1 / 16

Monday, 5 March 2012

Monday, 5 March 2012. Planner page 78. 1. Current Events (Set 24) 2. Factory (mill) Life 3. Ch. 11 Vocabulary 4. Transportation Revolution 5. Ch. 11 Outlines 6. Ch. 11 Foldable *HW due Wed. coal. Today ’ s History Standards is 8.6. Tuesday, 6 March 2012. Planner page 78.

overton
Download Presentation

Monday, 5 March 2012

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Monday, 5 March 2012 Planner page 78 • 1. Current Events (Set 24) • 2. Factory (mill) Life • 3. Ch. 11 Vocabulary • 4. Transportation Revolution • 5. Ch. 11 Outlines • 6. Ch. 11 Foldable • *HW due Wed. coal Today’s History Standards is 8.6

  2. Tuesday, 6 March 2012 Planner page 78 • 1. Current Event #2 • 2. Transportation Rev. • 3. Ch. 11 Vocab. • 4. Technology Rev. • 5. Outlines / Morse Code • 6. West HW due tomorrow • *Museum folder tomorrow Today’s History Standards is 8.6

  3. Wednesday, 7 March 2012 Planner page 78 • 1. Current Event #3 • 2. Collect West HW • 3. Museum Focus / Summary • 4. Library Research • 5. East Coast Mtg After School Today’s History Standards is 8.8

  4. Thursday, 8 March 2012 Planner page 78 • 1. Current Event #4 • 2. Morse Code • 3. South Chart • 4. Chapter 12 Vocab. • 5. Cotton Industry • 6. Outline • * Collect late HW • * Notebook rubric Today’s History Standards is 8.7

  5. Friday, 9 March 2012 Planner page 78 • 1. Current Event #5 • 2. South Chart • 3. Chapter 12 Vocab. • 4. Cotton Industry • 5. Outline • 6. Notebooks due Today’s History Standards is 8.7

  6. Current Events (Set 24) 1. “Tornado Alley: Deadly Twisters Claim Human Lives and Millions $ in Property Across 5 States.” Total devastation as 165-200 MPH (EF-4) winds spin path of destruction leaving death toll at 40. Parts of Ohio, Indiana, Kentucky, Georgia, and Alabama all declared federal disaster areas

  7. Current Event #2 2. “Freedom of Speech? Supreme Court Hears First Amendment Challenge to Stolen Valor Act.” Justices must decide if lying about receiving awards for military service is protected by the Constitution. Military awards system was established during Revolutionary War by Gen. George Washington

  8. Current Event #3 3. “Attorney General (Cabinet Member) Says Constitution Allows Killing of American Terrorists.” Eric Holder defends President’s lawful authority to target U.S. citizens when capture is not feasible. Killing American terrorists (Anwar al-Awlaki who operate within Al Qaeda is not assassination

  9. Current Event #3 3. “Attorney General Says Constitution Allows Killing of American Terrorists; it’s not Assassination.” Eric Holder defends President’s lawful authority to target U.S. citizens when capture is not feasible. Killing American citizens like Anwar al-Awlaki who operate within Al Qaeda is not unlawful

  10. Current Event #4 • 4. “Missing Persons: Faces of 2 USS Monitor Union Navy Sailors Reconstructed by Forensic Scientists.” • First “ironclad” ship sank in 1862; skeletons were discovered after gun turret was raised from bottom. DNA testing, did not find a match with any living descendants of the ship’s crew or their families

  11. Current Event #5 5. “China Softens its Threatening and Harsh One Child Policy Slogans, but Not the Law Itself.” People’s Daily says new slogans will reportedly be less offensive to the public and ease social tensions. ”To tie your tubes is to honor your family." "We would rather scrape your womb than allow you to have a second child!" “If sterilization or abortion demands are rejected; houses will be toppled and cows confiiscated!” “Have fewer children, raise more pigs!” “Better to destroy my family than destroy my country.” ”Please cure your illness before you plan to be a mother." “Control growth and improve the qualities of the population.!" “Lower fertility; better quality!” “Boys and girls are all treasures!” “Mistreatment and abandonment of baby girls is strictly prohibited.” China claims urban policy (40% of population) has resulted in 400 million less births since 1979

  12. Chapter 11The Industrial Revolution in America (Standard 8.6) • Effects • Lowered costs & • increased speed • Led to textile mills • Effects • Lowered costs & • increased speed • Led to textile mills Richard Arkwright Innovation: water frame (spinning machine), Richard Arkwright Innovation: water frameg machine) Eli Whitney Innovation: idea of Interchangeable parts Eli Whitney Innovation: idea of Interchangeable parts • Effects • Easy to assemble and • replace parts • Mass production • Effects • Easy to assemble and • replace parts • mass production Samuel Slater Innovation: machine production of cotton thread in mills Samuel Slater Innovation: machine production of cotton thread in mills. Rhode Island System = families • Effects • Spread of textile mills; • many in New England • Increased productivity • of American textiles • Effects • Spread of textile mills; • many in New England • Increased productivity • of American textiles Section 2 • Effects • Young, single women • workers living on site • Workers organize, trade • unions, strikes Francis Cabot Lowell Innovation: Water powered textile mills. Lowell System Lowell System = females

  13. Chapter 11The Transportation & Technological Revolution (Standard 8.6) • Industrial Revolution: • Mass production • Interchangeable parts • The Lowell & Rhode Island systems • Industrial Revolution: • Mass production • Interchangeable parts • The Lowell & Rhode Island systems telegraph telegraph Transportation Revolution Transportation Revolution Factories Factories Water and Steam Power Water and Steam Power Railroad & Steamboat Railroad & Steamboat Growing cities Growing cities New farm machinery New farm machinery

  14. Chapter 11The Transportation & Technological Revolution (Standard 8.6) Telegraph Steam Power Farm & Home Effects Effects Effects • Steamboat • Steam locomotive • Coal for fuel • Cheaper/faster • Urbanization / cities • Steamboat • Steam locomotive • Coal for fuel • Railroads • Urbanization / cities • Communication • Information • Long distances • Faster commun. • Follows railroads • Longer distances • Steel Plow • Mechanical reaper • Sewing machine • Steel Plow • Mechanical reaper • Sewing machine John Deere, Cyrus McCormick, Singer Samuel F. B. Morse Fulton & Cooper

  15. Industrial Revolution Cornell Notes Questions Notes / Answers • 1. What was the first industry to use machines to manufacture goods? What was the effect of this? (pg. 347) • 2. In what part of the U.S. were most mills located? Why? (pg. 348) • 3. Whose contributions were most important – Samuel Slater’s textile machines or Eli Whitney’s interchangeable parts? Why? • 4. What are the elements of mass production? (pg. 348-349)

  16. Chapter 12 Cornell Notes Questions Notes / Answers • 1. How did the cotton gin make processing cotton easier? (pg. 377) • 2. How did slavery change as a result of the cotton gin and the growth of the cotton belt? (pg. 378-379) • 3. Describe the other food, cash crops, & industries that developed in the South? (pg. 380) • 4. Why were planters and their families considered the most powerful class in the South? (pg. 382-383) • 5. How were the lives of Yeomen and poor whites different from planters? (pg. 384) • 6. How did free African Americans face discrimination in the South? (Pg. 385)

More Related