01.3 Quiz Trade and Economic Change
01.5 Quiz The Enlightenment (5 Matching & 5 MC)
"rule of law"
ancient Greeks
Magna Carta
English Bill of Rights
scientific method
Parliament
branches of government
John Locke
02.1 Quiz Roanoke and Jamestown
02.2 Quiz The New England Colonies (5 T/F & 5 MC)
What was the first written constitution in America?
What were the differences among Pilgrims and Puritans?
Who founded Jamestown?
What was the outcome of King Philip’s War?
Which Protestants wanted to reform the Anglican Church?
What is the Mayflower Compact?
Who helped the Pilgrims survive in Plymouth?
Which colony in America first practiced religious tolerance?
Who is the founder of the Massachusetts Bay colony?
How did the lack of religious tolerance by the Puritans lead to the formation of additional colonies?
02.3 Quiz The Middle Colonies (5 Matching & 5 MC)
02.4 Quiz The Southern Colonies (5 Fill-In & 4 MC)
⦿ Georgia
⦿ Maryland
⦿ Carolina
⦿ Indentured servants
⦿ Bacon’s Rebellion
⦿ African slavery
⦿ Carolina crops
2.5b Analyzing Sources: Colonial America (After analyzing the three primary sources, answer all eight questions in complete sentences.)
Did you review the five McGraw Hill Ch 02 Self-Check Quizzes in preparation for the 25 question, Ch 02 Test Colonial America on Wednesday, November 10, 2022?
02.1 Self-Check Quiz: Roanoke and Jamestown
02.2 Self-Check Quiz: The New England Colonies
02.3 Self-Check Quiz: The Middle Colonies
02.4 Self-Check Quiz: The Southern Colonies
02.5 Self-Check Quiz: An American Identity Grows
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fBHygSQyKqQ Nov 09, 2022 McGraw Hill has great study tools available for students to use when preparing to take an assessment. Each lesson has the ability to Launch Presentation that includes the option to Open Tray and review all Resources. Lesson Review always includes a Self-Check Quiz, a Vocabulary Review and a Game. James Garritson
George Washington
William Pitt
France
Great Britain
Canada
Native Americans
French
British
French and Indian War
The fall of Quebec
Albany Plan of Union
Iroquois Confederacy
The Treaty of Paris
The Proclamation of 1763
Copy and Paste these Five Questions and then answer them to prepare for the McGraw Hill quiz.
What was the Continental Congress?
Who was the leader of the Green Mountain Boys and what British-held fort did they capture?
Who, along with Paul Revere, warned Samuel Adams that the British were coming?
Who was Benedict Arnold and what military information did he sell to the British?
Who had orders to take away the weapons of the Massachusetts militia?
3.4a America's Literature: Paul Revere's Ride by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow (After reading the poem, answer the five questions in complete sentences.)
Copy and Paste these Five Terms and then write brief notes about each term to prepare for the McGraw Hill quiz.
Continental Congress
Second Continental Congress
Continental Army
Hessians
Benjamin Franklin
Second Continental Congress
Post Office
Olive Branch Petition
German troops
General George Washington
New York in March 1776
Declaration of Independence
Continental Army
Quebec
03.4 Self-Check Quiz: A Call to Arms
03.5 Self-Check Quiz: Declaring Independence
Take and Retake the 03.0 Entry Test The Spirit of Independence all three times to prepare for this test. All 20 questions with the same answers are on this test. All questions and answer choices are available until 10 p.m. tonight (Thursday, February 6, 2025). Take the first three McGraw Hill Ch 03 Self-Check Quizzes, play the Games multiple times, open and reread the definitions for the Vocabulary Reviews, and review the three lessons for the 30 question, Ch 03 Test The Spirit of Independence on Friday, February 7, 2025.
03.1 Self-Check Quiz: Rivalry in North America
03.2 Self-Check Quiz: No Taxation Without Representation
03.3 Self-Check Quiz: Uniting the Colonists
3.5a Points of View: Should the Colonies Declare Their Independence From Great Britain? (After analyzing both sources, answer the six questions in complete sentences.)
3.5b Analyzing Sources: The Spirit of Independence (After analyzing the three primary sources, answer all nine questions in complete sentences.)
3.5c The Declaration of Independence (Thoroughly read this document.)
04.1 Self-Check Quiz: The War for Independence
04.2 Self-Check Quiz: The War Continues
04.3 Self-Check Quiz: Battlegrounds Shift
04.4 Self-Check Quiz: The Final Years
Take and Retake the 04.0b Entry Test The American Revolution all three times to prepare for this test. All 20 questions with identical answers from the Entry Test are included on this test. All questions and answer choices are available today (Thursday, February 27, 2025). Take the four McGraw Hill Ch 04 Self-Check Quizzes, play the Games multiple times, open and reread the definitions for the Vocabulary Reviews, and review the four lessons this evening in preparation for the 40 question, Ch 04 Test The American Revolution on Friday, February 28, 2025.
04.1 Self-Check Quiz: The War for Independence
04.2 Self-Check Quiz: The War Continues
04.3 Self-Check Quiz: Battlegrounds Shift
04.4 Self-Check Quiz: The Final Years
Students will fill out this guide using McGraw Hill Chapter 4 Lessons.
American military advantages
British military advantages
Native Americans
Green Mountain Boys
Hessians
Loyalists
Patriots
Continental Congress
George Washington
Benjamin Franklin
Patrick Henry
Thomas Paine
Nathan Hale
Marquis de Lafayette
Friedrich von Steuben
John Paul Jones
Francis Marion
France
slavery
privateer
blockade
Vincennes
Saratoga
Yorktown
Trenton
Philadelphia
Treaty of Paris
05.1 Quiz The Articles of Confederation (4 T/F & 5 MC)
05.2 Quiz Forging a New Constitution (5 Fill-In & 4 MC)
05.1 Quiz (5 Matching & 4 MC)
Federalist
Anti-federalist
checks and balances
Electoral College
Framers
Opposition to the Constitution
Life, Liberty, and Property
Branches of Government
What are the key principles of the U.S. Constitution?
How did the Framers of the Constitution limit the powers of the national government?
What are enumerated powers of the Congress according to the Constitution?
How does the Constitution provide for the separation of powers?
Which entity has the power to interpret the Constitution and decide whether or not actions by the legislative and executive branches are allowed?
Which freedoms and rights are addressed in the Bill of Rights?
How has the Constitution formally changed over time?
What are ways to make a formal proposal to amend the Constitution?
How has amending the Constitution brought significant changes to the nation?
What is a way that the Constitution has changed other than by formally amending it?
What are the three branches of the federal government?
What is the number of representatives from each state in the House based on?
How many senators does each state send to Congress?
Which branch of the federal government makes the nation’s laws?
What powers are given to the president by the Constitution?
What is the Supreme Court’s power of judicial review?
What is the right of due process?
What is the process called when a person who was born in another country can become a citizen?
What are the basic freedoms outlined in the First Amendment to the Constitution?
What are the duties of citizenship?
Who was the first president under the new Constitution?
Who makes up the president’s cabinet?
How many amendments are in the Bill of Rights?
Who did President Washington depend on for economic advice and policies in his first years in office?
Why did the United States face serious financial trouble after the American Revolution?
What are taxes on imports called?
What advice did Washington give the nation in his Farewell Address?
Who became the second president of the United States after George Washington left office?
What term is used for residents of the United States who are not citizens?
What does the principle of states’ rights hold?
07.1 Quiz The First President (5 MC & 5 Short Answers)
Within the executive branch, what did the three department heads and the attorney general come to be known as?
Who was the first leader of the new Department of State?
Why did Jefferson oppose Hamilton’s plan for paying off debts with taxes?
What or who is a “speculator”?
What is a “precedent”?
07.2 Quiz Early Challenges (5 Matching & 5 MC)
07.3 Quiz The First Political Parties (5 Fill-In & 5 MC)
08.1 Quiz A New Party in Power
In the election of 1800, who did Federalists support for a second presidential term?
What did President Jefferson and Secretary of the Treasury Gallatin work to reduce?
What did Congress pass in order prevent another showdown between
a presidential and a vice-presidential candidate?
What are taxes on imported goods called?
What do historians call the last-minute judicial appointments made by President Adams?
09.2 Quiz Moving West (5 Fill-In & 4 MC)
What did pioneer women in the West get together in parties to accomplish? _______ and _______
Which canal extended from New York City to Buffalo and was
363 miles long?
Beginning in the 1780s, what types engines were used to power boats?
In which year was the first census of the United States taken?
What is the name of a device that is located along a canal and designed to work like an escalator to help raise
and lower boats up and down hills?
09.3 Quiz Unity and Sectionalism (5 Matching & 4 MC)
10.2 Quiz Conflicts Over Land (5 Fill-In & 5 MC)
In which state did Congress set aside land for Native Americans in 1834?
What were the “Black Seminoles?”
Which President in 1830 pushed the Indian Removal Act through Congress?
What is the name of the “Trail Where They Cried?"
In which case did President Jackson ignore the Supreme Court’s decision?
10.3 Quiz Jackson and the Bank (5 T/F & 4 MC)
11.1 Quiz The Oregon Country (5 Matching & 5 MC)
11.2 Quiz Statehood for Florida and Texas (5 T/F & 5 MC)
11.3 Quiz War with Mexico (5 T/F & 4 MC)
There are 8 questions from the Ch 14 Entry Test Toward Civil War and 16 questions from the Ch 15 Entry Test The Civil War. There are 6 questions from the 15.1 Self-Check Quiz: The Two Sides and 5 additional questions from 15.2-15.5 Self-Check Quizzes. Students were assigned Civil War Ch 14 and 15 Quizizz Flashcards and a Pretest in Google Classroom. A Civil War Ch 14 and 15 Pretest with all 35 questions was also assigned in McGraw Hill to prepare for this test.
Lesson 1: Europe Looks Out on the World
Lesson 2: Early Exploration
Lesson 3: Trade and Economic Change
Lesson 4: Competing for Colonies
Lesson 5: The Enlightenment
Analyzing Sources: Changing Ideas and a Changing World
Lesson 1: Roanoke and Jamestown
Lesson 2: The New England Colonies
Lesson 3: The Middle Colonies
Lesson 4: The Southern Colonies
Lesson 5: An American Identity Grows
America's Literature: The Interesting Narrative of the Life of Olaudah Equiano
Analyzing Sources: Colonial America
Lesson 1: Rivalry in North America
Lesson 2: No Taxation Without Representation
Lesson 3: Uniting the Colonists
Lesson 4: A Call to Arms
America's Literature: Paul Revere's Ride
Lesson 5: Declaring Independence
Points of View: Should the Colonies Declare Their Independence From Great Britain?
Analyzing Sources: The Spirit of Independence
Feature: The Declaration of Independence
Lesson 1: The War for Independence
Lesson 2: The War Continues
Lesson 3: Battlegrounds Shift
Lesson 4: The Final Years
Analyzing Sources: The American Revolution
Lesson 1: The Articles of Confederation
Lesson 2: Forging a New Constitution
Points of View: Should the Constitution Be Ratified?
Lesson 3: A New Plan of Government
Analyzing Sources: A More Perfect Union
Lesson 1: Principles of the Constitution
Lesson 2: Government and the People
Analyzing Sources: The Constitution
Feature: The Constitution of the United States
Lesson 1: The First President
Lesson 2: Early Challenges
Lesson 3: The First Political Parties
Analyzing Sources: The Federalist Era
Lesson 1: A New Party in Power
Lesson 2: The Louisiana Purchase
America's Literature: The Journals of the Lewis and Clark Expedition
Lesson 3: A Time of Conflict
Lesson 4: The War of 1812
Analyzing Sources: The Jefferson Era
Lesson 1: A Growing Economy
Lesson 2: Moving West
Lesson 3: Unity and Sectionalism
America's Literature: The Last of the Mohicans
Analyzing Sources: Growth and Expansion
Lesson 1: Jacksonian Democracy
Lesson 2: Conflicts Over Land
Lesson 3: Jackson and the Bank
Analyzing Sources: The Jackson Era
Lesson 1: The Oregon Country
Lesson 2: Statehood for Florida and Texas
Points of View: Was Manifest Destiny Justified?
Lesson 3: War With Mexico
Lesson 4: California and Utah
Analyzing Sources: Manifest Destiny
Lesson 1: The Industrial North
Lesson 2: People of the North
Lesson 3: Southern Cotton Kingdom
Lesson 4: People of the South
Analyzing Sources: North and South
Lesson 1: Social Reform
Lesson 2: The Abolitionists
Lesson 3: The Women’s Movement
Analyzing Sources: The Spirit of Reform
Lesson 1: The Search for Compromise
America's Literature: Uncle Tom’s Cabin
Lesson 2: Challenges to Slavery
Lesson 3: Secession and War
Points of View: Did the South Have the Right to Secede?
Analyzing Sources: Toward Civil War
Lesson 1: The Two Sides
Lesson 2: Early Years of the War
Lesson 3: Life During the Civil War
Lesson 4: The Strain of War
Lesson 5: The War’s Final Stages
Analyzing Sources: The Civil War
Lesson 1: Planning Reconstruction
Lesson 2: The Radicals Take Control
Lesson 3: The South During Reconstruction
Lesson 4: The Post-Reconstruction Era
Analyzing Sources: The Reconstruction Era
Lesson 1: Mining and Railroads in the West
Lesson 2: Ranchers and Farmers
Lesson 3: Native American Struggles
America's Literature: American Indian Stories
Lesson 4: Farmers—A New Political Force
Analyzing Sources: Opening the West
Lesson 1: Railroads Lead the Way
Lesson 2: Inventions Change Society
Lesson 3: An Age of Big Business
Lesson 4: Workers in the Industrial Age
America's Literature: Counting on Grace
Lesson 5: Becoming a World Power
Analyzing Sources: The Industrial Age
Lesson 1: The New Immigrants
Points of View: Should Immigration Be Limited?
Lesson 2: Moving to the City
Lesson 3: A Changing Culture
Lesson 4: The Rise of Progressivism
Lesson 5: Progressive Achievements
Analyzing Sources: A Changing Society
Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., and the Civil Rights Movement
Program Overview: Welcome to IMPACT Online
Handbook: Historian's Toolkit
Lesson 1:: What Is History?
Lesson 2:: How Does a Historian Work?
Chapter 1: Changing Ideas and a Changing World
Lesson 1: Europe Looks Out on the World
Lesson 2: Early Exploration
Lesson 3: Trade and Economic Change
Lesson 4: Competing for Colonies
Lesson 5: The Enlightenment
Analyzing Sources: Changing Ideas and a Changing World
Chapter 2: Colonial America
Lesson 1: Roanoke and Jamestown
Lesson 2: The New England Colonies
Lesson 3: The Middle Colonies
Lesson 4: The Southern Colonies
Lesson 5: An American Identity Grows
America's Literature: The Interesting Narrative of the Life of Olaudah Equiano
Analyzing Sources: Colonial America
Chapter 3: The Spirit of Independence
Lesson 1: Rivalry in North America
Lesson 2: No Taxation Without Representation
Lesson 3: Uniting the Colonists
Lesson 4: A Call to Arms
America's Literature: Paul Revere's Ride
Lesson 5: Declaring Independence
Points of View: Should the Colonies Declare Their Independence From Great Britain?
Analyzing Sources: The Spirit of Independence
Feature: The Declaration of Independence
Chapter 4: The American Revolution
Lesson 1: The War for Independence
Lesson 2: The War Continues
Lesson 3: Battlegrounds Shift
Lesson 4: The Final Years
Analyzing Sources: The American Revolution
Chapter 5: A More Perfect Union
Lesson 1: The Articles of Confederation
Lesson 2: Forging a New Constitution
Points of View: Should the Constitution Be Ratified?
Lesson 3: A New Plan of Government
Analyzing Sources: A More Perfect Union
Chapter 6: The Constitution
Lesson 1: Principles of the Constitution
Lesson 2: Government and the People
Analyzing Sources: The Constitution
Feature: The Constitution of the United States
Chapter 7: The Federalist Era
Lesson 1: The First President
Lesson 2: Early Challenges
Lesson 3: The First Political Parties
Analyzing Sources: The Federalist Era
Chapter 8: The Jefferson Era
Lesson 1: A New Party in Power
Lesson 2: The Louisiana Purchase
America's Literature: The Journals of the Lewis and Clark Expedition
Lesson 3: A Time of Conflict
Lesson 4: The War of 1812
Analyzing Sources: The Jefferson Era
Chapter 9: Growth and Expansion
Lesson 1: A Growing Economy
Lesson 2: Moving West
Lesson 3: Unity and Sectionalism
America's Literature: The Last of the Mohicans
Analyzing Sources: Growth and Expansion
Chapter 10: The Jackson Era
Lesson 1: Jacksonian Democracy
Lesson 2: Conflicts Over Land
Lesson 3: Jackson and the Bank
Analyzing Sources: The Jackson Era
Chapter 11: Manifest Destiny
Lesson 1: The Oregon Country
Lesson 2: Statehood for Florida and Texas
Points of View: Was Manifest Destiny Justified?
Lesson 3: War With Mexico
Lesson 4: California and Utah
Analyzing Sources: Manifest Destiny
Chapter 12: North and South
Lesson 1: The Industrial North
Lesson 2: People of the North
Lesson 3: Southern Cotton Kingdom
Lesson 4: People of the South
Analyzing Sources: North and South
Chapter 13: The Spirit of Reform
Lesson 1: Social Reform
Lesson 2: The Abolitionists
Lesson 3: The Women’s Movement
Analyzing Sources: The Spirit of Reform
Chapter 14: Toward Civil War
Lesson 1: The Search for Compromise
America's Literature: Uncle Tom’s Cabin
Lesson 2: Challenges to Slavery
Lesson 3: Secession and War
Points of View: Did the South Have the Right to Secede?
Analyzing Sources: Toward Civil War
Chapter 15: The Civil War
Lesson 1: The Two Sides
Lesson 2: Early Years of the War
Lesson 3: Life During the Civil War
Lesson 4: The Strain of War
Lesson 5: The War’s Final Stages
Analyzing Sources: The Civil War
Chapter 16: The Reconstruction Era
Lesson 1: Planning Reconstruction
Lesson 2: The Radicals Take Control
Lesson 3: The South During Reconstruction
Lesson 4: The Post-Reconstruction Era
Analyzing Sources: The Reconstruction Era
Chapter 17: Opening the West
Lesson 1: Mining and Railroads in the West
Lesson 2: Ranchers and Farmers
Lesson 3: Native American Struggles
America's Literature: American Indian Stories
Lesson 4: Farmers—A New Political Force
Analyzing Sources: Opening the West
Chapter 18: The Industrial Age
Lesson 1: Railroads Lead the Way
Lesson 2: Inventions Change Society
Lesson 3: An Age of Big Business
Lesson 4: Workers in the Industrial Age
America's Literature: Counting on Grace
Lesson 5: Becoming a World Power
Analyzing Sources: The Industrial Age
Chapter 19: A Changing Society
Lesson 1: The New Immigrants
Points of View: Should Immigration Be Limited?
Lesson 2: Moving to the City
Lesson 3: A Changing Culture
Lesson 4: The Rise of Progressivism
Lesson 5: Progressive Achievements
Analyzing Sources: A Changing Society
Supplemental Lesson: Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., and the Civil Rights Movement
Reference Material: Program-Level Resources
Reference Material: Beyond the Classroom
Beyond the Classroom: Mount Vernon: Be Washington
Directions: Take the Self-Check Quiz to check your understanding of the lesson. After you have selected your response, select the Check Answer button to see how you did.
Number of questions: #
Points possible: 10.00
You are about to start a test!
1. Make sure you have a good Internet connection before starting
2. Do not use your browser's forward or back buttons while taking the test
Do not use your browser forward or back buttons.
Make sure you have a good internet connection.
Required
Scheduling
Start Date (MM/DD/YYYY) – Due Date (MM/DD/YYYY)
Allow late submission
Late submission info
Visibility
Visible
Quiz
Time Limit
30 minutes
All Students
Class Attempts
2
Info for class attempts
Individual Attempts
Add Individual Student Attempts
Grade Calculation
Best Score
Info for grade calculation
Extensions
Add Individual Student Extensions
Student Scoresheet
May view scores but not answers
Explanations
Students may not view
Answer Reason
Show answer reason on student scoresheet
Students will use their McGraw Hill eBook to take this quiz based on a SmartBook, Resources and Study Tools. Students should view and submit all McGraw Hill Resources and Study Tools to better prepare for this open book quiz. View this McGraw Hill Quiz Tutorial to understand how to use Split View when taking an open book quiz.
Number of questions: 10 (5 Matching Questions and 5 Multiple Choice)
Points possible: 10
You are about to start a test!
1. Make sure you have a good Internet connection before starting
2. Do not use your browser's forward or back buttons while taking the test
Chapter.Lesson Quiz - Title
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2HZxxc3bRxU Oct 4, 2022 Students will use this tutorial to take an Open eBook McGraw Hill Quiz using the Split View feature available on an iPad. James Garritson
https://support.apple.com/guide/ipad/open-two-items-in-split-view-ipad08c9970c/ipados
Students will use their McGraw Hill eBook to take this quiz based on a SmartBook, Resources and Study Tools. Students should view and submit all McGraw Hill Resources and Study Tools to better prepare for this open book quiz.
View this McGraw Hill Quiz Tutorial | https://sites.google.com/eusd.org/jgarritson/assignments/assessments#h.a2zjs71pmtj to understand how to use Split View | https://support.apple.com/guide/ipad/open-two-items-in-split-view-ipad08c9970c/ipados when taking an open book quiz.
Number of questions: 10 (5 Matching Questions and 5 Multiple Choice)
Points possible: 10
You are about to start a test!
1. Make sure you have a good Internet connection before starting
2. Do not use your browser's forward or back buttons while taking the test
McGraw Hill Assessments | https://sites.google.com/eusd.org/jgarritson/assignments/assessments
Clever | https://clever.com/in/escondidousd
McGraw Hill Lessons | http://mh.telelearn.org
McGraw Hill Split View Video | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2HZxxc3bRxU
Chapter.Lesson Quiz - Title