Social Studies: World War I: Causes, Alliances, and Outcomes
Understanding the long-term causes, major alliances, and results of the Great War
Social Studies: World War I: Causes, Alliances, and Outcomes
Understanding the long-term causes, major alliances, and results of the Great War
Social Studies - Grade 6-8
- 1
The acronym M.A.I.N. is often used to remember four long-term causes of World War I. Write what each letter stands for and give a brief explanation of one cause.
Think about competition for weapons, promises between countries, colonies, and pride in one's nation.
M.A.I.N. stands for militarism, alliances, imperialism, and nationalism. One example is militarism, which means countries built up large armies and navies, making war more likely. - 2
In 1914, Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria-Hungary was assassinated in Sarajevo. Explain why this event helped start a larger war in Europe.
The assassination caused Austria-Hungary to blame Serbia and declare war. Because European countries had alliance agreements, more nations joined the conflict, turning a local crisis into a major war. - 3
Classify each country as part of the Allied Powers or the Central Powers during most of World War I: Germany, France, Great Britain, Austria-Hungary, Russia, Ottoman Empire.
Germany and Austria-Hungary were on the same side, while France, Great Britain, and Russia were on the opposing side.
Germany, Austria-Hungary, and the Ottoman Empire were Central Powers. France, Great Britain, and Russia were Allied Powers during most of the war. - 4
Explain how the alliance system made World War I larger and harder to avoid.
The alliance system made the war larger because countries promised to support each other if war began. When one country entered the conflict, its allies were pulled in too. - 5
Look at a timeline with these events: 1914 assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand, 1917 United States enters the war, 1918 armistice ends the fighting, 1919 Treaty of Versailles signed. Put the events in order and explain what happened last.
The treaty came after the fighting stopped.
The correct order is the assassination in 1914, the United States entering the war in 1917, the armistice in 1918, and the Treaty of Versailles in 1919. The Treaty of Versailles happened last and set peace terms after the war. - 6
Define militarism and explain how it increased tension in Europe before World War I.
Militarism is the belief that a country should build and use strong military forces. It increased tension because countries competed to build larger armies and navies and prepared for possible war. - 7
Define imperialism and explain how competition for colonies contributed to World War I tensions.
Think about countries competing for land, wealth, and power in Africa and Asia.
Imperialism is when powerful countries control other lands for resources, markets, and influence. Competition for colonies created rivalry and distrust among European powers. - 8
Define nationalism and explain how it affected groups living in large empires such as Austria-Hungary.
Nationalism is strong pride in one's nation or ethnic group. In large empires, some groups wanted independence or their own nation, which caused conflict and weakened the empire. - 9
Explain why trench warfare led to a stalemate on the Western Front.
A stalemate means neither side can make much progress.
Trench warfare led to a stalemate because soldiers were protected by trenches, barbed wire, and machine guns. Attacks across open land were extremely dangerous and often gained very little ground. - 10
Describe one reason the United States entered World War I in 1917.
One reason the United States entered World War I was Germany's use of unrestricted submarine warfare, which attacked ships carrying goods and passengers. The Zimmermann Telegram also angered many Americans because Germany encouraged Mexico to fight the United States. - 11
The Treaty of Versailles placed major blame for the war on Germany. Explain one major condition Germany had to accept under the treaty.
Reparations are payments made after a war to cover damages.
Germany had to accept responsibility for the war and pay reparations, which were payments for war damages. Germany also had to reduce its military and give up territory. - 12
Explain how World War I changed the map of Europe after 1918.
World War I changed the map of Europe because several empires collapsed, including Austria-Hungary, the Ottoman Empire, Germany, and Russia. New countries were created, and borders were redrawn. - 13
Compare the goals of the League of Nations with one reason it struggled to succeed.
A peace organization needs strong members and the ability to act when countries break agreements.
The League of Nations was created to help countries solve disputes peacefully and prevent future wars. It struggled because some powerful countries, including the United States, did not join, and it had limited power to enforce decisions. - 14
Read the statement: 'World War I was caused only by the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand.' Explain why this statement is incomplete.
The statement is incomplete because the assassination was the immediate trigger, but long-term causes also mattered. Militarism, alliances, imperialism, and nationalism had already created tension in Europe. - 15
Write a short paragraph explaining how one cause, one alliance, and one outcome of World War I are connected.
Use words such as because, as a result, and therefore to show connections.
A strong answer explains that a cause such as nationalism increased tension, an alliance such as the Central Powers or Allied Powers helped spread the war, and an outcome such as the Treaty of Versailles changed Europe after the fighting ended. The paragraph should connect the ideas in a logical way.