Warm Up: Week 4 Update TOC Cornell Notes: 11-5 Wrap Up
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Transcript of Warm Up: Week 4 Update TOC Cornell Notes: 11-5 Wrap Up
1. Warm Up: Week 4
2. Update TOC3. Cornell Notes:
11-54. Wrap Up
Create Questions for today’s
Cornell Notes in the left side of
your paper!Good luck on the
CAHSEE TUES AND WED.
Current Event #4 Due Friday
If you were absent Friday, you have until Friday to make up
the quiz.
Number 1-10 place the
following in chronological
order.Assassination of Franz FerdinandWWIIndustrial RevolutionImperialismAmerican Revolution French RevolutionRevolutions in Latin AmericaThe EnlightenmentThe Russian Revolution Agricultural Revolution
Standard 10.7 Understand the causes and consequences of the Russian Revolution.
Monday February 5, 2014Why not you? ~Russell Wilson’s Dad
Agenda Home Fun Warm Up
1. The Enlightenment2. American Revolution 3. French Revolution4. Revolutions in Latin America5. Agricultural Revolution6. Industrial Revolution7. Imperialism8. Assassination of Franz Ferdinand9. WWI10.The Russian Revolution
Today’s Standard
10.7 Students analyze the rise of totalitarian governments after World War I.
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).
1. Warm Up2. Russian
Revolution Quiz: 20 Questions
3. Notebook Peer Evaluation
4. Wrap Up: Turn in inside notebook.
Due Today• Flow Map• Notebook• Current Event
and Warm UP: Inside Notebook.
No “Week in Rap” It’s Thursday.Flocabulary: “Between the Wars” Take three notes in your warm up box.
Standard 10.7 Understand the causes and consequences of the Russian Revolution.
Thursday February 14, 2013
Agenda Home Fun Warm Up
1. Warm Up: Week 5 (18)
2. Review Game3. Notebooks4. Wrap Up
• Current Event #5 (19)
• 10.5,6,7Notebook
• “Russian Revolution” Flow map.
• Russian Revolution Quiz
• TOMORROW
Page 378 in Book.Read the paragraph on the Bolshevik Takeover. Answer the standards check Question below it in a complete sentence.
Standard 10.7 Understand the causes and consequences of the Russian Revolution.
Wednesday February 13, 2013
Agenda Home Fun Warm Up
1. Warm Up: Week 5 (18)
2. Grades3. Pass back work4. Notebook5. Russian
Revolution Flow Map. Due Thursday
6. Wrap Up
• Current Event #5 (19)
• 10.5,6,7Notebook
• “Russian Revolution” Flow map.
• Russian Revolution Test
• THURSDAY!!
The year is 2035 and your 8 year old child has just asked you why WWI and the
Russian Revolution
happened. Write your answer in your warm up
box.
Standard 10.7 Understand the causes and consequences of the Russian Revolution.
Tuesday February 12, 2013
Agenda Home Fun Warm Up
1. Warm Up: Week 5 (18)
2. Russian Revolution Flow Map. Due Thursday
3. Wrap Up
• Current Event #5 (19)
• 10.5,6,7Notebook
• “Russian Revolution” Flow map.
• Unit Test
• THURSDAY!!
Number 1-5. Using page 378 Place the following events in
chronological order:
• Bolsheviks sign Treaty of Brest-Litovsk
• The March Revolution forces Tsar Nicholas to abdicate.
• Communists win the Russian Civil War
• Russia enters WWI• The November
Revolution brings Bolsheviks to power.
Standard 10.7 Understand the causes and consequences of the Russian Revolution.
Monday February 11, 2013
Agenda Home Fun Warm Up
1. Warm Up: Week 5 (18)
2. Russian Revolution Flow Map. Due Thursday
3. Wrap Up
• Current Event #5 (19)
• 10.5,6,7Notebook
• “Russian Revolution” Flow map.
• Unit Test
• THURSDAY!!
Number 1-5. Using page 378 Place the following events in
chronological order:
• Bolsheviks sign Treaty of Brest-Litovsk
• The March Revolution forces Tsar Nicholas to abdicate.
• Communists win the Russian Civil War
• Russia enters WWI• The November
Revolution brings Bolsheviks to power.
Standard 10.7 Understand the causes and consequences of the Russian Revolution.
Monday February 11, 2013
Agenda Home Fun Warm Up
The March Revolution Part 3Part 2
Key event of
this phase
The Russian Revolution
Key event of
this phase
Key event of
this phase
Key event of
this phase
Key event of
this phase
Key event of
this phase
PLEASE COPY THE FOLLOWING INTO YOUR NOTES!
• The Russian Revolution is actually two revolutions and a civil war all rolled into one!
• In 1917 the March Revolution knocks the czar out of power.
• Later in 1917, the Bolshevik Revolution put Lenin and the communists in power.
• Finally, an all out civil war breaks out between the Bolsheviks, now called the Red Army and old supporters of the Czar, now the white army.
1. Warm Up: Week 4
2. Pass Back Work 3. Go over
grades.4. Finish Cornell
Notes: 11-55. Wrap Up
Current Event #4 Due
Tomorrow. Ch 11 Section 5
Illustrated Vocabulary: Do in 11-5 notes.
Planner Check Tomorrow!
Warm Up: Page 249. After reading the infographic,
answer the thinking critically
questions IN COMPLETE
SENTENCES.
Standard 10.7 Understand the causes and consequences of the Russian Revolution.
Thursday February 7, 2013
Agenda Home Fun Warm Up
The time is always right to do what is right.-Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., activist
1. Warm Up: Week 4
2. Current Event #4
3. Finish Cornell Notes: 11-5
4. Rasputin Challenge
5. Wrap Up (Keep, will be checked in notebook next Thursday!)
Ch 11 Section 5 Illustrated
Vocabulary: Do in 11-5 notes.
Warm Up: The Week in Rap Flocabulary!
Take three notes, explain the
significance of one.
Standard 10.7 Understand the causes and
consequences of the Russian Revolution.
Friday February 8, 2013
Agenda Home Fun Warm Up
Fun Fact: Napoleon constructed his battle plans in a sandbox.
Agenda:1. Warm Up2. Russian
Revolution Thinking Map (50 pts, Due Tom.)
3. Check Vocab and Questions
4. Wrap Up
Home Fun:Current Event #1RR Thinking Map
Study for Quiz
Warm Up: Watch Russian
Revolution and Formation of
USSR. Take three notes.
Essential Question: What were the causes and consequences of the Russian Revolution, including Lenin's use of totalitarian means to
seize and maintain control?
Thursday January 12, 2012
Friendly Reminders
1. Always get the agenda copied from a neighbor if you are absent.
2. IF you are late you lose 10 points and will stay after class to pick up trash.
3. Find out what you miss and make it up ASAP.4. Completed work goes in the “In Box”5. Please handle your business on your time.
(Pencils, trash, hole punching, stapling)6. Late work is accepted for ½ credit. So do it ON
TIME!!!
Modern World History Timeline
2012400 BC
11-5 Revolution and Civil War in
Russia.Essential Question: How did two revolutions and a civil war bring about Communist control of Russia?
Ch 11 Section 5 Terms
Term Definition Use in Sentence
Illustration
Proletariat
Soviet
Cheka
Commissar
Today’s Objectives
Students will be able to….1. Discuss the pre-revolution conditions in
Russia and explain how they lead to the Russian Revolution by participating in class discussion and completing notes.
2. Identify and define key vocabulary words for this section.
The Russian Revolution
Part I:The Beginning
Russia in 1815• Largest most
populous nation in world
• Rigid social structure• Majority of Russians
were Serfs• Very small middle
class• Landowning Nobles
dominated society• Crimean War (1855)
revealed Russia’s lack of industrialization
• Autocracy – czars had absolute power
• People angry b/c social inequality & ruthless treatment from czars
• Censorship, secret police, oppression of minorities
Czars & the Russian People
C z a r N i c h o l a s I
C z a r A l e x a n d e r I
Russian Reforms• 1861 – Emancipation
(freeing) of Serfs• Serfs have to buy land – but
have no money• Leads to more frustration• Did lead to urbanization in
some areas
• Zemstovs – local gov’t responsible for roads, schools, etc..• Gave Russians experience in
self-government
• Other reforms:• Trial by jury• Military service terms were
reduced• Brutal discipline was limited
Tsar Alexander III• Tsar Alexander II – Assassinated
March 3, 1881• Tsar Alexander III response; wipe
out all resistance• Increased power of secret police • Imposed strict Censorship• Exiled critics to Siberia• Persecution of Jews, Armenians,
Poles, Finns, etc…
• Pogroms – organized and sanctioned mob attacks on Jewish people.
Pogrom in Russia. Jews being beaten while police look on, 1880's at Kiev.
I don’t trust you!
Industrialization & Revolution
• Russia begins industrialization late
• Build Trans-Siberian Railway
• Unrest b/c of awful conditions, low wages, child labor- widening gap b/w RICH and POOR
• Unrest leads to formation of revolutionary groups
• Russo-Japanese War: 1904• Russians suffered one
defeat after another• Lead to more
discontent and riots
• Bloody Sunday:• St. Petersburg January
22, 1905• Peaceful protestors
assembled• Tsar fled, soldiers fired
into the crowd• Killed the peoples
faith and trust in the Tsar
Results of Bloody Sunday• The creation of the
Duma (elected national legislature)
• Duma was dissolved by the Tsar for criticizing the gov’t
• Arrests, pogroms, and executions continued
• By 1914 Russia was still an autocracy
Why would the pre-revolution conditions in Russia cause the people to feel angry with
their leaders?
Minimum of 30 words
Today’s Standard
10.7 Students analyze the rise of totalitarian governments after World War I.
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).
Russian Revolution Part IIThe Bolshevik Revolution
Chapter 11 Section 5
Crises Leading to Revolution
• WWI – millions of Russians slaughtered, strained resources, lack of trust in the Tsarina.
• March Revolution (1917) - Czar Nicholas II abdicates throne
• Duma provisional govt takes over
Bolshevik Revolution• Bolsheviks = small
group of radical revolutionaries
• Lenin returns to lead Bolsheviks
• Lenin & Bolsheviks gain support of soviets in major cities
• Lenin’s slogan: “Peace, Land, Bread”
• Bolsheviks seize power from Duma in Nov. 1917- Lenin is new leader
Vladimir Ilyich Ulyanov=LENIN
Leader of the Bolsheviks
Bolsheviks in Power• Lenin orders
farmland redistributed among peasants• Communism: everyone
equal
• Control of factories to workers
• Treaty of Brest-Litovsk with Germany (March 1918)
Russian Civil War• Civil War from 1918 to
1921:• Two Sides• Reds - Communist
Bolsheviks • Whites – everyone else
• Allies help the Whites – hope they will win and help the war effort
• Reds appealed to Russian nationalism for support.• Used cheka (secret
police) to execute anyone against the revolution
• War communism – took over banks, mines, factories and railroads.
15 million die
Scene in Petrograd street showing the death toll of a morning's work by the Cheka or the
extraordinary commission. A dozen dead bloodied bodies lie on ground while several people
including police look on.
Lenin Restores Order
• Russia divided into communist republics controlled by Moscow• USSR (1922) =
Union of Soviet Socialist Republics• Dictatorship of
Communist Party
Lenin &
Stalin,
about 1920
Flag of the USSR
Wrap Up
Why do you think Lenin and Stalin were able to do what they did?