US HISTORY EOC
REVIEW GUIDE
For students preparing for the South Carolina End of
Course (EOC) Examination in U.S. History
These materials are provided free of charge
for use by teachers and students who are
preparing for the US History EOC exam.
Anyone may use and modify these guides for
non-commercial, educational purposes as
long as I receive credit for my work.
, TABLE OF CONTENTS
Click on a link to go directly to a Review Guide.
STANDARD 1 (Colonial & Early National America)
1.1 (Colonial America) PowerPoint YouTube E-Lecture(s)
1.2 (British Influence & Colonial Protests) PowerPoint (2) YouTube E-Lecture(s)
1.3 (Declaration of Independence)
1.4 (Articles and Constitution) PowerPoint
1.5 (Principles of the Constitution) PowerPoint
1.6 (Jefferson vs. Hamilton) PowerPoint
1.7 (Marshall Court) PowerPoint
STANDARD 2 (Westward Movement & Sectionalism)
2.1 (Westward Movement) PowerPoint
2.2 (Monroe Doctrine & Manifest Destiny) PowerPoint
2.3 (Sectionalism & Economic Development) PowerPoint
2.4 (Antebellum Reform Movements) PowerPoint
STANDARD 3 (The Civil War & Reconstruction)
3.1 (Causes of the Civil War) PowerPoint
3.2 (The Civil War) PowerPoint YouTube E-Lecture(s)
3.3 (Reconstruction – Part I) PowerPoint
3.4 (Reconstruction – Part II) PowerPoint
3.5 (Nadir of American Race Relations)
STANDARD 4 (Industrialization, Urbanization & Progressivism)
4.1 (Transcontinental RR & Indian Wars) PowerPoint
Guides for 4.2 – 4.4 PENDING
4.5 (Immigration & Urbanization) PowerPoint
4.6 (Progressive Reform)
,STANDARD 5 (Foreign Policy, Imperialism, and WWI)
5.1 (From “Isolationism to Imperialism”) PowerPoint
5.2 (The Spanish-American War) PowerPoint
5.3 (US Imperialism) PowerPoint
5.4 (World War I) PowerPoint
5.5 (Rejection of Wilsonian Internationalism) PowerPoint YouTube E-Lecture(s)
STANDARD 6 (Roaring Twenties & Great Depression)
6.1 (1920s – Part I) PowerPoint
6.2 (1920s – Part II) PowerPoint
6.3 (Hoover’s Depression)
6.4 (The New Deal)
STANDARD 7 (WWII and the Cold War)
7.1 (American Neutrality) PowerPoint
7.2 (WWII – The Home Front) PowerPoint
7.3 (WWII – Military & Diplomacy)
7.4 (The Economy, the Holocaust & Israel)
Guides for 7.5 – 8.6 PENDING
3
, USHC 1.1 Summarize the distinct characteristics of each colonial region in the settlement and
development of British North America, including religious, social, political, and economic
differences.
Motives for Colonization:
Contrasting the Colonial Regions
Religion Society Politics Economy
New
England
Mid-
Atlantic Not Assessed
Southern
Religion in the Colonies The Colonial Economy
New England The Triangular Trade
John Winthrop (MA) City on a Colonies:
The “Religious Freedom” Myth Europe:
Although the Puritans fled England to escape Africa:
religious persecution, but they turned around and
persecuted dissenters in their own communities.
Economic Regulation
Exiled Dissenters:
The Acts
governed colonial trade, but were not
strictly enforced – a policy known as
Mid-Atlantic
Pennsylvania Maryland
salutary neglect.
William Penn Lord Baltimore
PORTS: Boston, New York,
Philadelphia, Charleston
REVIEW GUIDE
For students preparing for the South Carolina End of
Course (EOC) Examination in U.S. History
These materials are provided free of charge
for use by teachers and students who are
preparing for the US History EOC exam.
Anyone may use and modify these guides for
non-commercial, educational purposes as
long as I receive credit for my work.
, TABLE OF CONTENTS
Click on a link to go directly to a Review Guide.
STANDARD 1 (Colonial & Early National America)
1.1 (Colonial America) PowerPoint YouTube E-Lecture(s)
1.2 (British Influence & Colonial Protests) PowerPoint (2) YouTube E-Lecture(s)
1.3 (Declaration of Independence)
1.4 (Articles and Constitution) PowerPoint
1.5 (Principles of the Constitution) PowerPoint
1.6 (Jefferson vs. Hamilton) PowerPoint
1.7 (Marshall Court) PowerPoint
STANDARD 2 (Westward Movement & Sectionalism)
2.1 (Westward Movement) PowerPoint
2.2 (Monroe Doctrine & Manifest Destiny) PowerPoint
2.3 (Sectionalism & Economic Development) PowerPoint
2.4 (Antebellum Reform Movements) PowerPoint
STANDARD 3 (The Civil War & Reconstruction)
3.1 (Causes of the Civil War) PowerPoint
3.2 (The Civil War) PowerPoint YouTube E-Lecture(s)
3.3 (Reconstruction – Part I) PowerPoint
3.4 (Reconstruction – Part II) PowerPoint
3.5 (Nadir of American Race Relations)
STANDARD 4 (Industrialization, Urbanization & Progressivism)
4.1 (Transcontinental RR & Indian Wars) PowerPoint
Guides for 4.2 – 4.4 PENDING
4.5 (Immigration & Urbanization) PowerPoint
4.6 (Progressive Reform)
,STANDARD 5 (Foreign Policy, Imperialism, and WWI)
5.1 (From “Isolationism to Imperialism”) PowerPoint
5.2 (The Spanish-American War) PowerPoint
5.3 (US Imperialism) PowerPoint
5.4 (World War I) PowerPoint
5.5 (Rejection of Wilsonian Internationalism) PowerPoint YouTube E-Lecture(s)
STANDARD 6 (Roaring Twenties & Great Depression)
6.1 (1920s – Part I) PowerPoint
6.2 (1920s – Part II) PowerPoint
6.3 (Hoover’s Depression)
6.4 (The New Deal)
STANDARD 7 (WWII and the Cold War)
7.1 (American Neutrality) PowerPoint
7.2 (WWII – The Home Front) PowerPoint
7.3 (WWII – Military & Diplomacy)
7.4 (The Economy, the Holocaust & Israel)
Guides for 7.5 – 8.6 PENDING
3
, USHC 1.1 Summarize the distinct characteristics of each colonial region in the settlement and
development of British North America, including religious, social, political, and economic
differences.
Motives for Colonization:
Contrasting the Colonial Regions
Religion Society Politics Economy
New
England
Mid-
Atlantic Not Assessed
Southern
Religion in the Colonies The Colonial Economy
New England The Triangular Trade
John Winthrop (MA) City on a Colonies:
The “Religious Freedom” Myth Europe:
Although the Puritans fled England to escape Africa:
religious persecution, but they turned around and
persecuted dissenters in their own communities.
Economic Regulation
Exiled Dissenters:
The Acts
governed colonial trade, but were not
strictly enforced – a policy known as
Mid-Atlantic
Pennsylvania Maryland
salutary neglect.
William Penn Lord Baltimore
PORTS: Boston, New York,
Philadelphia, Charleston