American History Word Researches: Hoover and the Great Depression

American History Word Researches: Hoover and the Great Depression
Author: Loren Krogstad
Publisher: Teacher Created Materials
Total Pages: 4
Release: 2014-02-01
Genre:
ISBN: 1480773921

Sharpen students' critical-thinking and research skills with this word research. Parents, students, and teachers will love this history-based puzzle with corresponding research questions. They're a great way to practice higher-order thinking skills.

American History Word Researches: FDR and the Great Depression

American History Word Researches: FDR and the Great Depression
Author: Loren Krogstad
Publisher: Teacher Created Materials
Total Pages: 4
Release: 2014-02-01
Genre:
ISBN: 148077393X

Sharpen students' critical-thinking and research skills with this word research. Parents, students, and teachers will love this history-based puzzle with corresponding research questions. They're a great way to practice higher-order thinking skills.

U.S. History Word (Re)Searches: From Colonial Times to the Present

U.S. History Word (Re)Searches: From Colonial Times to the Present
Author: Loren Krogstad
Publisher: Teacher Created Resources
Total Pages: 146
Release: 2003-06-20
Genre: Education
ISBN: 0743937686

Students first research history facts to answer fill-in-the-blank type of questions about American history. Then they circle their answers in word searches. These self-checking exeercises are great for review.

American History Word Researches: The Roaring Twenties

American History Word Researches: The Roaring Twenties
Author: Loren Krogstad
Publisher: Teacher Created Materials
Total Pages: 4
Release: 2014-02-01
Genre:
ISBN: 1480773913

Sharpen students' critical-thinking and research skills with this word research. Parents, students, and teachers will love this history-based puzzle with corresponding research questions. They're a great way to practice higher-order thinking skills.

American History Word Researches: World War II

American History Word Researches: World War II
Author: Loren Krogstad
Publisher: Teacher Created Materials
Total Pages: 4
Release: 2014-02-01
Genre:
ISBN: 1480773948

Sharpen students' critical-thinking and research skills with this word research. Parents, students, and teachers will love this history-based puzzle with corresponding research questions. They're a great way to practice higher-order thinking skills.

The Great Depression

The Great Depression
Author: Stanley Schultz
Publisher: Gareth Stevens
Total Pages: 58
Release: 2006
Genre: Juvenile Nonfiction
ISBN: 9780836859782

Explains what caused the Great Depression and how presidents Hoover and Roosevelt dealt with the situation, discusses the social conditions of the United States at this time, and presents the key people involved with rebuilding America.

Spotlight on America: The Great Depression

Spotlight on America: The Great Depression
Author: Robert W. Smith
Publisher: Teacher Created Resources
Total Pages: 50
Release: 2006-01-26
Genre: Education
ISBN: 1420632183

Encourage students to take an in-depth view of the people and events of specific eras of American history. Nonfiction reading comprehension is emphasized along with research, writing, critical thinking, working with maps, and more. Most titles include a Readers Theater.

Depression to Cold War

Depression to Cold War
Author: Joseph M. Siracusa
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing USA
Total Pages: 324
Release: 2002-08-30
Genre: History
ISBN: 031301230X

Organized around the office of the president, this study focuses on American behavior at home and abroad from the Great Depression to the onset of the end of the Cold War, two key points during which America sought a re-definition of its proper relationship to the world. Domestically, American society continued the process of industrialization and urbanization that had begun in the 19th century. Urban growth accompanied industrialism, and more and more Americans lived in cities. Because of industrial growth and the consequent interest in foreign markets, the United States became a major world power. American actions as a nation, whether as positive attempts to mold events abroad or as negative efforts to enjoy material abundance in relative political isolation, could not help but affect the course of world history. Under President Hoover, the federal government was still a comparatively small enterprise; challenges of the next six decades would transform it almost beyond belief, touching in one way or another almost every facet of American life. Before the New Deal, few Americans expected the government to do anything for them. By the end of the Second World War and in the aftermath of the Great Depression, however, Americans had turned to Washington for help. Even the popular Reagan presidency of the 1980s, the most conservative since Hoover, would fail to undo the basic New Deal commitment to assist struggling Americans. There would be no turning back the clock, at home or abroad.

Rhetoric As Currency

Rhetoric As Currency
Author: Davis W. Houck
Publisher: Texas A&M University Press
Total Pages: 252
Release: 2001
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 9781585441099

Hoover, the president of economic depression; Roosevelt the president of recovery--the public images of these two men are so firmly fixed that they offer shorthand ways to talk about the era we know as the Great Depression. Yet their views on economic policy for taking the country out of its greatest economic calamity were not so different as is often supposed. Indeed, the famed journalist Walter Lippmann once claimed that Roosevelt's legislative measures represented "a continuous evolution of the Hoover measures." Moreover, both Hoover and Roosevelt shared a Keynesian conviction that public confidence was vital to recovery. They differed markedly, of course, in their ability to restore that confidence. Roosevelt's advantage lay not just in his position in the changing of the guard. He employed a skilled staff of speech writers, and he had the negative example of Hoover before him from which to plot rhetorical strategies that would be more effective. In Rhetoric as Currency, Houck uses the historical context of the Great Depression to explore the relationship of rhetoric to the economy and specifically economic recovery. He closely analyzes Hoover's rhetorical corpus from March 4, 1929, through March 3, 1933, and Roosevelt's from January 3, 1930, through June 16, 1933. This longitudinal study allows him to understand rhetoric as a process rather than a series of isolated, discrete products. Houck first examines Hoover's presidential rhetoric, tracing its paradoxes and the radical shift that occurred in the final year of his administration. The Depression, in his rhetoric, was a foe to be vanquished by an optimistic Christian and civic faith, not federal legislation. Once he determined that federal intervention was indeed required, he could not return to the dais; rather, he relied on an antagonistic press to carry his message of confidence. Abdicating the rhetorical pulpit, he left it in the hands of those opposed to him. Houck then studies the economic rhetoric of Franklin Roosevelt as governor, candidate, president-elect, and finally president. He traces the key similarities and differences in Roosevelt's economic rhetoric with particular attention to an embodied economics, wherein recovery was premised less on mental optimism than a physical, active confidence.

Dark Realities

Dark Realities
Author: Wyn Derbyshire
Publisher: Spiramus Press Ltd
Total Pages: 264
Release: 2013
Genre: History
ISBN: 1907444777

The stock market crash came in October 1929, and America slid into deep depression. Against a background of bank failures, industrial decline, rural poverty, and unemployment, there was an outbreak of protests, strikes, and riots. Hoover was swept from power in 1932, and it fell to the new President, Franklin D. Roosevelt, to revive America's fortunes with a number of ground-breaking new programs which made up the New Deal. Dark Realities covers this period in America's history. The book introduces the key figures of this time period and reveals the impact that the Great Depression had on the American people.