Revolutions in the Modern World Value 1.0

advertisement

Written under the

History Course

Framework 2008.

History

T Course

Type 2

Modern History Units

Accredited from 1 January 2010 – 31

December 2014

Revolutions in the Modern World Value 1.0

Prerequisites

Nil

Specific Unit Goals

A Course

This unit should enable students to:

Demonstrate investigation and interpretation skills necessary to analyse historical information and achieve independence in researching

Communicate a logically developed and focussed argument to convey historical positions or ideas

Develop an understanding of the nature of revolutions and revolutionary movements

Demonstrate knowledge, awareness and understanding of causes, significant individuals, social groups, places, and events related to the revolutions of the modern world

Consider the role of ideas, movements and leaders in revolution

Evaluate the impact and outcomes, including the nature of the new society created by the revolution

T Course

This unit should enable students to:

Demonstrate investigation and interpretation skills necessary to solve problems of evidence and achieve independence in researching

Communicate a logically developed, articulate and focussed argument to convey historical positions or ideas

Develop an understanding of the nature of revolutions and revolutionary movements

Demonstrate knowledge, awareness and understanding of causes, significant individuals, social groups, places, and events related to the revolutions of the modern world

Critically evaluate the role of ideas, movements and leaders in revolution

Evaluate the impact and outcomes, including the nature of the new society created by the revolution

Content

A study of this unit should include a comparison of at least two of the following content areas. There is scope for some areas to be treated in more depth than others. Topics for study will be guided by teacher expertise and student interest.

The Nature of Revolutions

What is a Revolution?

Models of Revolution

Examples of Revolutions:

The English Revolution (1625-1689)

The Industrial Revolution

The American Revolution

The French Revolution

The Russian Revolution

The Chinese Revolution

The Cuban Revolution

The Islamic Revolution

For each revolution, there will be three aspects to consider:

1. The Old Regime and the origins of the Revolution

Political, social and economic life in pre-revolutionary society

Causes of tension

Reasons for government unwillingness or inability to adjust

2. Revolutionary events, ideas, movements and leaders

Turning points and chronology of the revolution

Leading personalities of the revolution

Ideas/ideologies of the revolution

Revolutionary movements/groups/organisations

3. The New Society (move forward to a post revolutionary stage)

Impact and legacy of the Revolution

Teaching and Learning Strategies

Relevant and effective strategies will focus on investigating and interpreting evidence in:

Primary sources – e.g. diaries, posters, cartoons, letters, photographs

Secondary sources –e.g. biographies, texts, documentaries, film and historical novel treatments of indigenous life and slavery

Statistical data – e.g. maps, charts, graphs.

Kinaesthetic activities, e.g. role plays and imaginative reconstructions of key events, model making and visits to institutions, films, artistic interpretations or historic sites may also be used to investigate and interpret evidence

Visits to the Australian War Memorial and National Archives of Australia

 Guest speakers (i.e. Veteran’s Affairs, Archives, and Universities)

Findings will be communicated through:

Writing – e.g. essay writing, document studies, empathetic exercises

Oral and aural activities –e.g. class discussions, debates, guest speakers, oral histories, group work, quizzes

ICT – e.g. web quests, spreadsheet analyses, computer games, PowerPoint presentations, Internet searches.

See Teaching and Learning Strategies in the main document and the History Course

Framework for other teaching strategies.

Assessment Task Types

See pages 72-74 for assessment information

Student Capabilities

Student Capabilities creative and critical thinkers enterprising problem-solvers skilled and empathetic communicators informed and ethical decision-makers environmentally and culturally aware citizens confident and capable users of technologies independent and self-managing learners collaborative team members

Evidence could be in:

Goals Content Teaching

√ and

Learning

Assessment

Specific Unit Resources

This list is not to be seen as comprehensive. It seeks to identify some useful resources and to give an indication of the level at which students are expected to work. These resources include student-centred resources and teacher references. These were accurate at the time of publication.

English Revolution Books

Murphy, Derrick, Irene

Carrier & Elizabeth

Sparey

Seel, Graham E.

Starkey, David

Vallance, Edward

Audio Visual

Britain 1558-1689 , Harper Collins Publishers, London,

2002

Regicide and Republic England 1603-1660 , Cambridge

University Press, Cambridge, 2001.

Monarchy From the Middle Ages to Modernity , Harper

Perennial, London, 2007.

The Glorious Revolution, 1688 - Britain’s Fight and

Liberty , Abacus, London, 2006.

Monarchy: The Complete Second and Third Series,

Grenada Production, Channel Four Television Corp,

2006

French Revolution

(especially*):

Texts

Adcock, Michael.

Burke, Edmund.

Barallon, M et al

Behrens, C.B.A

Analysing the French revolution , Cambridge University

Press, Cambridge.2004.

Reflections on the revolution in France , Penguin,

London, 2004.

The French Revolution: A Student Handbook,

History Teachers’ Association of Victoria. 1991

The Ancient Regime , Thames and Hudson, London. 1967

Cobban, A The Social Interpretation of The French Revolution ,

Connelly, O

Farman, J

* Fielding, M and

Morcombe, M

Forrest, A

Hampson, N

*Hibbert, C

Kallen, Stuart A.(ed)

Rude, G

Cambridge University Press. 1986

The French Revolution and Napoleonic Era , Harcourt

Brace Jovanovich College Publishers, Orlando. 1991

History in a Hurry: The French Revolution

The Spirit of Change: France in Revolution, McGraw

Hill, Roseville, NSW. 1999

The French Revolution , Blackwell, Oxford, 1995

The French Revolution (A Concise History), Thames and

Hudson, London. 1975

The French Revolution , Penguin, U.K. 1982

The age of revolution , in World history by era, vol. 6,

Greenhaven Press, San Diego. 2002.

The French Revolution , Phoenix, London, 1999

Schama, S

* Townson, D

Citizens: A Chronicle of the French Revolution , Vintage

Books, New York. 1989

Access to History: France in Revolution , National

Textbook Company, Chicago, 2001

Audio Visual

Ridicule

Russian Revolution (especially*) :

Texts

Antohi, Sorin and

Tismaneanu, Vladimir

(Eds)

Barrallon, M.

Between past and future: the revolutions of 1989 and their aftermath, Plymbridge, Plymouth, 1999.

Brooman, J.

*Bucklow, M & Russell,

G.

Chamberlain, W.H.

The Russian Revolution: A Student Handbook , HTAV,

1992.

Russia in War and Revolution , Longman, U.K. 1987.

Russia: Why Revolution?

Melbourne, 1991

(2nd ed) Longman Cheshire,

*Christian, D.

Daborn, J.

*Figes, O.

The Russian Revolution , 1917-1921, Vol 2.Princeton

University Press, 1935.

Power and Privilege (2nd ed), Longman Cheshire,

Melbourne, 1994.

Russia: Revolution and Counter-Revolution 1917-1924 ,

Cambridge University Press, 1961.

A People's Tragedy , Random House, London, 1996.

*Fitzpatrick, S.

*Gill, G.

The Russian Revolution (2nd ed), Oxford University

Press, 1994.

20th Century Russia: The Search for Power and

Authority (2nd ed), Thomas Nelson, Melbourne, 1994.

Hoysted, Merilyn The Russian revolution: A student handbook , HTAV,

Collingwood, 2001.

Hughes, G & Welfare, S Red Empire: The Forbidden History of the USSR ,

Weidenfeld and Nicolson, London, 1990.

Laver, J History at Source: Russia 1914-1941,

Stoughton, U.K. 1991.

Hodder &

*Lynch, M.

*Lynch, M.

Malone, Richard.

Moorehead, A.

Morecombe, M &

Fielding, M.

Phillips, S.

*Pipes, R.

Rummel, R.G.

Sinclair, K (ed).

Smith, S.A.

Tismaneanu Vladimir

Von Rauch, G. A

Winsbury, R

Articles

McDonald, D.

McDonald, D.

McDonald, D.

Audio Visual

American Revolution:

Texts

Cantwell, J.

Commanger, H.S. &

Morris, R.B

Frances, D.

Jensen, M (ed)

Reaction and Revolutions: Russia 1881-1924 (2nd ed),

Hodder & Stoughton, U.K. 2000

Stalin and Khrushchev: the USSR 1924-1964, Hodder &

Stoughton, U.K. 1990.

Analysing the Russian revolution , Cambridge University

Press, Cambridge, 2004.

The Russian Revolution , Carroll & Graf, New York,

1987

The Spirit of Change: Russia in Revolution , McGraw

Hill, Roseville, NSW, 1998

Lenin and the Russian Revolution , Heinemann, U.K.

2000.

A Concise History of the Russian Revolution , Vintage

Books, New York, 1996

Lethal Politics: Soviet Genocide and Mass Murder since

1917, Transaction, New Brunswick, 1990

Readings: Russian Revolution , HTAV, 1997

Revolution and the people in Russia and China: a comparative history, Cambridge University Press,

Cambridge, 2008.

The revolutions of 1989 , Routledge, London, 1999.

History Of Soviet Russia , Thames and Hudson, London,

1957

Communism: People in Politics , Hamish Hamilton,

London, 1987

A Snapshot of Stalin's Russia, 1923-1932 , in AGORA,

2001.

Ideas in the Russian Revolution , in Sinclair op cit.

Rasputin and his place in VCE Revolutions , in AGORA,

2002.

Ten Days that Shook the World

Nicholas and Alexandra

The American Revolution: A Student Handbook , HTAV,

1995.

The Spirit of Seventy-Six: The Story of the American

Revolution as told by its participants , Da Capo Press,

New York, 1995.

American Revolution and the Making of the American

Republic 1771-1791 , Heinemann, Auckland, 1992

Tracts of the American Revolution , Bobbs-Merril Co,

Indiana, 1977

Murphy, Derrick, Kathryn

Cooper & Mark Waldron

Traynor, John

Young, A.F. et al

United States 1776-1 992, Harper Collins Publishers,

London, 2001

Mastering Modern US History , Palgrave, New York,

2001.

We The People: Voices and Images of the American

Revolution , Temple University Press, 1992.

Chinese Revolution:

Texts

Buggy, T.

Green, J.

Laffey, M.

MacKerras, C et al

MacDonald, C.K.

McDonald, D.

Ward, H.

The Long Revolution: A History of Modern China ,

Shakespeare Head Press, NSW, 1988

China, OUP, Oxford, 1989

Mao and the Struggle for China: Revolutionary

Leadership, 1922-1949 , Heinemann, Auckland, 1992

China in Revolution 1850-1976: History through

Documents , Longman Cheshire, Melbourne, 1993

Modern China, Basil Blackwell, Great Britain, 1985

The Chinese Revolution: A Student Handbook (2 nd ed),

HTAV, 1997

China in the Twentieth Century , Heinemann, Australia,

1989

Cuban Revolution:

Texts

Babun, Teo A

Byrne, Paul J

The Cuban Revolution: Years of Promise , University of

Florida: Gainsville, 2005

Cuban Missile Crisis: To the Brink of War , Compass

Point Books: Minnesota, 2006

Cuba for Beginners , Writers and Readers, 1980 Ruiz, et al

Sweig, Julius Inside the Cuban Revolution: Fidel Castro and the

Underground, Harvard University Press: Cambridge,

2002

These were accurate at the time of publication.

Please see the Bibliography on page 31 of Part 1 of the course for further resources.

Modern Revolutions Value 0.5

This is the underlying 0.5 unit to Revolutions in the Modern World 1.0.

Prerequisites

Nil

Specific Unit Goals

A Course

This unit should enable students to:

Demonstrate investigation and interpretation skills necessary to analyse historical information and achieve independence in researching

Communicate a logically developed and focussed argument to convey historical positions or ideas

Develop an understanding of the nature of revolutions and revolutionary movements

Demonstrate knowledge, awareness and understanding of causes, significant individuals, social groups, places, and events related to the revolutions of the modern world

Consider the role of ideas, movements and leaders in revolution

Evaluate the impact and outcomes, including the nature of the new society created by the revolution

T Course

This unit should enable students to:

Demonstrate investigation and interpretation skills necessary to solve problems of evidence and achieve independence in researching

Communicate a logically developed, articulate and focussed argument to convey historical positions or ideas

Develop an understanding of the nature of revolutions and revolutionary movements

Demonstrate knowledge, awareness and understanding of causes, significant individuals, social groups, places, and events related to the revolutions of the modern world

Critically evaluate the role of ideas, movements and leaders in revolution

Evaluate the impact and outcomes, including the nature of the new society created by the revolution

Content

This unit should include an in-depth study of a maximum of two of the following content areas. There is scope for some areas to be treated in more depth than others. Topics for study will be guided by teacher expertise and student interest.

The Nature of Revolutions

What is a Revolution?

Models of Revolution

Examples of Revolutions:

The English Revolution (1625-1689)

The Industrial Revolution

The American Revolution

The French Revolution

The Russian Revolution

The Chinese Revolution

The Cuban Revolution

The Islamic Revolution

For each revolution, there will be three aspects to consider:

1. The Old Regime and the origins of the Revolution

Political, social and economic life in pre-revolutionary society

Causes of tension

Reasons for government unwillingness or inability to adjust

2. Revolutionary events, ideas, movements and leaders

Turning points and chronology of the revolution

Leading personalities of the revolution

Ideas/ideologies of the revolution

Revolutionary movements/groups/organisations

3. The New Society (move forward to a post revolutionary stage)

Impact and legacy of the Revolution

Teaching and Learning Strategies

Relevant and effective strategies will focus on investigating and interpreting evidence in:

Primary sources – e.g. diaries, posters, cartoons, letters, photographs

Secondary sources –e.g. biographies, texts, documentaries, film and historical novel treatments of indigenous life and slavery

Statistical data – e.g. maps, charts, graphs.

Kinaesthetic activities, e.g. role plays and imaginative reconstructions of key events, model making and visits to institutions, films, artistic interpretations or historic sites may also be used to investigate and interpret evidence

Visits to the Australian War Memorial and National Archives of Australia

 Guest speakers (i.e. Veteran’s Affairs, Archives, and Universities)

Findings will be communicated through:

Writing – e.g. essay writing, document studies, empathetic exercises

Oral and aural activities –e.g. class discussions, debates, guest speakers, oral histories, group work, quizzes

ICT – e.g. web quests, spreadsheet analyses, computer games, PowerPoint presentations, Internet searches.

See Teaching and Learning Strategies in the main document and the History Course

Framework for other teaching strategies.

Assessment Task Types

See pages 72-74 for assessment information

Student Capabilities

Student Capabilities creative and critical thinkers enterprising problem-solvers skilled and empathetic communicators informed and ethical decision-makers environmentally and culturally aware citizens confident and capable users of technologies independent and self-managing learners collaborative team members

Evidence could be in:

Goals Content Teaching

√ and

Learning

Assessment

Specific Unit Resources

This list is not to be seen as comprehensive. It seeks to identify some useful resources and to give an indication of the level at which students are expected to work. These resources include student-centred resources and teacher references. These were accurate at the time of publication.

English Revolution Books

Murphy, Derrick, Irene

Carrier & Elizabeth

Sparey

Seel, Graham E.

Starkey, David

Vallance, Edward

Audio Visual

Britain 1558-1689 , Harper Collins Publishers, London,

2002

Regicide and Republic England 1603-1660 , Cambridge

University Press, Cambridge, 2001.

Monarchy From the Middle Ages to Modernity , Harper

Perennial, London, 2007.

The Glorious Revolution, 1688 - Britain’s Fight and

Liberty , Abacus, London, 2006.

Monarchy: The Complete Second and Third Series,

Grenada Production, Channel Four Television Corp,

2006

French Revolution

(especially*):

Texts

Barallon, M et al

Behrens, C.B.A

Cobban, A

The French Revolution: A Student Handbook,

History Teachers’ Association of Victoria. 1991

The Ancient Regime , Thames and Hudson, London. 1967

Connelly, O

Farman, J

The Social Interpretation of The French Revolution ,

Cambridge University Press. 1986

The French Revolution and Napoleonic Era , Harcourt

Brace Jovanovich College Publishers, Orlando. 1991

History in a Hurry: The French Revolution

* Fielding, M and

Morcombe, M

Forrest, A

Hampson, N

*Hibbert, C

The Spirit of Change: France in Revolution, McGraw

Hill, Roseville, NSW. 1999

The French Revolution , Blackwell, Oxford, 1995

The French Revolution (A Concise History), Thames and

Hudson, London. 1975

The French Revolution , Penguin, U.K. 1982

Rude, G

Schama, S

* Townson, D

Audio Visual

The French Revolution , Phoenix, London, 1999

Citizens: A Chronicle of the French Revolution , Vintage

Books, New York. 1989

Access to History: France in Revolution , National

Textbook Company, Chicago, 2001

Ridicule

Russian Revolution (especially*) :

Texts

Barrallon, M.

Brooman, J.

*Bucklow, M & Russell,

G.

Chamberlain, W.H.

The Russian Revolution: A Student Handbook , HTAV,

1992.

Russia in War and Revolution , Longman, U.K. 1987.

Russia: Why Revolution?

Melbourne, 1991

(2nd ed) Longman Cheshire,

*Christian, D.

Daborn, J.

*Figes, O.

*Pipes, R.

The Russian Revolution , 1917-1921, Vol 2.Princeton

University Press, 1935.

Power and Privilege (2nd ed), Longman Cheshire,

Melbourne, 1994.

Russia: Revolution and Counter-Revolution 1917-1924 ,

Cambridge University Press, 1961.

A People's Tragedy , Random House, London, 1996.

*Fitzpatrick, S.

*Gill, G.

*Lynch, M.

The Russian Revolution (2nd ed), Oxford University

Press, 1994.

20th Century Russia: The Search for Power and

Authority (2nd ed), Thomas Nelson, Melbourne, 1994.

Hughes, G & Welfare, S Red Empire: The Forbidden History of the USSR ,

Weidenfeld and Nicolson, London, 1990.

Laver, J

*Lynch, M.

History at Source: Russia 1914-1941, Hodder &

Stoughton, U.K. 1991.

Reaction and Revolutions: Russia 1881-1924 (2nd ed),

Hodder & Stoughton, U.K. 2000

Stalin and Khrushchev: the USSR 1924-1964, Hodder &

Stoughton, U.K. 1990.

Moorehead, A.

Morecombe, M &

Fielding, M.

The Russian Revolution , Carroll & Graf, New York,

1987

The Spirit of Change: Russia in Revolution , McGraw

Hill, Roseville, NSW, 1998

Phillips, S. Lenin and the Russian Revolution , Heinemann, U.K.

2000.

A Concise History of the Russian Revolution , Vintage

Books, New York, 1996

Rummel, R.G.

Sinclair, K (ed).

Lethal Politics: Soviet Genocide and Mass Murder since

1917, Transaction, New Brunswick, 1990

Readings: Russian Revolution , HTAV, 1997

Von Rauch, G. A

Winsbury, R

History Of Soviet Russia , Thames and Hudson, London,

1957

Communism: People in Politics , Hamish Hamilton,

London, 1987

Articles

McDonald, D.

McDonald, D.

McDonald, D.

A Snapshot of Stalin's Russia, 1923-1932 , in AGORA,

2001.

Ideas in the Russian Revolution , in Sinclair op cit.

Rasputin and his place in VCE Revolutions , in AGORA,

2002.

Audio Visual

American Revolution:

Ten Days that Shook the World

Nicholas and Alexandra

Texts

Cantwell, J.

Commanger, H.S. &

Morris, R.B

Frances, D.

Jensen, M (ed)

Murphy, Derrick, Kathryn

Cooper & Mark Waldron

Traynor, John

Young, A.F. et al

Chinese Revolution:

Texts

Buggy, T.

The American Revolution: A Student Handbook , HTAV,

1995.

The Spirit of Seventy-Six: The Story of the American

Revolution as told by its participants , Da Capo Press,

New York, 1995.

American Revolution and the Making of the American

Republic 1771-1791 , Heinemann, Auckland, 1992

Tracts of the American Revolution , Bobbs-Merril Co,

Indiana, 1977

United States 1776-1 992, Harper Collins Publishers,

London, 2001

Mastering Modern US History , Palgrave, New York,

2001.

We The People: Voices and Images of the American

Revolution , Temple University Press, 1992.

Green, J.

Laffey, M.

MacKerras, C et al

MacDonald, C.K.

McDonald, D.

The Long Revolution: A History of Modern China ,

Shakespeare Head Press, NSW, 1988

China, OUP, Oxford, 1989

Mao and the Struggle for China: Revolutionary

Leadership, 1922-1949 , Heinemann, Auckland, 1992

China in Revolution 1850-1976: History through

Documents , Longman Cheshire, Melbourne, 1993

Modern China, Basil Blackwell, Great Britain, 1985

The Chinese Revolution: A Student Handbook (2 nd

ed),

HTAV, 1997

Ward, H. China in the Twentieth Century , Heinemann, Australia,

1989

Cuban Revolution:

Texts

Babun, Teo A

Byrne, Paul J

The Cuban Revolution: Years of Promise , University of

Florida: Gainsville, 2005

Cuban Missile Crisis: To the Brink of War , Compass

Point Books: Minnesota, 2006

Cuba for Beginners , Writers and Readers, 1980 Ruiz, et al

Sweig, Julius Inside the Cuban Revolution: Fidel Castro and the

Underground, Harvard University Press: Cambridge,

2002

These were accurate at the time of publication.

Please see the Bibliography on page 31 of Part 1 of the course for further resources.

Download