not citizens

Inside Cherokee sued for land and won but were moved anyway

Pot it #6 – Outside – Top – McCullough v. Maryland, bottom – Gibbons v Ogden,

Inside – top - Bank (elastic clause, necessary & proper), bottom – commerce (trade)

Page 26: STAAR Review Foldable

Page 7 Stamp Act, etc: Causes of the American

Revolutionary War Lexington and Concord – Mass., first shots fired,

“The Shot Heard round the World” Battle of Saratoga – turning point of the Revolution Valley Forge – Patriots suffered a harsh winter but

received word of alliances, foreign training Battle of Yorktown – Final major battle of the

Revolution Nullification Crisis – Pres Jackson passed the

Tariff, making S. Carolina threaten secession

Page 27: STAAR Review Foldable

Page 7 Fort Sumter: South Carolina harbor island fort – April 1861

– 1st shots of Civil War – Confederate Victory

Battle of Vicksburg – Mississippi, 1863 – Union captured the last Confederate stronghold on the Mississippi River; Union controls Mississippi River – a turning point battle

Gettysburg – turning point of the war , North slowing gets the advantage as Southern casualties grow; Gettysburg Address follows it; Lee invaded the North for the last time, attempting to find supplies (boots)

Appomattox Court House, VA- Robert E Lee s surrenders to U.S. Grant ending the war; South loses

Page 28: STAAR Review Foldable

Page 8 Take the squares of paper and fold the corners into the center.

Page 29: STAAR Review Foldable

Page 8 Amendments

1 3

2

MUST BE PASSED BY 2/3 OF BOTH HOUSES OF CONGRESS AND ¾ OF STATES

Freedom of speech, religion, press, assembly,

petition

forbids gov’t to order citizens to house soldiers

right to bear arms

Page 30: STAAR Review Foldable

Page 8 4

7 5

6

requires search warrant

jury trial in civil suits

don’t have to testify against self;no double jeopardy; due process of law

speedy trial, face accuser, right to an

attorney

Page 31: STAAR Review Foldable

Page 8 9

8 10

Billof Rights

people have rights not mentioned in Constitution

no cruel and unusual

punishment; no excessive bail

powers not given to federal government belong to the states

first 10 Amendments to the

Constitution

Page 32: STAAR Review Foldable

Page 8 14

13 15

Civil WarAmendments

Citizens – granted citizenship to African American and former Confederates

Free –abolished slavery

Vote – granted voting rights to African American mailes

passed during Reconstruction

after the Civil War

Page 33: STAAR Review Foldable