Hi D-Block,
I will fill you in on all the details about the test at the start of class tomorrow but here is how I usually do tests.
The test will be broken into multiple choice and short answer questions. Multiple Choice is very straight forward, the short answer questions are just like the vocab test. You will be given a term and you have to define it and give the historical significance (Why it's important). There will be something like 20-25 MC questions and 5-7 short answer questions.
As far as what to study you should be studying all of your class notes, all of the handouts I've given you, all of the assignments etc.
Here is a rundown of what we've covered so far:
Wednesday March 10 - The Causes of WWII
Thursday March 11 - Canada goes to War
Friday March 12 - Canada at War
Monday March 15 - Canada at War continued, Canada's home front (Homework Assignment)
Tuesday March 16 - Japanese Canadian Internment
Wednesday March 17 - The Holocaust
Thursday March 18 - The War's impact on Canada (We will do some review on this day too)
Friday March 19 - The Unit Test
I will post all the relevant vocab in the vocab section.
You will be allowed to bring in one sheet of paper with notes. You can write whatever you want on the paper, but you can only bring one piece. I think this is better than totally open book because as you make the "cheat sheet" you will be studying. Whereas if it is totally open book many students don't study and they don't do very well.
Sound ok?
We'll talk tomorrow in class but feel free to e-mail me if you have any questions.
Im off to see Canada VS Norway in Sledgehockey! (Ultra-nationalism at it's best!)
See you tomorrow,
-Mr. Miller
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I don't know where I'm suppose to be putting the homework so I'm doing it here.
ReplyDelete- They wouldn't be caught being with them or they don't need to deal with them.
- It's shallow how people could think mean things about other people but expect to be treated nicely.
- The government forced Japanese Canadians to move to Japan or to move to West of the Rocky. But the government cancelled it after a couple of years. The government regreted forcing Japanese Canadians to move.