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PRACTICE PRACTICUM ASSESSMENT

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Title: PRACTICE PRACTICUM ASSESSMENT


1
PRACTICE PRACTICUMASSESSMENT
2
5 minutes
3
In 1767, British troops were sent to Boston to
ensure the collection of the import duties passed
under the Townshend Acts. Colonists were upset
with this. On March 5, 1770, a group of
colonists began harassing soldiers guarding
Bostons customs house by throwing snowballs and
rocks and them. The troops called for help. More
troops and colonists arrived at the scene. In
the confusion, shots rang out and eight colonists
were shot, five of whom were killed. This
incident became known as the Boston Massacre,
although this highly charged name exaggerates
what actually happened. This Paul Revere
engraving was a piece of propaganda used to sway
people to the belief that Boston was under attack
by the British. This poster incorrectly shows
the British giving the order to fire and fails to
illustrate how the conflict started. The dog in
the center is a symbol of loyalty, used by the
colonists to illustrate their belief that they
were in fact loyal subjects of the British crown.
In the end, John Adams defended the soldiers in
court, arguing that as British subjects, they
deserved a trial by jury, a right which British
policy in the 1770s denied smugglers who avoided
import duties. Most of the soldiers were
acquitted, but some were convicted of
manslaughter and branded on the thumbs. The
incident illustrates the growing tension between
the colonies and Britain, particularly, colonial
objections to having a standing army during peace
time.
4
3 minutes
5
  • In 1773, Parliament repealed all of the Townshend
    Acts, except the one on tea. Britain had all of
    the excess tea of the British East India Company
    sent to America to prevent the company from going
    bankrupt. Even with a tiny tax attached, the
    British tea remained cheaper than smuggled
    American tea. American tea smuggles were
    outraged that their business was imperiled by the
    cheap tea. Others were angry that Americans were
    being seduced into paying a British tax. In
    December 1773, Sons of Liberty dressed as Indians
    boarded a ship in Boston Harbor and emptied every
    crate of tea into Boston Harbor. As a result of
    this destruction of property, Britain passed the
    Coercive Acts to punish Boston.

6
6 minutes
  • His Majestys subjects in these colonies are
    entitled to all the inherent rights and
    liberties of his natural born subjects within the
    kingdom of Great Britain. It is inseparable
    essential to the freedom of a people, and the
    undoubted rights of Englishmen, that no taxes be
    imposed on them but with their own consent, given
    personally or by their representatives. . .the
    only representatives of the people of these
    colonies are persons chosen therein by
    themselves, and that no taxes ever have been, or
    can be constitutionally imposed on them, but by
    their respective legislatures.

7
This is an excerpt from the Declaration of Rights
and Grievances from the Stamp Act Congress which
met in 1765 in Philadelphia. In 1765, the
British Prime Minister George Grenville passed
through Parliament a Stamp Act for raising enough
money pay the cost of keeping a British army in
America. This decision came after Britain went
into enormous debts to win the French and Indian
War. This tax was the first direct tax that
colonists paid on products made in the colonies,
and they were outraged by it. The colonists
believed that rights guaranteed to all British
citizens by the documents in the British
Constitution included the right to be taxed only
with their own consent given through
representatives that they themselves elected.
Since no elected colonial representatives existed
in the Parliament, the colonists felt this tax
and future taxes were unjust. The Stamp Act
Congress agreed to boycott British goods and
wrote petitions such as this to the British
government, tactics the colonists would continue
to use throughout the taxation crisis of the
1760s and 1770s. Colonial outrage also included
destruction of personal property and threats on
the lives of stamp agents, often carried out by
the Sons of Liberty. The colonial outrage was
strong enough to scare anyone from actually
selling the stamps, and the Stamp Act was
repealed in 1766, but at the same time,
Parliament passed the Declaratory Act, a
statement that it did indeed have the right to
tax the colonists. Thus, the issue of the Stamp
Act was resolved, but the issue of taxation
without representation was left opened and would
eventually split the colonists from Britain. The
Stamp Act Congress was the second attempt at
colonial unity, the first having been the Albany
Plan of Union during the French and Indian War.
8
3 minutes
9
  • This is a political cartoon about the 1774
    Intolerable Acts. The Intolerable Acts were a
    group of laws passed by the British Parliament to
    punish Boston for the destruction of British tea
    during the Boston Tea Party. The Intolerable
    Acts choked Boston economically by closing the
    harbor. The artist depicts this economic
    punishment by showing Boston as a cage full of
    starving prisoners who are eating raw fish that
    other colonists are feeding them. Other parts of
    the Intolerable Acts restricted Massachusettss
    self-rule. The cartoon is from a colonial point
    of view because it shows the desperation of
    Boston and the overly plentiful supply of British
    military force in the background. As a result of
    the Intolerable Acts, the colonies met at the
    First Continental Congress which wrote petitions,
    passed boycotts, and assembled colonial militia.
    It was the final of the controversial British
    laws before the firing of the first shots of the
    Revolutionary War at Lexington and Concord.

10
5 MINUTES
11
  • In 1754, France had claimed North America between
    the Appalachian Mountains and the Rocky
    Mountains. Under the pressure of growing
    population, settlers in the 13 British colonies
    began pushing westward into this French
    territory. They began clashing with the Indians
    who lived there. After a battle at Fort
    Necessity, the French and Indian War began. It
    was actually the beginning of a World War (fought
    on multiple continents) between France and
    Britain called The Seven Years War. Indians
    sided with the French rather than the British
    because British cleared Indian hunting grounds to
    establish farms, while the French just set up
    trading forts that did not destroy Indian lands.
    In order to win the war, British Prime Minister
    William Pitt authorized massive spending, which
    sent England into huge debt. The war ended in
    1763 with the Treaty of Paris, which transferred
    land east of the Mississippi to Britain and
    announced the end of French authority in North
    America. In order to prevent future Indian wars,
    the British government set up the Proclamation
    Line of 1763. This line was meant to keep
    settlers from sparking future Indian wars. In
    order to pay for the continued protection of the
    colonies, Britain starting passing direct taxes
    on the colonies, which was the major cause of the
    American Revolution.

12
Salutary Neglect
30 seconds
13
Salutary Neglect
30 More seconds
This adding of time will not actually happen on a
practicum assessment. The point here is to get
you used to the element of pacing and to
understand how to quickly narrow and expand the
scope of your writing.
14
  • According to the theory of mercantilism, colonial
    trade was supposed to support the economy of the
    mother country. In accordance with this theory,
    England passed the Navigation Acts to restrict
    colonial trade, but England didnt bother
    enforcing the Navigation Acts because enforcing
    them was more expensive than ignoring them. This
    unofficial policy of ignoring the Navigation Acts
    was called Salutary Neglect, to which the
    colonies grew accustomed. The same term is also
    applied to Englands policy of allowing the
    colonies to govern themselves during most of
    their early history. When England suddenly
    reversed Salutary Neglect, it infuriated the
    colonists and provoked the American Revolution.

15
THE END
16
3 minutes
The Revolution was effected before the war
commenced. The Revolution was in the minds and
hearts of the people. -John Adams, 1818
17
  • Historians have argued that the American
    Revolution was not just the explosive decade
    leading up to 1776. Rather, as John Adams
    suggests here, it was a social and intellectual
    change that began when the first settlers arrived
    in Jamestown. Being in a rugged new environment
    forced colonists to find the most efficient ways
    of survival. Being far away from the stagnant
    social traditions of Europe encouraged
    independence and individualism. They developed a
    tradition of self-government based upon an
    English system. The main difference was that the
    availability of cheap land created a large middle
    class of propertied voters. When Parliament
    tried to suggest that virtual representation
    justified its power to tax the colonies directly,
    it made cries of no taxation without
    representation ring out..
  • Like a children who grew up on their own into
    fully self-sufficient adults, the colonies
    thought of themselves as self-regulating. There
    was no need for a British parent to help them
    get along. This quote suggests thatThe
    American Revolution that began around 1776 was
    merely the result of Britain tinkering with a new
    political and social system that had already
    fallen into place.

18
3.5 minutes
  • We hold these truths to be self-evident that all
    men are. . . endowed by their Creator with
    certain inalienable rights. To secure these
    rights, governments are instituted among men,
    deriving their just powers from the consent of
    the governed. . .Whenever any government becomes
    destructive of these ends, it is the right of the
    people to alter or to abolish it and to institute
    new government.

19
This is a passage from the Declaration of
Independence by Thomas Jefferson. It was signed
in July 1776 in the Second Continental Congress
after many attempts to obtain a redress of
grievances against Britain failed. The colonists
main complaint was that they did not get to vote
for Parliamentary representatives who were
levying taxes. This dispute escalated into a war
that started in 1775 at the Battle of Lexington
and Concord. In this passage, Jefferson justifies
the reasons for independence. He uses
Enlightenment theories about the social contract
and natural rights to do so. He uses John
Lockes argument that a government must protect
the natural rights of life, liberty, and property
as part of the social contract. According to
Locke, when a government fails to protect those
rights, the people have the right to change the
government. Since Britain failed to protect the
colonists rights to vote for parliamentary
representatives (a long-cherished right of
Englishmen), they decided to establish a new
government. The Declaration of Independence is
important in world history because it was the
first time that a nation was founded upon the
principles of the Enlightenment. In some ways,
it achieved John Winthrops dream of A City on a
Hill or a model society that the rest of the
world would admire from afar.
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