The Roaring Twenties
Society and Conflict in the 1920s
The Great Depression Begins
The New Deal
Evaluating the New Deal
100

Explain how WWI led to the Roaring 20s

The economic boom following WWI, driven by industrial expansion, consumerism, and technological innovation.

100

Identify the Harlem Renaissance and its impact on African Americans.

The Harlem Renaissance, a cultural movement celebrating black art, music and literature with figures like Langston Hughes and Duke Ellington

100

Describe factors behind the stock market crash of 1929

Over-speculation in the stock market, buying on margin, and the October 1929 crash.

100

Explain Hoover’s response to the economic crisis and why it failed.

Hoover’s belief in “rugged individualism,” limited government relief, and failed policies like the Reconstruction Finance Corporation.

100

Analyze the second new deal and important programs that came from it

the Second New Deal’s focus on long-term reforms, including Social Security, the Wagner Act, and expanded work programs.

200

Analyze the economy and labor during the 1920s

The rise of mass production, assembly lines, low unemployment, and a growing wage gap between workers and business owners.

200

Explain the effects of prohibition and organized crime

The failure of prohibition, leading to bootlegging speakeasies, and the rise of organized crime bosses like Al Capone

200

Explain the different causes of the Great Depression

Bank failures, reduced consumer spending, declining international trade, and the Dust Bowl.

200

Analyze the 1932 election and its results

FDR’s landslide victory in the 1932 election, reflecting public frustration with Hoover’s handling of the Depression.

200

Describe controversies of FDR’s presidency and problems with the new deal

FDR’s controversial Court-Packing Plan, increased national debt, and failures to end racial discrimination

300

Describe the new cultural changes in America

Radio and films as national entertainment, advertising fueling consumer culture, and installment plans increasing household purchases

300

Analyze elements of the nativist movement and the resurgence of the KKK

A rise in anti-immigrant sentiment, leading to restrictive laws like the National Origins Act of 1924 and the resurgence of the KKK

300

Analyze the human cost of the Depression

Widespread unemployment, homelessness, breadlines, and Hoovervilles.

300

Identify and explain the importance of FDR‘s election and his plan to solve the bank crisis

FDR’s promise of a “New Deal,” including the Emergency Banking Relief Act and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation to restore faith in banks.

300

Explain how the new deal impacted woman and minorities

Expanded job opportunities for women but continued wage gaps, as well as mixed effects for minorities due to discrimination in relief programs

400

Explain how the roles of women changed during the 1920s

Greater workforce participation, the right to vote, flappers challenging social norms, and more women attending college

400

Describe fundamentalism and events associated with it

Religious fundamentalism, emphasizing a literal interpretation of the Bible, exemplified by the 1925 Scopes Trial over the teaching of evolution

400

Identify the impact of the Dust Bowl and who it affected the most.

An environmental disaster caused by over farming and drought, primarily affected farmers in Oklahoma, Texas, and Kansas.

400

Identify the three R’s of the new deal and detail important programs from each

Relief, Recovery, and Reform

400

In what way was the new deal a failure?

The argument that the New Deal didn’t end the Depression, failed to fully resolve unemployment, and led to an overreliance on government aid

500

Describe the youth movement and the “Lost Generation”

The lost generation, disillusioned writers like Hemingway and Fitzgerald, and rebellious youth rejecting traditional values

500

Identify the presidents of the 1920s and describe their presidencies

Warren G. Harding, Calvin Coolidge, Herbert Hoover

500

Explain the effect of the Great Depression on minorities

Increased discrimination, higher unemployment rates, and intensified poverty among African Americans, Mexican American, and women.

500

Identify the critics of the new deal and their criticisms

Huey Long, Father Coughlin, and conservatives who believed the New Deal expanded government too much

500

In what way was the new deal a success?

The argument that the New Deal created a lasting safety net and redefined the federal government’s role in the economy.