Contemporary History World at War: United States As a Global Power
Learning Objectives
- Students will be able to explain how the United States became a global power.
- Students will understand the pros and cons of isolationism in U.S. foreign policy.
Length
One 45 minute period
Grade Level
High School
Homework
Students will complete Part 1 of the Guided Reading Handout related to How Did the United States Become a Global Power?
Class
- (5 Minutes) Homework Debrief
- (15 Minutes) Jigsaw Timeline: Break students into 5 groups and assign each a section of Essential Events Between 1900 and 1945. There are 25 events listed on the timeline so each group will look at 5 events. Students should jot down brief notes making a connection to how each event might be tied to the United States growing as a global power. These notes are meant to inform the activity during the second half of class as well as the homework. Note: In several cases, there is a clear connection to the United States. In others, it is indirect (i.e. Sykes Picot Agreement, Bolshevik Revolution).
- Group 1: 1898 Spanish American War - 1914 Panama Canal
- Group 2: 1915 Second Battle of Ypres - 1917/1920 World War I Influences Suffrage Movement
- Group 3: 1918 Armistice Day - 1933 Hitler Named Chancellor
- Group 4: 1935 Second Italo-Ethiopian War - 1941/45 The Holocaust
- Group 5: 1941 Pearl Harbor - 1945 Atomic Bombs
- (25 Minutes) Activity: Students will recombine into heterogeneous groups (one member from each group listed above). Draw students’ attention to the question raised at the end of “How Did the United States Become a Global Power?”: What is the United States’ place in the world today?
- Introduce the idea that the United States has typically moved back and forth along an axis from isolationism to global engagement in its response to that question.
- Working in small groups using the attached graphic organizer, have students brainstorm potential arguments for a more isolationist stance and for a more globally engaged stance. For each argument, ask students to cite a historical example.
Homework
- Students will individually write a short op-ed article advising the president on what the United States’ place in the world today should be. Whichever position they choose, ask them to cite historical examples supporting their argument.
- In addition to material covered in class, they may also consider looking at “Why Did World War II Happen?” or Isolationism Versus Engagement