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Introduction
Teacher Resources
Timeline
Major Events
Maps
Classroom Activities
Glossary
OTHER EPISODES
Cold War I
Citizen Kurchatov
Bay of Pigs
Yalta
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National and State Standards
Use of "The Berlin Crisis" video program and curriculum
guide will help students develop the following skills consistent
with the National
Standards established at McREL and Oregon State Content Standards.
National Content Standards:
Civics
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Standard 23
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Understands the impact of significant political and non-political
developments on the United States and other nations
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Geography
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Standard 13
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Understands the forces of cooperation and conflict that shape
the divisions of Earth's surface
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Historical Understanding
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Standard 1
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Understands and knows how to analyze chronological relationships
and patterns
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Standard 2
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Understands the historical perspective
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United States History
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Era 9,
Standard 27
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Understands how the Cold War and conflicts in Korea and Vietnam
influenced domestic and international politics
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World History
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Era 9,
Standard 43
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Understands how post-World War II reconstruction occurred,
new international power relations took shape, and colonial
empires broke up
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Era 9,
Standard 44
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Understands the search for community, stability, and peace
in an interdependent world
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Era 9,
Standard 45
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Understands major global trends since World War II
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Language Arts
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Writing, 4
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Gathers and uses information for research purposes
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Reading, 7
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Uses reading skills and strategies to understand and interpret
a variety of informational texts
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Listening and
Speaking, 8
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Uses listening and speaking strategies for different purposes
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Viewing, 9
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Uses viewing skills and strategies to understand and interpret
visual media
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Media, 10
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Understands the characteristics and components of the media
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Thinking and Reasoning
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Standard 1
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Understands and applies the basic principles of presenting
an argument
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Standard 6
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Applies decision-making techniques
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Oregon State Standards:
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Content Standard
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CIM Standard
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Social Science: Civics and Government
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- Understand
how the United States government relates and interacts with
other nations.
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- Understand
the impact of significant political and non-political developments
on the United States and other nations' international organizations
and the role of the United States in them.
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Social Science: Geography
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- Locate
places and understand and use geographic information or
relationships by reading, interpreting, and preparing maps
and other geographic representations.
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- Interpret
and evaluate information using complex geographic representations.
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Social Science: Historical Skills
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- Understand,
represent, and interpret chronological relationships in
history.
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- Reconstruct,
interpret, and represent the chronology of significant events,
developments, and narratives from U.S. history.
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- Identify
and analyze cause and effect relationships in history.
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- Compare
and contrast institutions and ideas in history, noting cause
and effect relationships.
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- Interpret
and represent chronological relationships and patterns of
change and continuity over time.
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- Recognize
and interpret continuity and/or change with respect to particular
historical developments in the twentieth century.
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- Identify
and analyze various perspectives and interpretations of
historical issues and events.
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- Understand
how contemporary perspectives affect historical interpretation.
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Social Science: World History
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- Understand
the importance and lasting influence of issues, events,
people, and developments in world history.
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- Understand
the causes, characteristics, lasting influence, and impact
of political, economic, and social developments in world
history.
Eligible Content:
- Understand
the division of Europe after WWII leading to the Cold War.
- Understand
the impact of the Cold War on individuals, groups, and nations.
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Social Science: Social Science Analysis
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- Identify, research, and clarify an event, issue, problem,
or phenomenon of significance to society.
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- Define, research, and explain an event, issue, problem,
or phenomenon and its significance to society.
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- Gather, use, and evaluate researched information to support
analyses and conclusions.
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- Gather, analyze, use, and document information from various
sources, distinguishing facts, opinions, inferences, biases,
stereotypes, and persuasive appeals.
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- Understand an event, issue, problem, or phenomenon from
multiple perspectives.
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- Analyze an event, issue, problem or phenomenon from varied
or opposed perspectives or points of view.
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- Identify and analyze characteristics, causes, and consequences
of an event, issue, problem, or phenomenon.
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- Analyze an event, issue, problem, or phenomenon identifying
characteristics, influences, causes, and both short- and
long-term effects.
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- Identify, compare, and evaluate outcomes, responses, or
solutions, then reach a supported conclusion.
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- Propose, compare, and judge multiple responses, alternatives,
or solutions, then reach a defensible, supported conclusion.
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Language Arts: Communication
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- Communicate knowledge of the topic, including relevant
examples, facts, anecdotes, and details.
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- Convey clear, focused main ideas with accurate, relevant
supporting details, including documentation of sources,
appropriate to audience and purpose.
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Language Arts: Reading
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- Demonstrate evaluative comprehension of a variety of printed
materials.
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- Analyze and evaluate whether an argument, action, or policy
is validated by the evidence in a selection.
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- Draw connections and explain relationships between reading
selections and other texts, experiences, issues, and events.
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- Extend and deepen comprehension by relating text to other
texts, experiences, issues, and events.
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Language Arts: Writing
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- Communicate knowledge of the topic, including relevant
examples, facts, anecdotes, and details.
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- Convey clear, focused main ideas supported by accurate
and relevant supporting details, in ways appropriate to
topic, audience, and purpose.
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