social studies stadardized test prep

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Social Studies Reading Comprehension Using Historical Content and Passages in order to understand themes in History while supporting English Standards tested in the SBA

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Page 1: Social Studies Stadardized Test Prep

Social StudiesReading Comprehension

Using Historical Content and Passages in order to understand themes in History while supporting English

Standards tested in the SBA

Page 2: Social Studies Stadardized Test Prep

Identifying the Main IdeaThe question “What is this writing about?” is answered in the main Idea. Sometimes titles and headings reveal it. Individual paragraphs are built around a main idea. The rest of the sentences explain, give details about, or support the idea.

Learning to Identify the Main Idea- Use the following guidelines to help you identify the main idea:

•Read the selection carefully.•Look for the main idea and jot it down in your own words.•Look for the same main idea in a topic sentence. Remember the topic may be implied.•Read the selection to see whether other sentences support the main idea.

Page 3: Social Studies Stadardized Test Prep

Identifying the Main Idea & Drawing ConclusionsProgressive Reforms:

In the early 1900’s, Progressives backed a number of reforms designed to increase the people’s direct control of the government. Wisconsin, for example, made changes in the political process to give voters more power and to limit the influence of political parties. The reform included a direct primary election, in which all party members could vote for a candidate to run in the general election.

Progressivism in other states passed more reforms. The initiative allowed citizens to place a measure or issue on the ballot in a state election. The referendum gave voters the opportunity to accept or reject measures that the state legislature enacted. The recall enabled voters to remove unsatisfactory elected official from their jobs.

Progressives also changed the way U.S. senators are elected. The Constitution had given state legislatures the responsibility for choosing senators, but party bosses and business interests often controlled the selection process. Progressives wanted to give the people an opportunity to vote for their senators directly. Support for this idea grew. In 1912 Congress passed the Seventeenth Amendment to the Constitution to provide for the direct election of senators.

Progressive reforms changed the nature of American democracy by giving the people a greater voice and more real power in the political process. With these reforms, voters could select their representatives more directly; approve, reject, and introduce legislation; and call for a special election to remove an elected official from office.

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Identifying the Main Idea and Drawing Conclusion

1. Which of the following statements best states the main idea of the reading?

A. Progressive reform increased people’s direct control of the government.

B. Wisconsin gave voters more power in the political process than other states.

C. Progressives thought that people should be able to vote for their senators directly.

D. People had less control over the government after Progressive reforms were passed.

2. Which sentence below best represents a conclusion that can be drawn from this reading?

A. Progressive reforms made people’s lives easier by allowing the government to take care of more issues.

B. Progressives backed increased participation of political parties and business interests in selecting government officials.

C. Progressives believed that by placing more power in the hands of the voters, the political process would be fairer and less corrupt.

D. Progressives’ most significant reform in the early 1900s was the recall.

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Vocabulary Comprehension

3. In the passage the term ‘initiative’ means -

A. Ability to act on your ownB. PlanC. IdeaD. Beginning to take steps

4. In the passage a synonym for ‘process’ is-

A. ProcedureB. Legal issuesC. SummonsD. method

Page 6: Social Studies Stadardized Test Prep

Determining Cause & EffectAny condition or event that makes something happen is known as a cause. What happens as a result is an effect. Cause and effect relationships explain why things happen and how actions produce other actions. Cause and effect relationships can be simple or complex. Sometimes several different causes produce a single effect. At other times, one cause can produce several effects.

Learning to Determine Cause & Effect- Use the following guidelines to help You in determining cause and effect:

•Select an event or circumstance.•Compare the situation at the time of the event with conditions before it happened (causes) and after it happened (effects).•Look for vocabulary clues to help decide whether one event caused another.•Look for other relationships between the events.•Describe the cause and effects of the event.

Page 7: Social Studies Stadardized Test Prep

War with Spain in Cuba and the Philippines

U.S support of the Cuban Rebellion

The sinking of the USS Maine in Havana Harbor

U.S gains overseas empire: Annexes Guam and Puerto Rico

U.S extends power through military force in the Philippines

The Spanish American WarCauses Effects

The sinking of the USS Maine in Havana Harbor

U.S support of the Cuban Rebellion

Cuba gains independence

Understanding Cause & Effect

Page 8: Social Studies Stadardized Test Prep

Which of the following was not an outcome of the Spanish American War?

a)Cuba gained its independenceb)The U.S gained Guam and Puerto Ricoc)Philippines willfully accepted American occupationd)The United States acquired a overseas empire

Understanding Cause & Effect

Page 9: Social Studies Stadardized Test Prep

Analyzing Primary SourcesOriginal records of events made by eyewitnesses are known as primary sources. Primary sources include speeches, letters, journals, autobiographies, legal documents, drawings, pictures, and other objects made at the time. Each primary source can give some kind of information but does not necessarily give a complete picture of an event. For example, a letter from an immigrant might describe in detail the events of the difficult journey, but might not tell you how many people immigrated.

Learning to Analyze Primary Sources- Use the following guidelines to help analyze primary sources:

•Determine the origin of the source (the source’s author) and when and where the source was written or made.•Analyze the data for the main idea or concept as well as supporting ideas.•Consider the author’s personal beliefs or attitudes.

Page 10: Social Studies Stadardized Test Prep

Use the excerpt and social studies knowledge to answer the question below.

How long are the Spaniards to drench Cuba with the blood and tears of her people? How long is the peasantry of Spain to be drafted away to Cuba to die miserably in a hopeless war, that Spanish nobles and Spanish officers may get medals and honors?

- New York World, 1897

The author of this article most likely believed that the U.S involvement in the Spanish American War was necessary in order to-

a)Prevent further casualties in Cubab)Protect U.S economic interests in Spainc)Make Cuba a U.S colonyd)Seize control of Spanish territories

Interpreting & Analyzing Information from Primary Source

Page 11: Social Studies Stadardized Test Prep

The Panama CanalRoosevelt and others believed a canal through central America would save time and money for military and commercial shipping. The canal shortened the distance between the Pacific and Atlantic Oceans by 8,000 miles.

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Roosevelt Shrinks the World!

What is this headline referring to?a)The building of the Panama Canalb)The end of the Spanish American Warc)The annexation of Hawaii d)The Monroe Doctrine

Analyzing Headlines

Page 13: Social Studies Stadardized Test Prep

Drawing ConclusionsWhen you draw a conclusion, you analyze and interpret facts and information to arrive at a conclusion, or a reasonable judgment that sums up the information. Drawing conclusions may often involve gathering information that is not mentioned in the text. You may need to infer, or use information in the text and what you already know about a topic to help you reach your conclusion.

Learning to Draw Conclusions- Use the following guidelines to help you draw conclusions.

•Read the selection carefully.•Identify the main ideas related to the topic.•Look for key information and data in the text, graphics, and any illustrations or photos.•Carefully consider all points of view presented in the text.•Draw conclusions about the topic based on the information given.•Ask yourself whether your conclusions are based on information in the text.

Page 14: Social Studies Stadardized Test Prep

1920’s & 1930’s

The economy began a steady growth that lasted most of the 1920 decade. Technology made rapid growth possible, and electricity powered American industry. As electricity became more available, demand grew for appliances. By the 1920’s more than 60% of households had electricity. Consumers acquired refrigerators, vacuum cleaners, and radios. As demand for these items grew, more and more of them were produced, leading to lower prices. Between 1920 and 1929, the cost of a refrigerator dropped from $600 to $300.

Economic Boom & Bust:

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1. What conclusion can you draw about the daily lives of ordinary citizens in the 1920’s?

A. The prices of automobiles rose due to decreased consumer demand.

B. Americans did not understand the new advances in technology.

C. Americans preferred to save their earnings rather than spend them.

D. Americans’ lives became easier because of the improvement in the economy and affordability of consumer goods.

Drawing Conclusions

Economic Boom & Bust ?:

Page 17: Social Studies Stadardized Test Prep

New Mexico’s Role in WWIINew Mexican and Philippian soldiers were forced to march 65 miles then held prisoner during WWII by the Japanese Imperial Army, which is known as the Bataan Death March. Later in the war, New Mexico’s Navajo Code Talkers would serve a crucial role in keeping our secret code allowing us an opportunity to gain an advantage over the Japanese who later surrendered. As our soldiers fought bravely in the Pacific dedicated scientists worked in our secret city developing a device that would win the war for the United States. On July 16, 1945 the first atomic detonation took place in Socorro County at the Trinity Site. New Mexico’s contribution to the war effort is memorialized throughout our state and recognized every year at Veteran’s Day in many our cities and their monuments celebrating our citizen’s bravery.

Practicing Main Ideas & Supporting Details

Page 18: Social Studies Stadardized Test Prep

In ten complete sentences elaborate on the previous text and add supporting

details that correspond each bold term.

Practicing Main Ideas & Supporting Details

Page 19: Social Studies Stadardized Test Prep

Evaluating InformationInformation that aims to persuade people to accept a viewpoint may not be based on factual evidence. By evaluating information, you critically assess the information and form a judgment about its accuracy and usefulness.

Learning to Evaluate Information- Use the following guidelines to help you evaluate information.

•Read the source for its content.•Identify the author’s opinions and biases. Look for emotion-filled words.•Consider the motives the author may have had in writing the document and

author’s target audience.•Based on your evaluation, form a judgment on how accurate and trustworthy

the information is.•Draw a conclusion as to the usefulness of the information.

Page 20: Social Studies Stadardized Test Prep

The Atomic Bomb

By the spring of 1945, the Japanese faced certain defeat. Yet they continued to fight. Their refusal to surrender led the United States to use a powerful new weapon: the atomic bomb. After years of work on July 16, 1945, scientists tested the atomic bomb in the New Mexico desert. Truman now had to decide whether to use the bomb against Japan. The allies issued the Postdam Declaration, warning that is Japan did not surrender it faced “prompt and utter destruction.” The Japanese leader did not want to surrender, and Truman ordered the use of the bomb.

On August 6, 1945, an American B-29 bomber, the Enola Gay, dropped an atomic bomb on the Japanese city of Hiroshima. Three days later, a second bomb was dropped on the city of Nagasaki. The atomic bombs caused unimaginable destruction. The fist bomb leveled Hiroshima and killed 80,000 to 120,00 people instantly; the Nagasaki bomb killed between 35,000 and 74,000 people. Thousands more were injured, and many died later from radiation.

Evaluating Information

Page 21: Social Studies Stadardized Test Prep
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Evaluate Information

Directions: Often a writer will try to persuade readers to accept a certain viewpoint. Read the following text and primary source. As you read, evaluate the information. Ask yourself if the reasoning is supported by sound factual information and if the passages appeal to the emotions and biases of the readers. Then answers the questions that follow.

In July 1945, President Truman went to Postdam, near Berlin, for a meeting with WinstonChurchill and Josef Stalin. While the president was on his way back to the United States, an atomic bomb dropped on Hiroshima, Japan. On August 15, 1945, the Japanese surrendered. Many Americans have questioned the wisdom and the morality of using the atomic bomb. In recent years, some historians have suggested that the real reason for dropping the atomicBomb was to show the Soviet Union that the United States had a trump card in any post-war Dispute.

Page 23: Social Studies Stadardized Test Prep

In his memoirs, from which this excerpt is taken, President Truman offers his own explanation of his decision to use the atomic bomb.

Evaluating Information

“The historic message of the first explosion of an atomic bomb was flashed to me in a message from Secretary of War Stimson on the morning of July 16. The most secret and the most daring enterprise of the war had succeeded. We are now in possession of a weapon that would not only revolutionize war but could alter the course of history and civilizations.

“The Army plan envisaged an amphibious landing in the fall of 1945 on the island of Kyushu, the southernmost of the Japanese home islands. The first landing would then be followed approximately four months later by a second great invasion, which would be carried out by our Eighth and Tenth Armies, followed by the First Army transferred from Europe, all of which go ashore in the Kanto plains near Tokyo. In all, it had been estimated that it would require until the late fall of 1946 to bring Japan to her knees.

“This was a formidable conception, and all of us realized fully that the fighting would be fierce and the losses heavy. General Marshall told me that it might cost half a million American lives to force the enemy’s surrender on his home grounds.

“Let there be no mistake about it. I regarded the bomb as a military weapon and never had any doubt that it should be used.

“In deciding to use this bomb I wanted to make sure that it would be used as a weapon of war in the manner prescribed by the laws of war.”

Page 24: Social Studies Stadardized Test Prep

Evaluating Information1. What viewpoint does Truman want the reader to

understand?

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2. Briefly explain how Truman present his defense of his decision to use the atomic bomb and whether his defense is effective.

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1. In recent years, some historians have suggested that Truman’s real reason for dropping the atomic bomb was

A.To save thousands of Japanese lives that would be lost during an invasion.B.To save the enormous amount of money that would be required to mount a full-scale invasion of Europe.C.To show the Soviet Union that the United States had the atomic bomb in case of any disputes after the war.D.To keep the Japanese from developing the atomic bomb.

2. Truman said that he chose to drop the atomic bomb on Japan because

A.The Soviet Union was about to invade JapanB.The Soviet Union would soon have an atomic bomb if its own.C.The Japanese could never be defeated with conventional factors.D.Too many American lives would be lost in an invasion of Japan.

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