CHC2D.4 Exam Review

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CHC2D1.4 FINAL WRITTEN EXAM – Ms.

Barnach

When and Where:


Period 4: Tuesday, January 30th Room 216

What to Bring:
Pen, Pencil, Eraser

Mark Breakdown:
Category Part Description Mark Breakdown Mark

Knowledge & Understanding Part A Multiple Choice 20 Marks

Knowledge & Understanding Part B True or False 10 Marks

Application Part C Making Connections with Key Themes 10 Marks

Thinking Part D Short Answers 20 Marks


TOTAL /60

THINGS YOU SHOULD KNOW…


World War I WWII
● Causes of World War I ● Causes of WWII, Key leaders, Triple Axis
● Robert Borden ● Fascism
● Map of 1914 ● Appeasement
● League of Nations ● Non-Aggression Pact (Nazi-Soviet Pact)
● Paris Peace Conference ● Manhattan Project: Oppenheimer
● Alliances (Triple Entente, Triple Alliance), ● Atomic Bombs: Hiroshima/Nagasaki: Little
Assassination (Archduke, Black Hand) Boy, Fat Man
● Why did Canada enter the war? ● Blitzkrieg
● Canadian Entry into WWI ● Luftwaffe vs. RAF
● Trench warfare, No Man’s Land ● Canadian Battles – Ortona, Hong Kong, D-
● The war in the air Day, Dieppe (Operation Jubilee), Ortona
● Balfour Declaration (Operation Husky)
● Billy Bishop ● WWII Battles – Battle of Britain, Operation
● WWI Battles – Details and Canadian Barbarossa, Dunkirk, Pearl Harbour,
Significance ● VE Day/VJ Day
● Wartime Elections Act ● Women at War
● Schlieffen Plan ● Science and Technology
● War Guilt Clause ● Liberation of Holland
● Propaganda ● Holocaust, Final Solution, Ant-Semitism,
● Victory Bonds Auschwitz
● Treaty of Versailles ● Japanese Internment
● Home front: Conscription, War Measures Act,
William King, Camp X
1920s & 1930s Unit 4
● Relief Camps & the On-to-Ottawa-Trek ● Cold War: Definition, Igor Gouzenko, Iron
● Autonomy - Chanak Affair, Halibut Treaty, Curtain, NATO, NORAD, Warsaw Pact, Avro
Arrow, Diefenbaker
Statue of Westminster
● United Nations
● Minority groups ● Espionage
● Three (3) Political Parties è CCF, Social ● Tommy Douglas
Credit & Union Nationale (List leaders, ● Quiet Revolution
solutions to depression and audience) ● Proxy war
● Residential Schools, Assimilation ● Pierre Trudeau – Trudeaumania
● Women's Temperance Union ● Suez Canal, Korean War, Vietnam War,
Cuban Missile Crisis
● Suffrage
● October Crisis – FLQ, Trudeau
● Changing Fads, new inventions; radio, ● Peacekeeping: Suez Crisis, Lester B.
entertainment, etc. Pearson, (Peacekeeping Mission)
● Person’s Case ○ Canada as a Middle Power
● Relief Camps ● Avro Arrow
● Prohibition ● Viola Desmond
● Direct & Indirect Cause of the Great ● Sputnik
● Africville
Depression - e.g. Stock Market Crash
● Sixties Scoop
● Spanish Flu
● Winnipeg General Strike Contemporary Canada
● Immigration • Canadian flags
• Oka Crisis
• Canadian Regionalism
• 94 Calls to Action
• Truth and Reconciliation Commission

EXAM TIPS

1. Customise your notes to make them more personal. Experiment with colour coding, notes on
postcards, diagrams or whatever helps you learn your topic.

2. Take regular short breaks. Studying for hours and hours will only make you tired and ruin your
concentration, which may make you even more anxious. A break every 45 to 60 minutes is
about right.

3. Ensure you have a good night's sleep the night before. Go to bed early and do not consume
caffeine too late into the afternoon/evening.

4. Ask for help. If you're feeling stressed, it's important to talk to someone you trust, such as a
family member, teacher or a friend. Lots of people find exams difficult to deal with, so do not be
embarrassed to ask for support.

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