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"Essential" State Standards:
11.6 Students analyze the different
explanations for the Great Depression and how the New Deal fundamentally
changed the role of the federal government.
- Describe the monetary issues of the late
nineteenth and early twentieth centuries that gave rise to the
establishment of the Federal Reserve and the weaknesses in key sectors
of the economy in the late 1920s.
- Understand the explanations of the principal
causes of the Great Depression and the steps taken by the Federal
Reserve, Congress, and Presidents Herbert Hoover and Franklin Delano
Roosevelt to combat the economic crisis.
- Discuss the human toll of the Depression,
natural disasters, and unwise agricultural practices and their effects
on the depopulation of rural regions and on political movements of the
left and right, with particular attention to the Dust Bowl refugees
and their social and economic impacts in California.
- Analyze the effects of and the controversies
arising from New Deal economic policies and the expanded role of the
federal government in society and the economy since the 1930s (e.g.,
Works Progress Administration, Social Security, National Labor
Relations Board, farm programs, regional development policies, and
energy development projects such as the Tennessee Valley Authority,
California Central Valley Project, and Bonneville Dam).
- Trace the advances and retreats of organized
labor, from the creation of the American Federation of Labor and the
Congress of Industrial Organizations to current issues of a
postindustrial, multinational economy, including the United Farm
Workers in California.
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