Title: Hansen U.S. History U.S. Imperialism
1Hansen U.S. History U.S. Imperialism
Group Project
Introduction- Around the year 1900, the United
States made the decision to become an
imperialist
power- expanding beyond the borders of
continental North America. In doing so, the
country
was adopting a European model of power one which
demanded military bases, trade, and resources
around the globe. With your partners, you will
research the history of Americas intervention in
its new colonies, and you will demonstrate your
understanding of both the simple and complex
aspects of each intervention.
- Materials the Group Will Have
- - this sheet of instructions
- - a world map -a reading packet with
information on each of the seven colonies to be
discussed - - a set of questions for each of the seven
colonies - - Mr. Hansens lecture on the first colony (the
Philippines) as well as an example of Mr.
Hansens creative work on the Philippines - Calendar
- - Day 1 and part of Day 2- An introduction to
the project and an example of high level work
(Mr. Hansens Philippines lecture and creative
work). - - students receive some of necessary
materials (a) this sheet, and (b) the
questions that must be answered by the end of
the project - - Mr. Hansen will give a miniature
lecture on U.S. intervention in the
Philippines. Students will use the
information from this lecture to answer the
relevant questions in their reading packet
- - Mr. Hansen will then share his creative
work on the Philippines - students will
be assigned to groups - groups will get
remaining necessary materials (c) a group
copy of the questions, (d) the reading packet,
and (e), a world map - - Rest of Day 2, Day 3, and Day 4 - Work
time to gather information on the three remaining
colonies assigned (not the same for all groups). -
- - Day 2, 3, and 4 (cont.)
- - My group has been assigned to the
following colonies _______________,
___________, and _____________ - - Day 5, 6, and 7- Groups create Creative Part
of the Project (explained in the next section)
focusing on two of the three colonies they have
been assigned. In addition, they set up and label
their World Map. - - Day 8 and 9- Groups take turns explaining or
gathering information on the remaining three
colonies from other groups - - Day 10 Groups turn in their final packet (one
per group). This packet will include, in the
following order - 1) The World Map
- 2) The Questions and Answers for Each Colony
- 3) The Creative Piece
- The Creative Piece
- - For the two chosen colonies, students will
demonstrate their deep understanding by
reflecting the history in a creative way. - - for each colony chosen for this creative work,
students will select and make one of the
following to showcase their understanding and
creativity - a) a political cartoon
- b) a comic strip
- c) a visual metaphor
- d) a newspaper article (from the time the
events occurred) - e) an article in a history book from the
present day - - (Continued on back)
-
2- (the creative part- continued)
- - For each of the colonies chosen, the creative
piece must be made in two ways. The first way
will represent the viewpoint of those who see
American expansion into the colony as a good
thing and the second will represent the viewpoint
of those who criticize this instance of American
Imperialism. For a given colony you must choose
one creative technique and then use it for both
supporters and opponents of imperialism. Thus, if
you create a political cartoon from the view of
supporters then you must also create a political
cartoon from the view of opponents. You may not
create a political cartoon from one viewpoint and
a history article from the other viewpoint. Your
creative pieces must relate to each other. You
may choose a different format for your second
colony. - - Thus, when you are done with the creative
part, you will have made four creative works
relating to two American colonies. - - You will write a paragraph explaining the
meaning of each of your creative pieces, to help
me understand it when I grade it. Your paragraph
can be as short or as long as necessary. It
should be attached to the back of the creative
piece or should immediately follow it in your
final packet. - 4. Grading
- - This is an in-depth project and I expect to be
dazzled. - - I will grade your answers to the questions
related to one of the six colonies (the colony
will be chosen at random, but the same choice
will be graded for the whole class). I will give
these questions a grade out of 50 points. I will
be looking for clarity, thoroughness, and care in
your answers. - - In addition, I will grade your creative work
from one of the two colonies you create. I will
examine both the creative work from the pro side
and the creative work for the con side. I will
give this a grade out of 50 points as well. I
will be looking here for creativity, neatness,
clarity, depth of understanding, and effort. - 5. Good luck.
Or