Understanding the Fourteen Points: US in WW1
About This Worksheet
This worksheet explores the key concepts and vocabulary related to President Woodrow Wilson's Fourteen Points and their significance during World War I.
Topics covered:
Worksheet Preview
Full preview • 8 questions
Understanding the Fourteen Points: US in WW1
Untitled Worksheet
Introduction to the Fourteen Points
Source A: President Wilson's Speech to Congress, 1918
'My purpose is to set forth the principles of justice and peace that should guide the world after this terrible war. The Fourteen Points aim to prevent future conflicts and establish a fair peace.' Provenance: Speech delivered by President Woodrow Wilson to the US Congress, January 1918.
Vocabulary and Key Concepts
Key Terms:
- Self-determination: The right of nations to choose their own government.
- League of Nations: An international organization proposed to maintain peace.
- Armistice: A formal agreement to stop fighting.
- Diplomacy: Managing international relations through negotiation.
- Reparations: Compensation paid by a defeated country for damages.
Source B: Excerpt from Wilson's Fourteen Points
'A free, open-minded international order based on mutual respect and cooperation, where nations can resolve conflicts peacefully.' Provenance: Extract from Wilson's Fourteen Points, 1918.
Analysis of the Impact
Source C: Historian's View
'Wilson's Fourteen Points marked a significant shift in diplomatic efforts, emphasizing fairness and self-determination. However, some critics argued that it was idealistic and difficult to implement.' Provenance: A historian's analysis written in 1920.
Reflection and Summary
Summary: Wilson's Fourteen Points aimed to establish a fair, peaceful post-war world based on principles like self-determination and international cooperation. While influential, they faced criticism for being overly idealistic.
Key Vocabulary: self-determination, League of Nations, diplomacy, armistice, reparations.
Quick Actions
What is Remix?
Create a new worksheet based on this one. Change the grade level, topic, number of questions, or difficulty - then generate a fresh version.
- • Change grade level (Grade 6 → Grade 7)
- • Swap topics (Harry Potter → Macbeth)
- • Add more questions (10 → 15)
- • Adjust difficulty
Details
- Created
- 1/1/2026
- Updated
- 1/1/2026
- Type
- worksheet