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11.03B.A.1 - Enslaved Peoples of America in the 1800's

Resource:
11.03B.A.1 - Enslaved Peoples of America in the 1800's

Inquiry Question
How and why did the institution of slavery grow in the early 1800’s?


Learning Objective
Students will examine a variety of documents concerning enslaved people in order to practice connecting claims to evidence. 

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11.03B.A.2 - Nat Turner's Rebellion

U.S. History
Unit 11.03B: Sectionalism & the Civil War
Resource:
11.03B.A.2 - Nat Turner's Rebellion

Inquiry Question
How reliable are the primary source documents about Nat Turner’s rebellion and whose perspective is missing?


Learning Objective
Students will examine primary source documents concerning Nat Turner’s Rebellion in order to understand sourcing, bias, and missing historical perspectives. 

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11.03B.A.3 - Abolitionists

U.S. History
Unit 11.03B: Sectionalism & the Civil War
Resource:
11.03B.A.3 - Abolitionists

Inquiry Question

  • What anti-slavery arguments did abolitionists make? 

Learning Objective

  • Students will analyze several primary source excerpts from prominent Abolitionists in order to gain a deeper understanding of the anti-slavery arguments being made.  
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11.03B.A.4 - Sojourner Truth: Intersection of Women’s Rights and Abolition

U.S. History
Unit 11.03B: Sectionalism & the Civil War
Resource:
11.03B.A.4 - Sojourner Truth: Intersection of Women’s Rights and Abolition

Inquiry Question

  • How does Sojourner Truth demonstrate the intersection of women and Black rights and impact both early feminism and abolition?

Learning Objective

  • Students will use the practice analyzing visual and textual primary sources in order to better understand the intersectionality experienced by Black women activists in the 1800’s such as Sojourner Truth.
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11.03B.A.5 - Frederick Douglass: "What to the Slave is the 4th of July?"

U.S. History
Unit 11.03B: Sectionalism & the Civil War
Resource:
11.03B.A.5 - Frederick Douglass: "What to the Slave is the 4th of July?"

Inquiry Question
Why would marginalized people be critical of celebrating the early United States?

Learning Objective
Students will evaluate critical views on early US history by analyzing and comparing two different documents, one from Frederick Douglass and the other from a modern BLM activist, concerning celebrating the 4th of July. 

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11.03B.B.1 - Texas Annexation

U.S. History
Unit 11.03B: Sectionalism & the Civil War
Resource:
11.03B.B.1 - Texas Annexation

Inquiry Question
What were the arguments concerning the annexation of Texas? 


Learning Objective
Students will use primary source documents to evaluate different arguments for/against the annexation of Texas and draw their own conclusions on the United State’s actions. 

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11.03B.B.2 - Mexican American War

U.S. History
Unit 11.03B: Sectionalism & the Civil War
Resource:
11.03B.B.2 - Mexican American War

This source analyzes documents in order to understand the motivations of the Mexican-American War. 

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11.03B.B.3 - Compromises: Slavery & Expansion

U.S. History
Unit 11.03B: Sectionalism & the Civil War
Resource:
11.03B.B.3 - Compromises: Slavery & Expansion

Inquiry Question
How was westward expansion and slavery connected?


Learning Objective
Students will evaluate different documents concerning major political compromises with slavery in order to understand how it is connected with western expansion.

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11.03B.B.4 - Dred Scott Decision

U.S. History
Unit 11.03B: Sectionalism & the Civil War
Resource:
11.03B.B.4 - Dred Scott Decision

Inquiry Question

  • What did the ruling in the Dred Scott case mean for Black Americans in 1857? 

Learning Objective

  • Students will be able to analyze the impact of the Dred Scott decision by examining two primary source documents.
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11.03B.C.1 - Civil War before the Civil War: From Bleeding Kansas & John Brown

U.S. History
Unit 11.03B: Sectionalism & the Civil War
Resource:
11.03B.C.1 - Civil War before the Civil War: From Bleeding Kansas & John Brown

Inquiry Question
Was the escalation of violence necessary to end slavery in the U.S.?

Learning Objective
Students will evaluate the motivations behind the escalation of violence over slavery in the U.S. in Kansas before eventually leading to the Civil War by examining multiple primary source documents

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11.03B.C.2 - Union vs Confederacy

U.S. History
Unit 11.03B: Sectionalism & the Civil War
Resource:
11.03B.C.2 - Union vs Confederacy

Inquiry Question

  • What were the differences between the Union & the Confederacy and how did they contribute to a Union victory?

Learning Objective

  • Students will examine the differences between the Union and the Confederacy and determine how these differences both led to Civil War and the eventual Union victory.
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11.03B.C.3 - Gettysburg Address

U.S. History
Unit 11.03B: Sectionalism & the Civil War
Resource:
11.03B.C.3 - Gettysburg Address

Inquiry Question
How did Lincoln’s Gettysburg Address change perceptions on U.S. founding documents and the Union as a whole?
Learning Objective
Students will examine the Gettysburg Address and a modern analysis of the speech in order to understand changing perspectives on the U.S. before and after the Civil War.

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