Monday, February 28, 2011

Ms. Tracy Beauchamp-----Social Studies Chairperson-----Immigration, Expansion, and Growth of Industry and Cities



Library Resources
ABC-CLIO American History
Biography Reference Bank Select
Issues and Controversey in American History
Proquest Historical NY Times (from 1851)
Gale Student Resources in Context
Academic Integrity

TOPIC: EFFECTS OF WESTWARD EXPANSION
GROUP #1 -Moving West
TASK: To create a tri-fold display board that provides detailed information on the assigned topic.
CRITERIA/(Grading): All display board must contain the following elements:
• Title: (10 points)
o Group topic
o Group #
o Class Period
o Group Members - Alphabetical
• Information: (40 points – Individual grade)
o clearly organized
o answers each question in a detailed and creative manner.
• Images: 7 – minimum – with captions (30 Points)
o 1 map/diagram/chart
o 1 political cartoon
o 4 photographs or images
o 1 primary source document
• Worksheet (10 points)
o 5 regents multiple choice questions
o 5 short answer
o Blank copy & Answer key
• Works Cited: (10 points)
o MLA format
• Organization & Mechanics
o Up to 10 Points can be deducted
 EFFECTS OF WESTWARD EXPANSION
1. CH 15 –Section 1 Moving West– 433 – 435
• Include: Maps, Photographs, Diagrams, and Primary Sources.
• Describe what inspired the many groups that participated in the great migration into the West?
o Gold Rush
o Oregon Trail
o Mormons
o Exodusters
o Immigrants
• Compare the Wagon Train journey to the journey by railroad. Describe the costs, advantages, and disadvantages of both.
• How did Railroads and the U.S. government promote the migration of immigrants to the west?
• Explain the benefits and drawbacks of the Homestead Act of 1862.
TOPIC: EFFECTS OF WESTWARD EXPANSION
GROUP # 2 - Farming, Mining, & Ranching
TASK: To create a tri-fold display board that provides detailed information on the assigned topic.
CRITERIA/(Grading): All display board must contain the following elements:
• Title: (10 points)
o Group topic
o Group #o Class Period
o Group Members - Alphabetical
• Information: (40 points – Individual grade)
o clearly organized
o answers each question in a detailed and creative manner.
• Images: 7 – minimum – with captions (30 Points)
o 1 map/diagram/chart
o 1 political cartoon
o 4 photographs or images
o 1 primary source document
• Worksheet (10 points)
o 5 regents multiple choice questions
o 5 short answer
o Blank copy & Answer key
• Works Cited: (10 points)
o MLA format
• Organization & Mechanics
o Up to 10 Points can be deducted.
 EFFECTS OF WESTWARD EXPANSION
2. CH 15 – Section 3 Farming, Mining, & Ranching– 440 – 445
• Include: Maps, Photographs, Diagrams, and Primary Sources.
• Compare and contrast the following:
o Small Farms and Bonanza Farms
 What were some of the disadvantages of farming the Great Plains?
 What new technology developed to help farmers?
 Were Bonanza Farms a success or failure? Explain.
 How did the invention of barbed wire affect life (positive and negative) in the west?
o Pan Miners and Corporation Miners
 Describe the mining techniques and the life of miners from 1849 – 1860.
 How did mining techniques and technology change after 1860 and how did it effect the environment?
 How did cooperate mines treat their workers?
o Open Range Ranching and Sheep Herding
 Explain how the “open range” system worked and describe the lives of the cowboy (vaqueros) on the cattle trails.
 Describe the “Cow Towns” of the west. Include details on the lawmen and outlaws and weapons that gave rise to the “Wild West”.
 Explain how the introduction of sheep and barbed wire affected the Cattle Kingdom.
 Why did the frontier close in 1900?
TOPIC: EFFECTS OF WESTWARD EXPANSION
GROUP # 3 - Populism
TASK: To create a tri-fold display board that provides detailed information on the assigned topic.
CRITERIA/(Grading): All display board must contain the following elements:
• Title: (10 points)
o Group topic
o Group #
o Class Period
o Group Members - Alphabetical
• Information: (40 points – Individual grade)
o clearly organized
o answers each question in a detailed and creative manner.
• Images: 7 – minimum – with captions (30 Points)
o 1 map/diagram/chart
o 1 political cartoon
o 4 photographs or images
o 1 primary source document
• Worksheet (10 points)
o 5 regents multiple choice questions
o 5 short answer
o Blank copy & Answer key
• Works Cited: (10 points)
o MLA format
• Organization & Mechanics
o Up to 10 Points can be deducted
EFFECTS OF WESTWARD EXPANSION
3. CH 15 – Section 4 Populism – 446 – 451
• Include: Maps, Photographs, Diagrams, and Primary Sources.
• What led to the rise of the Populist Movement and what effects did it have?
• What were the major grievances (complaints) of the farmers of the west and south between 1870 and 1895?
• How did organizations like “The Grange” and the “Farmers Alliance” help the farmers?
• Explain the debate between the “Gold Standard” and “Free Silver”
• What was the purpose of the Populist Party and describe its FIVE goals.
• Compare the campaigns of William Jennings Bryan and William McKinley in the presidential election of 1896 and explain how the results affected the Populist Party.
TOPIC: INDUSTRIALIZATION
GROUP #4 - Technological Revolution
TASK: To create a tri-fold display board that provides detailed information on the assigned topic.
CRITERIA/(Grading): All display board must contain the following elements:
• Title: (10 points)
o Group topic
o Group #
o Class Period
o Group Members - Alphabetical
• Information: (40 points – Individual grade)
o clearly organized
o answers each question in a detailed and creative manner.
• Images: 7 – minimum – with captions (30 Points)
o 1 map/diagram/chart
o 1 political cartoon
o 4 photographs or images
o 1 primary source document
• Worksheet (10 points)
o 5 regents multiple choice questions
o 5 short answer
o Blank copy & Answer key
• Works Cited: (10 points)
o MLA format
• Organization & Mechanics
o Up to 10 Points can be deducted
 INDUSTRIALIZTION
4. Ch 14 – Section 1 – Technological Revolution 407 – 413
• Include: Maps, Photographs, Diagrams, and Primary Sources.
• Transportation:
o Describe the role the US government played in the construction of the Transcontinental Railroad.
o Explain the significance of Promontory Point, Utah.
o Analyze the benefits and drawbacks of the railroad construction projects.
o How did the completion of the Transcontinental Railroad impact the growth of business? How did it affect the Native Americans?
• Communication:
o Analyze the inventions of the telegraph and the telephone. How did they transform American?
• Electric Power
o Why are Thomas Edison and George Westinghouse credited with transforming American society?
o How did the introduction of electricity impact the growth of business and industry?
• Bessemer Process
o Explain how the Bessemer Process worked and why it can be called “Revolutionary”?
o How did the invention of cheep, strong steel, affect American industry?
TOPIC: GROWTH OF BIG BUSINESS
GROUP #5 - The Growth of Big Business
TASK: To create a tri-fold display board that provides detailed information on the assigned topic.
CRITERIA/(Grading): All display board must contain the following elements:
• Title: (10 points)
o Group topic
o Group #
o Class Period
o Group Members - Alphabetical
• Information: (40 points – Individual grade)
o clearly organized
o answers each question in a detailed and creative manner.
• Images: 7 – minimum – with captions (30 Points)
o 1 map/diagram/chart
o 1 political cartoon
o 4 photographs or images
o 1 primary source document
• Worksheet (10 points)
o 5 regents multiple choice questions
o 5 short answer
o Blank copy & Answer key
• Works Cited: (10 points)
o MLA format
• Organization & Mechanics
o Up to 10 Points can be deducted
 GROWTH OF BIG BUSINESS
5. CH 14 – Section 2 - The Growth of Big Business– 414-418
• Include: Maps, Photographs, Diagrams, and Primary Sources.
• Explain the strategies corporations and trusts used to decrease costs and increase profits. (Corporations, Trusts, Vertical Integration, Horizontal Integration).
• Explain how EACH of the following individuals were BOTH “Robber Barons” and “Captains of Industry”. Analyze their business practices and effects those practices had on both industrial growth and workers.
o Cornelius Vanderbilt – New York Central Rail Company
o Andrew Carnegie – Carnegie Steel
o John D. Rockefeller – Standard Oil
• Explain the idea behind Laissez-Faire government policy and how it helped big business grow.
• Evaluate the success and failures of the Interstate Commerce Commission and Sherman Anti-Trust Act.
TOPIC: GROWTH OF BIG BUSINESS
GROUP #6 - Politics (and Economics) in the Gilded Age
TASK: To create a tri-fold display board that provides detailed information on the assigned topic.
CRITERIA/(Grading): All display board must contain the following elements:
• Title: (10 points)
o Group topic
o Group #
o Class Period
o Group Members - Alphabetical
• Information: (40 points – Individual grade)
o clearly organized
o answers each question in a detailed and creative manner.
• Images: 7 – minimum – with captions (30 Points)
o 1 map/diagram/chart
o 1 political cartoon
o 4 photographs or images
o 1 primary source document
• Worksheet (10 points)
o 5 regents multiple choice questions
o 5 short answer
o Blank copy & Answer key
• Works Cited: (10 points)
o MLA format
• Organization & Mechanics
o Up to 10 Points can be deducted
 GROWTH OF BIG BUSINESS
6. CH 16 – Section 1 Politics (and Economics) in the Gilded Age– 461-466
• Include: Maps, Photographs, Diagrams, and Primary Sources.
• Why are the years 1878-1889* called the “Gilded Age”? *Note some sources use 1900)
• How did the government’s policy of laissez-faire lead to increased corruption in the U.S. Congress?
• How did the Spoils System affect the presidencies of: Rutherford B. Hayes (1877), James Garfield (1880), Chester Arthur (1881), and Grover Cleveland (1884)?
• Describe the role political cartoonists such as Tomas Nast and Joseph Keppler play in Gilded Age politics? Why were their methods successful?
• Much of the corruption in the Gilded Age was due to economic prosperity. Analyze the acts that were designed to stop this corruption and explain them in terms of being a success or a failure?
o Pendelton Civil Service Act (1883)
o Interstate Commerce Act (1887) - Railroads
o Tariff of 1888 - Taxes
o Sherman Anti-Trust Act (1890) - Monopolies
TOPIC: IMMIGRATION
GROUP #7 - People on the Move -Working Conditions & the Rise of Labor Unions
TASK: To create a tri-fold display board that provides detailed information on the assigned topic.
CRITERIA/(Grading): All display board must contain the following elements:
• Title: (10 points)
o Group topic
o Group #
o Class Period
o Group Members - Alphabetical
• Information: (40 points – Individual grade)
o clearly organized
o answers each question in a detailed and creative manner.
• Images: 7 – minimum – with captions (30 Points)
o 1 map/diagram/chart
o 1 political cartoon
o 4 photographs or images
o 1 primary source document
• Worksheet (10 points)
o 5 regents multiple choice questions
o 5 short answer
o Blank copy & Answer key
• Works Cited: (10 points)
o MLA format
• Organization & Mechanics
o Up to 10 Points can be deducted
 IMMIGRATION
7. CH 16 - Section 2 People on the Move– 467 – 472
CH 14 – Section 3 Industrialization and Workers– 419 – 422
CH 14 – Section 4 – The Great Strikes – 423 -428
• Include: Maps, Photographs, Diagrams, and Primary Sources.
• Who were the “New Immigrants” and what were the Push and Pull factors that brought them to America.
• Compare the experiences of immigrants at Ellis Island and Angel Island and explain why they were treated differently.
• Why did entire families need to work in factories?
• What were “Company Towns” and how did the conditions there exploit the workers? Why were people willing to work there?
• Describe the working conditions in factories.
• Compare the goals and strategies of the labor organization of the late 1800s
• Analyze the causes and effects of strikes (Haymarket, Homestead, Pullman
• Why did labor unions have a difficult time gaining public support?
TOPIC: GROWTH OF CITIES
GROUP #8 - The Challenge of the Cities
TASK: To create a tri-fold display board that provides detailed information on the assigned topic.
CRITERIA/(Grading): All display board must contain the following elements:
• Title: (10 points)
o Group topic
o Group #
o Class Period
o Group Members - Alphabetical
• Information: (40 points – Individual grade)
o clearly organized
o answers each question in a detailed and creative manner.
• Images: 7 – minimum – with captions (30 Points)
o 1 map/diagram/chart
o 1 political cartoon
o 4 photographs or images
o 1 primary source document
• Worksheet (10 points)
o 5 regents multiple choice questions
o 5 short answer
o Blank copy & Answer key
• Works Cited: (10 points)
o MLA format
• Organization & Mechanics
o Up to 10 Points can be deducted
 GROWTH OF CITIES
8. CH 16 –Section 3 – The Challenge of the Cities - 473-478
• Include: Maps, Photographs, Diagrams, and Primary Sources.
• Why did immigrants and rural migrants (farmers) move into the cities?
• How did skyscrapers reflect technology merged with art?
• Explain the inventions that made skyscrapers a more practical form of construction.
• Why were commuter rail lines (mass transit) that were powered by electricity and improvement over earlier commuter rail lines
• Why did the cities of the late 1900s have so many problems? What solutions did city planners develop to combat these problems?
o Tenements and housing conditions
o Overcrowding
o Water and Sanitation
o Fire
o Crime
• How did city planners help make cities safer, more functional and beautiful? (Frederick Law Olmsted)
• How did the increase in Newspaper (NY World & NY Journal) and Magazine (McClures & Cosmopolitan) circulation affect the American public?
• Describe the new forms of entertainment that urban centers began to offer?
 Amusement Parks
o Wild West Shows
o Vaudeville Shows
o Ragtime and Jazz
o Baseball and other sporting events.
TOPIC: MINORITY GROUPS
GROUP #9 - Conflict with Native Americans
TASK: To create a tri-fold display board that provides detailed information on the assigned topic.
CRITERIA/(Grading): All display board must contain the following elements:
Title: (10 points)
o Group topic
o Group #
o Class Period
o Group Members - Alphabetical
• Information: (40 points – Individual grade)
o clearly organized
o answers each question in a detailed and creative manner.
• Images: 7 – minimum – with captions (30 Points)
o 1 map/diagram/chart
o 1 political cartoon
o 4 photographs or images
o 1 primary source document
• Worksheet (10 points)
o 5 regents multiple choice questions
o 5 short answer
o Blank copy & Answer key
• Works Cited: (10 points)
o MLA format
• Organization & Mechanics
o Up to 10 Points can be deducted
 MINORITY GROUPS
9. Native Americans – CH 15 Section 2 Conflict with Native Americans– 436 – 439
• Include: Maps, Photographs, Diagrams, and Primary Sources.
• How did the pressures of westward expansion impact the lives of Native Americans
• How did the differing view of land and disease lead to the establishment of reservations?
• What impact did white people have on the buffalo herds of the west? How did it affect the lives of the Native Indians of the Great Plains?
• Analyze the Sand Creek Massacre (1864) and the Sioux Wars (1868) and explain why peace treaties such as the Forth Laramie Treaty, failed.
• Compare and contrast the actions of Sitting Bull and Chief Joseph and the effects of those actions on the Native Americans. Analyze: Was the United States government justified in their actions against the native tribes? Explain.
• How did the Dawes Act (1887) change the way Indians were treated?
TOPIC: MINORITY GROUPS
GROUP #10 – African Americans and the World of Jim Crow
TASK: To create a tri-fold display board that provides detailed information on the assigned topic.
CRITERIA/(Grading): All display board must contain the following elements:
• Title: (10 points)
o Group topic
o Group #
o Class Period
o Group Members - Alphabetical
• Information: (40 points – Individual grade)
o clearly organized
o answers each question in a detailed and creative manner.
• Images: 7 – minimum – with captions (30 Points)
o 1 map/diagram/chart
o 1 political cartoon
o 4 photographs or images
o 1 primary source document
• Worksheet (10 points)
o 5 regents multiple choice questions
o 5 short answer
o Blank copy & Answer key
• Works Cited: (10 points)
o MLA format
• Organization & Mechanics
o Up to 10 Points can be deducted
 MINORITY GROUPS
10. African Americans – CH 17 – Section 3 World of Jim Crow 498 – 402
• Include: Maps, Photographs, Diagrams, and Primary Sources.
• Why did Southern states limit the rights of African Americans despite the passage of the 15th Amendment to the US Constitution?
• Explain the restrictions imposed on African Americans under “Jim Crow” (1830) and the defeat in Plessy vs. Ferguson (1883).
• Why did lynching become an accepted, and in many ways, an unpunished violent crime in the south?
• How did Frederick Douglas, W.E.B. DuBois, and Booker T. Washington all strive to improve the lives of African-Americans in the United States?
• Explain “de facto segregation” and why it existed in the North?
• Despite restrictions, several African Americans made their mark on U.S History.
o George Washington Carver
o Granville T. Woods
TOPIC: MINORITY GROUPS
GROUP #11 – People on the Move and Growing Divisions – Asians and Irish in America.
TASK: To create a tri-fold display board that provides detailed information on the assigned topic.
CRITERIA/(Grading): All display board must contain the following elements:
• Title: (10 points)
o Group topic
o Group #
o Class Period
o Group Members - Alphabetical
• Information: (40 points – Individual grade)
o clearly organized
o answers each question in a detailed and creative manner.
• Images: 7 – minimum – with captions (30 Points)
o 1 map/diagram/chart
o 1 political cartoon
o 4 photographs or images
o 1 primary source document
• Worksheet (10 points)
o 5 regents multiple choice questions
o 5 short answer
o Blank copy & Answer key
• Works Cited: (10 points)
o MLA format
• Organization & Mechanics
o Up to 10 Points can be deducted
MINORITY GROUPS
11. Asian Americans – CH 16 – Section 2 – People on the Move 469 – 471
& Irish Americans – CH 9 – Section 2 – Growing Divisions – 279 – 281
• Include: Maps, Photographs, Diagrams, and Primary Sources.
• Explain the idea behind “Nativism” and why some American’s wanted to restrict immigration.
• What was the Know Nothing Party and what were it’s goals
• Why did the Transcontinental Railroads companies (Union Pacific and Central Pacific) recruited immigrants as workers?
• Compare and contrast the reasons why the Irish and Chinese came to America and how their goals differed from each other
• Analyze and compare how each rail company treated their workers (hours, salary, etc.)
• Explain the goal of the Chinese Exclusion Act 1882 and how it affected Asian immigrants and the jobs that were available to them?
• Explain how and why were the Irish were discriminated against in many eastern cities such as New York and Boston? What jobs were available to them?
• How were the Chinese and Irish portrayed in political cartoons? Why? (Thomas Nast)
TOPIC: MINORITY GROUPS
GROUP #12 – Women and Suffrage in the late 1800s and early 1900s
TASK: To create a tri-fold display board that provides detailed information on the assigned topic.
CRITERIA/(Grading): All display board must contain the following elements:
• Title: (10 points)
o Group topic
o Group #
o Class Period
o Group Members - Alphabetical
• Information: (40 points – Individual grade)
o clearly organized
o answers each question in a detailed and creative manner.
• Images: 7 – minimum – with captions (30 Points)
o 1 map/diagram/chart
o 1 political cartoon
o 4 photographs or images
o 1 primary source document
• Worksheet (10 points)
o 5 regents multiple choice questions
o 5 short answer
o Blank copy & Answer key
• Works Cited: (10 points)
o MLA format
• Organization & Mechanics
o Up to 10 Points can be deducted
MINORITY GROUPS
12. Women CH 17 – Section 4 Women in the late 1800s – 403 – 406
CH 19 – Section 4 – Suffrage at last – 557 - 560
• Include: Maps, Photographs, Diagrams, and Primary Sources.
• Was the Seneca Falls Convention in 1848 a success? Explain the outcome.
• How did the Civil War derail the Women’s Rights Movement?
• Explain the strategies employed by Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton in their efforts to gain the right to vote for women.
• How was the Women’s Christian Temperance Movement (Francis Willard) connected to the Suffrage Movement?
• Explain how Carrie Chapman Catt reenergized the National American Woman Suffrage Association (NASWA) by comparing her strategies to Anthony and Stanton.
• Compare the actions of Alice Paul and Lucy Burns and the National Women’s Party (NWP) during World War I to Anthony and Stanton’s actions during the Civil War.
• Was the passage of the 19th Amendment and simple process? Explain.

A selection of books has been set aside for student use
Please see staff for passwords to the online databases

Monday, February 14, 2011

Ms. Kimberly Santino-----Social Studies Department-----Critical Issues

Task: Research topics of Gay & Lesbian topics.
Directions: Complete you topic questions and create a power point presentation.
GROUP TOPIC QUESTIONS TO BE ADDRESSED BY THE GROUP

#1 GAY AND LESBIAN MARRIAGE OR FORMAL UNION
• Explain the difference between civil rights and human rights.
• Should gays/lesbians have equal rights to marry in America? Explain both pro and con arguments.
• Describe how local/state governments have passed laws limiting or promoting gay marriage or formal unions.
Example: Vermont, California, Arkansas
• What are the options for gays/lesbians to have children?
Example: Invetro-fertilization, Adoption

#2 DON’T ASK DON’T TELL, THE GOVERNMENT’S POSITION ON HOMOSEXUALS
• What is the Don’t Ask Don’t Tell policy?
• When was this passed by Congress?
• Who has supported this policy? Who supported the repeal of this policy? Explain why.
• Are homosexuals protected as a minority group in the military?
• Explain the pro and con arguments regarding homosexuals in the military.
#3 PUBLIC SCHOOLS, ORGANIZATIONS
• Should local school districts support gay/lesbian organizations and/or clubs? Explain.
• How can public schools teach tolerance of homosexuals?
• Should Ward Melville adopt to promote tolerance of homosexuals? Explain pro and con       arguments regarding public school teaching tolerance regarding homosexuals.

#4 HATE CRIMES • What is a hate crime?
• What types of hate crimes are made against homosexuals?
• How does law enforcement deal with hate crimes against homosexuals?
• Describe a true story about a hate crime case against a homosexual or homosexual group.

#5 OTHER COUNTRIES POSITIONS ON HOMOSEXUALITY
• Choose a country in the world.
• Explain any legal and/or religious law that may impact homosexuals. Example: Iran: Homosexuality punishable by death.
• Describe how this country has treated homosexuals.
• How do homosexuals in this country attempt to live out their lives?

#6 CONSTITUTIONAL PROTECTION OF HOMOSEXUALS
• What is the 14th Amendment to the Constitution?
• Explain how gays/lesbians would or would not be protected by the 14th Amendment to the Constitution.
• Explain pro and con arguments regarding the safeguarding of homosexual rights using the 14th Amendment to the Constitution.

#7 FAMOUS HOMOSEXUALS
• Choice 4 famous homosexuals and explain their life story and how they told the world they were gay/lesbian.
• Explain how this has helped/hindered their careers.
• Explain how the media has covered their lives before and/or after they admitted to the world they were gay/lesbian.

#8 BIOLOGICAL DIFFERENCES, ORGANS, NEUROTRANSMITTERS • Explain the biological causes of homosexuality.
• What studies have been conducted to prove that homosexuality is by in fact a biological cause? Explain thoroughly.
• Explain if homosexual behavior is in the natural world, and/or in other animals?
• Describe the legitimacy of biological causes for homosexuals.

#9 THE CHURCH AND HOMOSEXUALITY
 • Choose three different Christian denominations.
Example: RCC, Born-Again, Baptists
• Explain how each group uses the Bible to condemn homosexuality.
• What actions have these churches participated in to condemn homosexuality?
• Have these churches practiced reforming homosexuals? If so, how?

#10 TEEN HOMOSEXUALITY & TEEN SUICIDE
• What are the current statistics regarding gay/lesbian teens and gay/lesbian teen suicides?
• How accurate are these statistics?
• How has the internet impacted teen homosexuality?

• Explain the bullying, cyber, physical, emotional and mental which many homosexual teenagers experience.
• What can be done to safeguard these teens against bullying and committing suicide?

#11 RISE OF HOMOSEXUALITY IN PRISONS
• Describe a typical prison setting in the United States.
• Explain the public and private quarters for prisoners to be housed.
• Has there been a rise in homosexuality in prisons?
• Explain the different types of gangs in prisons.
• Do many gangs in prisons practice homosexuality? If so, which types?
#12 TRANSGENDER
• What is transgender sexuality?
• What are the theoretical causes of transgender?
• Why might people go through this type of transformation?
• What medical procedures have to occur to become a different sex? Explain.
• Research a transgender couple and explain their story/
#13 INDEPENDENT TOPIC
#14 INDEPENDENT TOPIC

Grading Rubric Will Be Supplied to Students

Sra. Gisela Muller-----Spanish Department-----Los Pintores

"The Making of a Fesco Showing the Building of a City ("Making a Fresco" ) (1931) is one of four murals in the Bay Area painted by Mexican Deigo Rivera (1886-1957)"

 

Nombre_______________Fecha_______________
Sra. Muller/Spanish 4 Project Title: Los Pintores

Due: March 7, 2011
You are working in pairs.
You will have thee days in the Library (February 16, 17 and 18)
Directions: Using art books in the library, online databases and quality websites you will...
1. Select 4 paintings from any Spanish or Mexcican Painter.
2. Discuss the style of the 4 works of art and explain the theme of the paintings. Write each summary in Spanish.
3. Choose 1 of the 4 paintings and write a paragraph in Spanish why you like the work (a paragraph consists of at least 6 sentences).
4. The project will be presented to the class orally on March 7.
5. Provide a biograpahy about the painters.
6. You will receive an oral and written grade.
Presentations to be placed on posterboard and presented orally.

Library Resources
Online Databases
Ehostes (Spanish language periodicals)
Literature Resource Center
Wilson Biographies
World Book Online
(search for books in our collection)
Academic Integrity
(cite your sources)
Please consult your WHMS Information Center worksheet for home access passwords

Print Resources
REF 709.2 CON Tom Pendergast (ed), Contemporary Artists
REF 703 ENC Bernard S. Meyers (ed.), Encyclopedia of World Art
REF 973 ENC Ilan Stavans, Encyclopedia Latina
921 GOY Evan S. Connell, Francisco Goya
759 VEN Piero Ventura, Great Painters
REF 703 INT James Vinson (ed.), International Dictionary of Art and Artists
759.6 SCH Richard Schikel, The World of Goya, 1746-1828
a book cart is available for student use

Mrs. Deborah Gandt--English Department--Grade 11 Honors Research Paper

Library Resources
Virtual Reference Collection
Bloom's Literary Reference Online
Literature Reference Center


RESEARCH PAPER
English 11 Honors

Here is your opportunity to become a minor authority on one aspect of an American author of your choice. You will also learn formal research paper techniques that you will use for this assignment and for assignments in your senior year and in college. Save all “how-to” handouts for future use. The assignment will receive 3 MAJOR GRADES: 1) content, 2) form and 3) preliminary steps. Therefore, in addition to the finished product, it is very important to do all preliminary steps on time and according to instructions. If you do so and follow all other instructions and guidelines this assignment can be easy and enjoyable.

THE ASSIGNMENT
You should seriously consider if your ‘Independent Reading’ author fits the following categories or select an American author who you enjoy reading but who is NOT from the usual list of white, male authors. Let’s explore the diversity of America and its literature. . Your author can be:
a) either male or female
b) a novelist, short story writer, poet, dramatist, or writer of non-fiction;
c) late 20th century.

THE THESIS
As you start to learn about your author, you will develop a thesis about your author and his/her literature. You will NOT just research the author’s life. Your Independent Reading book will be your primary source. Your THESIS STATEMENT may revolve around one of the following categories:
a) the ethnic characteristics of your author’s works;
b) a common theme in your author’s works;
c) a person or event that had a major influence on your author;
d) autobiographical aspects of your author’s literature;
e) an analysis of your author’s style;
f) etc.

TO BEGIN

Get an OVERVIEW of your author and his/her literature by using the reference works on listed on the assignment on the blogspot (www.wardmelvillelibrary.blogspot.com). Gale Group (need password-wardmelville- from home): Virtual Reference Collection → Literature/Language→ Literature Resource Center or Bloom’s Literary reference→Search (author, etc.) will provide access to best info.
a) Make certain at the outset that your author is AMERICAN and NOT too mainstream (TMI).
b) Then check that your author is not so obscure or modern that not enough has been written about your author and his/her works. If nothing has been written, you cannot do ‘research’.
c) If your author is very famous you will find that the wealth of information (TMI) is overwhelming and you may wish to switch to someone about whom less has been written.
d) Read several pieces about your author to begin to SELECT A THESIS relevant to your outside reading novel that will be used as a primary source.

SOURCE CARDS

IMMEDIATELY upon finding a possibly useful source, even a reference book or electronic source, record all pertinent information needed for your eventual Works Cited page. Put all reference information immediately into NoodleTools (username and password)  print this page and write (by hand) a corresponding number next to the Works Cited entry. Do not number on this page because you will need to remove the numbers from the final Works Cited page . Use the WMHS Info Center link to NoodleTools for proper format.

NOTE CARDS

Take all your notes directly on the Notecard feature in NoodleTools or on 3” x 5” index cards. Put only ONE IDEA on each card and ALWAYS include the page number and a CODE which corresponds to its source card. Be sure all QUOTES are EXACT but always take PARAPHRASED notes. These cards will later be rearranged by topic and finally into subtopics.

      The Joad's indealisticexpectations               1

  •          Joads head to Ca. with high hopes
  •          Bus discovers that for them
  •          "California is not a Promised Land but a man-blighted Eden"

RESEARCH PAPER

The completed paper will be 4.5 to 5 pages in length. MLA formatting rules apply to Works Cited, parenthetical documentation and formatting of title, headers, etc. One long quote and three short quotes with appropriate parenthetical documentation are required. Use NoodeTools on the WMHS Info Center page for this.

MLA TEMPLATE IN WORD:


File→New→Search box: (type) MLA research template→(select) Research paper in MLA style→click and download→now save in a new folder (name of research paper: Hemingway)→save as file name :MLA word template. Then read the directions and all will be demystified.

MLA FORMATTING ON WEB:


The best online reference is Purdue Online Writing Lab (http://owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/resource). [Shortcut: google – OWL MLA format] Use the column on left to find individual topics. Use the ‘Sample Paper’ to see formatting. The boxes explain why paper is formatted in this manner.

Tuesday, February 8, 2011

The Ward Melville Players Proudly Present...



A Murder Mystery Dinner Theater
The Dark Deceitful Quest


Thursday& Friday February 10th and 11th
6:00 PM in the WMHS Cafeteria


Tickets:
$15 Kids 12 & Under
$25 Students & Adults
Dinner & Dessert are included!


Proceeds go to the Marty Lyons Foundation