social change - weebly

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Social Change Reform Movements/Immigration

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Page 1: Social Change - Weebly

Social ChangeReform Movements/Immigration

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Women’s RightsDefine: Suffrage- The right to vote

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Second Great Awakening-

Revivals- Religious celebrations where a large group of people gather together

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Abolitionists The South’s agenda included slavery.

After the North read this book, many became upset and it inspired people to join the Abolitionist movement.

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Mental illnesses

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Temperance

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Education

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Labor Movement

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Literature

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Art

Discovered different species of birds

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Transcendentalism

Civil Disobedience

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Poster DirectionsDue:Wednesday or Thursday (end of class)

Directions: You are joining a reform movement and you are trying to get others to join with you. Create a poster that would try to inspire people to join.

● Must include a description of what the movement is all about, and why people should join in the movement

● Must include at least 4 colored symbols to help make your poster stand out● If you are an amazing drawer, you may sketch one big scene

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Gallery Walk Walk around to the different stations and decide which reform movement represents the image or text

● On your own sheet of paper number 1-19(no skipping lines)● The numbers represent each station. You will write your decision next to the

corresponding station number

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Mini QuizLabel paper 1-19-No skipping lines

Next to the number, decide which movement is being shown to you via the handout. Every movement will be used at least once. Some movements will be used several times. (HINT: “The Arts”, Mental Illness, and Transcendentalism - used just once)

● Second Great Awakening● Abolitionist Movement● Mental Illness● Temperance● Education● Women’s Rights● Transcendentalism● The Arts(paintings, literature)

● Labor Movement

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“But we are assembled to protest against a form of government existing without the consent of the governed - to declare our right to be free as man is free, to be represented in the government which we are taxed to support, to have such is graceful laws as give man the power to chastise and imprison his wife, to take the wages which she earns, the property which she inherits, and, in case of separation, the children of her love; laws which make her the mere dependent on his bounty. It is to protest against such unjust laws as these that we are assembled today, and to have them, if possible, forever erased from our statute books, deeming them a shame and a disgrace to a Christian republic in the nineteenth century”

Elizabeth Cady Stanton: Seneca Falls Keynote Address

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If there is no struggle, there is no progress.Power concedes nothing without a demand. It never did and it never will.It is easier to build strong children than to repair broken men.Those who profess to favor freedom, and yet depreciate agitation, are men who want crops without plowing up the ground.People might not get all they work for in this world, but they must certainly work for all they get

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Translation from the text

Step 1. A glass with a friend.

Step 2. A glass to keep the

cold out.

Step 3. A glass too much.

Step 4. Drunk and riotous.

Step 5. The summit attained.

Jolly companions. A confirmed

drunkard.

Step 6. Poverty and disease.

Step 7. Forsaken by Friends.

Step 8. Desperation and

crime.

Step 9. Death by suicide.

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This movement was a popular among essayists and lecturers, it promoted individualism and self-reliance, Civil Disobedience, and included works called “Nature” and “The American Scholar”

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“As an apple is not in any proper sense an apple, until it is ripe, so a human being is not in any proper sense a human being until he is educated”

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Immigration-What is different about these two photos? similar?Why do you believe people immirgrate?

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Important Terminology Push Factor: What is making people leave their country

Pull Factor: What is bringing them to a country

Immigrate: to move