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Ontario Outcome Chart: History Since World War I - Grade 10 Academic
This chart contains media-related learning outcomes from Ontario, Curriculum for History Since World War I, Grade 10 Academic, with links to supporting resources on the Media Awareness Network site. | Communities: Local, National, and Global | | Overall Expectations - analyse the impact of external forces and events on Canada and it policies since 1914
Specific Expectations - describe some of the ways in which American culture and politics have influenced Canada since World War I (e.g., movies, magazines, television, the Internet, Franklin D. Roosevelt, Eleanor Roosevelt, John F. Kennedy, Martin Luther King Jr., George W. Bush);
- explain the impact in Canada of the experience and memory or the Holocaust (e.g., immigration of Holocaust survivors; introduction of human rights legislation; policy dealing with hate crimes and Nazi war criminals; nature of response to occurrences of genocide/ethnic cleansing in the world after World War II; participation in International War Crimes tribunal);
- identify contributions to Canada’s multicultural society by regional, linguistic, ethnocultural, and religious communities (e.g.,Aboriginal peoples, Franco-Ontarians, Métis, Black Canadians, Doukhobors, Mennonites, local immigrantcommunities)
| Lessons
Comparing Crime Dramas
Defining Popular Culture
Resource Racket: A Global Perspective on Resources and Consumption
Selling Obesity
Tobacco Advertising in Canada
And Now a Word From Our Sponsor
Free Speech Versus the Internet
Challenging Hate
Thinking About HateUnderstanding Online Hate
Propaganda Techniques on Hate Sites | | Change and Continuity | | Overall Expectations - analyse the impact of scientific and technological developments on Canadians
Specific Expectations - describe various ways in which technological developments have affected the lives of Canadians since World War I (e.g., telephones, cars, airplanes, radio, television, nuclear arms and nuclear power, satellites, computers, the Internet, developments in petrochemicals and biotechnology)
| Lessons
Earth Day
Hurricane Katrina and the Internet
TV Turnoff Week | | Methods of Historical Inquiry and Communication | | Overall Expectations - interpret and analyse information gathered through research, employing concepts and approaches appropriate to historical inquiry
Specific Expectations Research - evaluate the credibility of sources and information (e.g., by considering the authority, impartiality, and expertise of the source and checking the information for accuracy, underlying assumptions, stereotypes, prejudice, and bias)
Interpretation and Analysis - distinguish between fact, opinion and inference in texts and visuals found in primary and secondary sources
- identify different viewpoints and explicit biases when interpreting information for research or when participating in a discussion
| Lessons
A Tale of Two Cities
Bias
Deconstructing Web Pages
Finding and Authenticating Online Information on Global Development Issues
ICYou See: A Lesson in Critical Thinking
Hurricane Katrina and the "Two-Photo Controversy"
Hurricane Katrina and the Internet
Thinking About Hate
Hoax? Scholarly Research? Personal Opinion? You Decide!
MNet Special Initiatives Fact or Folly: Authenticating Online Information
Related MNet Resources
Backgrounders
Internet Glossary: Authenticating Online Information
How to Search the Internet Effectively
The Five W's of Cyberspace
Quick Tips for Authenticating Online Information
Evaluating Internet Research Sources
Evaluating Internet-Based Information: A Goals-Based Approach
Tip Sheets
How to Discourage Plagiarism
Professional Development
Reality Check: Evaluating Online Information
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