Challenge 1
Challenge 2
Challenge 3
The Roots - Game Theory - 00 - Clock With No Hands
Monday, December 19, 2011
Tuesday, December 13, 2011
Holocaust Time Line: How Could This Happen?
In order to have the proper context when studying the Holocaust, it is imperative to have a basic understanding of the events that lead to Hitler getting pwer, maintaining power, the treatment of the Jews and other groups, Jewish resistance, and the demise of the Nazis. The way we will be doing this is through group work, group investigation and group presentation. In your group of 3-5, you will be responsible for learning about and presenting 1 section of the timeline to the rest of the class. You will also be responsible for the making and the adminstering of a quiz on your section.
The Timeline section focuses on the history of the Holocaust, chronicling the years from 1918 to the present. Hitler's rise to power was the initiation of a period that wrought great fear and destruction. Millions were forced to live in ghettos, only to be deported later to the concentration camps. The tragic details remained obscure until the liberation of the death camps and the further revelations during the Nuremberg War Trials. The subsections below offer a simplified outline for thinking about how the Holocaust unfolded. However, it should be kept in mind that many of the categories overlap.
- Rise of the Nazi Party (1918-1933). During the fourteen years following the end of World War I, the Nazi party grew from a small political group to the most powerful party in Germany.
- Nazification (1933-1939). Once Hitler became Chancellor and later Reichsführer, the Nazi party quickly changed Germany's political, social, and economic structure.
- The Ghettos (1939-1941). Confining Jews to ghettos was another critical step in Hitler's Final Solution. Link
- The Camps (1941-1942). The concentration camps were Hitler's final step in the annihilation of the Jews. Link
- Resistance (1942-1944). People resisted by any means possible, from stealing a slice of bread to sabotaging Nazi installations. Link
- Rescue and Liberation (1944-1945). Some survived through the heroics of neighbors; others were liberated by the Allies.
- Aftermath (1945-2000). After the war, Nazi perpetrators faced punishment for their war crimes and survivors began rebuilding their lives.
After you have spent considerable time making jot notes on your section (make sure you have a good understanding of all the information you present), it is time to present your learning to the class. Your group can present any way you chose. Possible options are:
- Presentaions using:
- OneTrueMedia
- Googledocs
- Comic Life
- Animoto
- Movie Maker
- Glogster
- Other
- Visuals
- simular to the Heritage Fair displays
- Oral Presentations
- need to have visuals to go with speech
- Other
- need to meet with teacher
Quiz
Your group will also need to have some sort of assessment at the end of your presentation to check for class understanding. The quiz may use the following formats:
- Short answer questions
- multiple choice
- matching
- essay-remember you have to mark it too!!
Paragraph Writing-The Wave
The Wave
Answer the following questions on your blog in paragraph form. Make sure you use proper paragraph structure, punctuation and grammar.- How can movements such as The Wave be defeated?
2. What does this film say about authority and power?
3. What does this experiment say about the cause of the Holocaust?
Monday, December 12, 2011
Population Density in Holocaust Ghettos
During the Nazi occupation of Poland, 255,000 Jews were forced to live in a ghetto in Lódz, Poland. By the end of 1941, the 4.3 square kilometer ghetto was occupied by an average of 3.5 people per room.
By October of 1940, Nazis had confined nearly 400,000 Jews in a 9.06 square kilometer area of Warsaw which normally housed about 160,000. The area was surrounded by a wall 10 feet high and was sealed off on November 15, 1940. Jews were forbidden to go outside the area on penalty of being shot on sight. No contact with the outside world was allowed.
Let's compare those numbers to how we live in Saskatchewan and Saskatoon:
Saskatchewan
What problems would arise in the crowded ghettos due to such a high population denisty?
By October of 1940, Nazis had confined nearly 400,000 Jews in a 9.06 square kilometer area of Warsaw which normally housed about 160,000. The area was surrounded by a wall 10 feet high and was sealed off on November 15, 1940. Jews were forbidden to go outside the area on penalty of being shot on sight. No contact with the outside world was allowed.
Let's compare those numbers to how we live in Saskatchewan and Saskatoon:
Saskatchewan
- Population: 1 053 960
- Area: 588 276 square kilometres
- Population: 257 300
- Area: 144 sq. kilometers
- Population: 405
- Area: 3688 sq. meters
What problems would arise in the crowded ghettos due to such a high population denisty?
- starvation
- disease
- uprising
- After reading Smoke and Ashes: The Story of the Holocaust by Barbara Rogasky, write a poem or a journal entry about the life of a young child living in the ghettos. Think about ideas from the reading like, "The countless children, whose parents had persihed, sitting in the streets. Their bodies bodies are frightfully thin, the bones stick out of a yellow skin that looks like parchment....They crawl on all fours, groaning..."
- Also, make a chorcoal drawing to represent your poem or journal entry. Here are some examples of drawings from the ghettos.
Thursday, December 1, 2011
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