Title: Unit 7
1Unit 7 Imperialism through World War I
- Lesson 2 Imperialism Day 1
2Friday, November 22
- Page 166 Attach Study Guide
- Page 169
- Bell ringer
- Have you ever tried to control someone younger,
smaller, or weaker? Why? How did you assert your
power? (if youve never done this, write about a
time youve seen it done) - Objective
- Explain how the Industrial Revolution led to
competition for resources among industrialized
nations. Analyze the effects of competition on
nationalism. Explain how new imperialism impacted
colonized peoples. - Homework Study Guide Objective 1
- Page 170
- Attach Part 1 Definition
3The New Imperialism
- 1870s-1914
- This overlaps with the Industrial Revolution, but
they are NOT THE SAME!
4Intro to Imperialism
- Imperialism the forceful takeover of one
country/region by another - With a partner, read Introduction to
Imperialism and answer the questions on the back - 15 minutes
5Part 1 Text Quest
- Complete questions 1-7
- Text book pages 757 758
- Time 20 minutes
6Part 2 Simulation
- Each person will be given an African or European
nation. Keep this information to yourself until
told to do different. - We will be going into the hallway.
- African nations, line up on the left side of the
hallway - European nations, line up on the right side of
the hallway
7Part 3 White Mans Burden
- Read White Mans Burden and answer corresponding
questions
8Part 4 Explaining Rwanda Introduction to New
Imperialism
- Begin by reading and responding to History of
Rwanda on your worksheet
9As we are talking about differences
10What Would You Do? Muslims in America video clip
- On Page 171 in your notebook
- - Write down at least 5 events you witness during
the video. - - Identify whether the event is positive of
negative.
11What would you do?
- -Why are some Americans upset/threatened by the
arrival of different cultures in the U.S? - -What defines our national sense of patriotism
and pride? - -Have you witnessed examples similar to this kind
of prejudice around Charlotte?
12Unit 7 Imperialism through World War I
- Lesson 2 Imperialism Day 2
- (The Scramble for Africa)
13Monday, November 25
- Page 172
- Bell ringer
- Who or what should decide a countrys borders?
Why? - Objective
- Explain how the Industrial Revolution led to
competition for resources among industrialized
nations. - Analyze the effects of competition on
nationalism. Explain how new imperialism impacted
colonized peoples. - Title the bottom half Part 5 Study Questions
- Page 173
- Title Guided Notes
- Page 174
- Attach Activity 1
- Page 174
- Attach Activity 3
14Remember
- With a partnercomplete Part 5 from Fridays
activity (Study Questions)
15Guided Notes
- For each slide, copy the title and all underlined
words/phrases. - Page 173 in notebook
16The Industrial Revolution
- The IR leads to the colonization of Africa
- New technology from the IR (such as the
steamboat) allows Europeans to travel further
inland in Africa than they had before - In his book Heart of Darkness, Joseph Conrad
describes the interior of Africa as one of the
last blank spots on the world mapNew
Imperialism changes that! - Business Owners need more factors of production
(think land resources)Africa has plenty!
Keep the factories hot!
17Famous Explorers Dr. Livingstone
- British
- Explored over 30 yrs
- Anti-imperialist
- Most famous explorer
18Cecil Rhodes
- British Explorer
- Came to South Africa at 17
- Became one of the richest men in the world
- Diamonds, gold
- Wanted AND power
- Very pro-imperialist
19Scramble for Africa
- European nations could get more land in Africa
and Asia, and so did not need to fight directly
over the land in Europe.
20Scramble for Africa
21(No Transcript)
22French Empire, 1914
23- British army officials and Indian princes playing
polo in 1880
24(No Transcript)
25(No Transcript)
26Activity
- Individually, you will receive ten minutes to
complete each of 4 activities. - Remain on task (-1 point for each redirection)
27Activity 1 White Mans Burden
28Racist Motives?
- Many Europeans justified taking over Africans
land by saying they were helping the African
savages achieve civilization - In his poem The White Mans Burden, Rudyard
Kipling explains African Imperialism as a mission
from God to spread Christianity and other Western
beliefs
29Criticism
- The books Heart of Darkness (written by a
European) and Things Fall Apart (written by an
African) both criticize the White Mans Burden
by saying the explorers did not care about
helping Africans at all but about exploiting them
to get rich
30Activity 2 The Berlin Conference
311884 The Berlin ConferenceBack to Guided Notes
(page 221)
- European leaders meet to stop fighting over
Africa - No Africans invited
- RESULT no European country could claim part of
Africa unless they set up a government office
there - 20 years later Almost entire continent divided
- No attention paid to traditional or ethnic
patterns
32- Which colonial power had the most land?
33Activity 3 The Map of Africa
34Activity 4 Reactions to Belgian Imperialism in
the Congo
35Economic Effects in Africa(Page 221 in Notebook)
- Infrastructure built - roads, schools, hospitals,
telephones, etc - Cash crop economies - unsustainable and no
diversification of foodstuffs - Uneven development - only areas around natural
resources that mattered to Europeans
36Resistance to Imperialism(Page 221 in Notebook)
- Ethiopia modernized already to successfully
fight off Italian imperialists - Liberia founded by freed
- US slaves, and so had the
- protection of the U.S.
37Modern Imperialism?
Does Imperialism still exist? In forms other
than domination of another nation?
38Modern Imperialism?
39Exit Ticket
- If the Africans had been invited to the Berlin
Conference how would Africa be better today? - 1 paragraph (5 sentences) response