Wednesday, December 18, 2024

Geography 12: answers to Friday 5, Dec. 13

 

  1.  The layer of the atmosphere where most of Earth’s weather happens.

-troposphere

  1.  The weight of air is referred to as ______________and is measured in ___________

-air pressure, kPa or millibars

  1.  Places on the map that have the same air pressure are connected by lines known as ___________

-isobars



  1. Draw and label Earth’s tri-cell model to show atmospheric circulation.  Include H and L pressure.










  1. What type of climate would you expect for a place that corresponds with the hadley cell?

-warm, wet near the equator

Tuesday, December 17, 2024

Geography 12: weather review sheet

Earth Matters text chapters:  14, part of 15, part of 16. 

Vocabulary:

air pressure            isobars                 jet stream                ozone layer                ozone
prevailing winds     coriolis effect    convectional flow    trade winds            doldroms
polar easterlies        thermal equator    hadley cells        ferrel cells            polar cells
high pressure          low pressure        pressure gradient    dew point        condensation
environmental lapse rate                altitude                    albedo                    front
air masses              barometer         advection fog        radiation fog         

-differentiate between weather and climate
-know weather station models and symbols
-know different weather fronts (we will review on Thursday)
-know the layers of the atmosphere and what we might find in each
-understand how wind and global circulation affect weather and weather patterns
-how does the jet stream affect weather patterns in our location?                           

I will add some more later this evening

Socials 10: 1930's Quest Review

Depression Era Quest Review:  Chapter 9

Vocab:
depression                        isolationism                            padlock law
business cycle                  relief                                        Union Nationale 
protectionism.                  socialism                                Social Credit
recession                          tariffs                                       CCF party
new deal                          Canadian Wheat Board         (maybe totalitarianism, appeasement)
Laissez-faire                    Regina Manifesto

People:
Roosevelt.         Woodsworth
Bennett              Duplessis
King

Topics:
Stock market crash                                        Immigration policies
On-to-Ottawa Trek
Work Camps
Government response to depression

Some questions to think about:

-Draw parallels between Canada and the US around the depression.  You may use examples from the movie to help.  Think government, economy, society.  

-In what ways was the Great Depression a time of progress & decline in Canadian History?  Provide specific examples with an explanation as to why. 

-Was Jim Braddock’s story during the Great Depression one of progress or decline? Why? 

-causes and consequences of depression (list of causes in notes but also p. 256) (or policies etc...)

-Why Quebec Nationalism rose (q. 1 p. 269)

-Shifting focus of political and economic ties, was this just a form of one economic dependance to another?  Defend.

-What is better to get out of a recession/depression freer trade or protective tariffs?

-Should Canada ever sign a treaty agreeing to help another country if it is attacked?

-Why did many racist and exclusionary policies persist at this time?

-What should the governments role be during a depression or recession?

Socials 10: answers to Friday 5, Dec. 13th

 

  1.  List two causes of the great depression.

-over production
-heavy reliance on primary resources (not diversifying)
-buying on credit
-trade with the US (reliance)
-stock market crash


  1. What was the major catalyst of this depression?  Explain what happened.

-Stock Market crash, people panicked and were all trying to sell their stocks, bottom of the market fell out


  1. What was the initial government response to the depression in Canada?

-initially nothing much - federal government said it was a provincial problem, eventually Bennet made work camps and tried to put some other things in place but really a little too late


  1. What was the On to Ottawa trek?

-men from the work camps went on strike and took their complaints to Ottawa riding the rails there but were stopped in Regina


  1. Why did the On to Ottawa trek happen?

-conditions in the work camps were terrible, pay was terrible, jobs were terrible, food was terrible


Friday, December 13, 2024

Thursday, December 12, 2024

Geography 12: week of Dec. 9th

 This week we have started our weather unit.  We started by focusing on atmospheric circulation looking at the main reason we have weather:  wind.  We examined the atmospheric layers, understood the atmospheric circulation patterns and atmospheric pressure.  

We watched a couple of videos:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7fd03fBRsuU

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xqM83_og1Fc

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PDEcAxfSYaI&t=8s

This will help you understand why the globe experiences uneven heating, the circulation cells and why and how wind moves.  We also checked out a weather map and how they work.  See this video to help with understanding:  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bd7DcVnrSL8

Check out this site on wind:  https://earth.nullschool.net/

We read chapter 14, completed the chart on p. 237 and you should be able to answer #9 on p. 239.

On Thursday this week we focused in on the polar, ferrel and hadley cells and what climate we would match with these understanding the lows and highs that form as a result.  (work sheet that is a hand in).

We also created three climate graphs and matched these with each of the cells above.  Check out some examples of climate graphs on page 403 in Earth Matters.  

Ensure the graphs are fully labelled. 

Decide which climate graph represents a region under:

The Hadley Cell

The Ferrel Cell

The Polar Cell

Make sure you write an explanation as to why you made your choice.  

Here are is the data for the three climate graphs: 





Social Studies 10: week of Dec. 9th

 This week in Socials 10 we focused in on the Great Depression, particularly the reasons for it.  We looked at the business cycle, examined the causes and consequences of the depression.  We discussed the government response to the depression and what we as citizens would expect of the government during hard times.  Students learned and took notes on relief, and relief camps and the On to Ottawa trek.  

We also continued on with our issues papers.  Students started part 5:  writing the paper.  I did a quick lesson on footnotes and how to format these with your quotes.

We also continued watching Cinderella Man and working on the sheet that goes with it.  

This is chapter 9 in the text book which starts on page 250.

Tuesday, December 3, 2024

Social Studies 10: Nov 29, Dec. 2&3

 Nov. 29th:

-we wrote a Friday 5

-did some review and worked on the following work around changing roles for women in the 1920's

Read p. 201, 202 & 204

Create a T chart with continuity (stayed the same) & change and using the information on the pages above complete the chart.

Watch videos on next slide.

Using your chart, Answer: 

-Q#2 p. 204

-Was WWI a turning point for women in Canada?

We finished off the class talking about those immigrating to Canada and what life was like for them and the discriminatory laws some faced  (text pages 224-237)

December 2nd

-We went over our Friday 5's and did some review
-Homework check on women in the 1920's Questions above and watched this video:  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=njAO38Og1-k&t=50s
-students did some work filling the following chart out about society in the 1920's
 

Major change:

Brief point form information on the change and the benefit:

A growing Economy

 

Changing trade partners

 

Changing Lifestyles

 

Media & Arts

 

Changes in Science & Technology

 

Changes in health:

 

-talked about push and pull factors and the difference between an immigrant, a refugee and a migrant

December 3rd
-today we did a little review in general and then talked about the above chart (HW check)
-from here we went on to do some reading on immigration and reviewed push-pull factors
-we finished up the class talking about if the 1920's were good for all?  We focussed on these three essential questions:
  1.  Did government actions help or hinder Indigenous people in Canada?


  1.  What was the impact of the Indian Act and the residential school system on Indigenous people?


  1. How did the Indian Act come to be?  What is the human cost of this policy for Indigenous people, particularly women?


-students then took some notes on Indigenous people post WWI, the Indian Act and read the following pages in order to answer the above questions. pp. 206-209

***TEST WEDNESDAY DECEMBER 4th



Geography 12, Nov. 29, Dec. 2 & 3

 Reminder:  *Field Trip tomorrow to Nakusp Hotsprings, bus leaves at 8am

                     *Test Friday (see review sheet on blog)

                     *Mini poster projects on natural disaster due Friday/Monday

Nov. 29th

-we talked a bit about the rock cycle and fossil fuels and watched this video. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zaXBVYr9Ij0

-we talked about Geothermal Energy, the pros and cons, how it works & watched these two videos

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DFQrE91kZwk

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VhBq0E53WD0

Dec. 2nd

-reviewed Geothermal Energy and where in BC it exists. (see graphic below)

-talked about the volcano belts in BC:  Anahim belt (hotspots), Cascade Arc (a.k.a. the Garibaldi Volcanic Belt) and  Stikine Volcanic Belt and the Wells Gray-Clearwater Volcanic Field (crustal rifting)  https://opentextbc.ca/geology/chapter/4-3-types-of-volcanoes/

-watched this video on volcanism:  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MMwTRLHuS2w


Dec. 3rd

-talked about Super volcanoes and did a little sequencing activity on how they work using the facts about these volcanoes.  We also watched this video:  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hDNlu7Qf6_E

-students worked on test review

Sunday, December 1, 2024

Geography 12: Answers to Fri 5, Nov. 29

 1.  Briefly explain a hotspot.

-a volcano that forms not on a plate boundary but mid plate where the earth's crust is thin and the magma burst through the crust creating a shield volcano over time, usually because the plate is moving, it creates a series of hotspots as the mantle plume is dragged along

2.  Define pyroclastic flow.

-is a dense, fast-moving flow of solidified lava pieces, volcanic ash, and hot gases. 

-A fast-moving, ground-hugging current of hot gases, ash, and volcanic rock fragments that flows down the slopes of a volcano during an explosive eruption.

3.  Explain what kind of volcano has super explosive eruptions and at what plate boundary we might find these volcanos.

-Composite/Strato volcano.  Found along Ring of Fire, or convegent/subducting plate boundaries

4.  What type of rocks might be associated with this type of volcano?

-Igneous rocks

-pumice, rhyolite

5.  Provide one positive and one negative idea around how volcanoes affect people's lives.

Positive:  fertile soil, geothermal energy, tourism, mining

Negative:  destruction of buildings, infrastructure, farming, death

Socials 10: answers to Friday 5, Nov. 29

 1.  Two new inventions from the 1920's.

-cistern pump, electric range, vacuum, refrigerator, model T Ford, iron etc...

2.  What is meant by Canadian Autonomy?

-self governance or independence (in this case from Britain)

3.  Two things Canada did in the 1920's that made them more autonomous.

-Chanak Affair- did not automatically jump into going and helping Britain when felt threatened by Turkey while peace keeping

-Halibut Treaty - first signed and negotiated International treaty independent of Britain

-King-Byng affair - GG went against PM's wishes, PM campaigned and won election saying British medaling in government

Balfour Report- made British Commonwealth and declared all countries that were under British control constitutionally equal

4.  Provide two facts about women in the 1920's.

-became more independent, winning the vote, allowed to work a variety of jobs and earn a living, wore more revealing clothing, protested, allowed to take government office and senate (famous five in person's case), talked politics

5.  How can you explain the economy in the 1920's?

-Canada's main trade partner moved from Britain to the US

-People were spending money, but much was on credit

-consumerism became a thing....people consuming goods like crazy after the restrictions of war