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Showing posts from March, 2019

Two Short Clips about the Early Cold War and Marshall Plan

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The first clip comes from Media Rich Learning and covers the end of World War II, the Russian Revolution, and the beginning of the split between the U.S. and the Soviet Union. The second clip concentrates on the Marshall Plan and comes from History .  It runs for only three minutes.

Russian Revolution Documentary

Here's an excellent documentary about the Russian Revolution that I found on School Tube. It's in three 9 minute parts.  I can't figure out who made the documentary but it's good, engaging, and relatively short. In the first nine minutes, the documentary outlines the causes of the revolution reviewing the plight of the peasants and workers and the abdication of the tsar. In the second part, Lenin arrives in Moscow on a sealed train car from Switzerland. He outlines his Marxist ideals and wrote down his vision for a socialist country in a paper called the April Thesis, which called for power to the Soviets and an end to the "imperialist war." In the third part, Lenin overthrows the Provisional Government and gets Russia out of World War I.

Nuremberg Trial Explained: Terrific Clip

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Here's an excellent 17-minute review of the Nuremberg Trial from History Skope that would be great for students.  It notes that the trial was the first time an international court sentenced criminals to prison and even death. The development of an international court came about after the Big Three considered three possibilities. Do nothing to the war criminals, kill them all by executive action, or put them all on trial, which is what they decided to do. History Skope outlines how the tribunal was set up and reviews the four types of crimes for which a person could be indicted: crimes against peace, crimes against humanity, war crimes, and a common plan or conspiracy to commit any of the three previous crimes.

The World in 1900, A Hyperdoc Assignment

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Studying the twentieth century just before World War I? Here's a hyperdoc I made , using a template from Ms. Byars,  that allows students to research four significant events in the first decade of the twentieth century. The hyperdoc includes links for each event as well as links to short video clips. The events include the Bloody Sunday massacre in Russia in 1905 and the Russo-Japanese War in the same year. Students examine Georgii Gapon's petition to the tsar and the main concessions that Russia lost to Japan. Students also read about the collapse of dynastic China and the Mexican Revolution, both in 1910. The guiding question for students is to analyze the commonalities of these different events. The research should show students the instability or insecurity that characterized the beginning of the 20the century. In years past, I started the 20th century with World War I but a relatively new book by James Carter and Richard Warren...