Tuesday, November 19, 2019

Tuesday Nov 18th Day 39

Chapter 6 Section #1 & #2 Quiz -Thursday

Today - Chapter 6 Section #2 presentation and Outline



CHAPTER 6 TEST TUESDAY 26th of Nov

Unit 4 Standards (Industrial Revolution)
Chapters 5 & 6

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Objective:
After studying this chapter students should be able to:
1. Understand the causes of the Industrial Revolution in England, Europe, and the United States.
2. Be able to describe the technological innovations that spurred industrialization.
3. Be able to describe the social, economic, and environmental impact of the Industrial Revolution and to make connections between the impact of the Industrial Revolution and the ideological and political responses.
4. Understand the relationship between the industrialized world and the non-industrialized world as demonstrated in the cases of Russia, Egypt, and India.

Rationale:
The Industrial Revolution was the biggest social turning point in history, transforming the very way people lived their lives. Identifying the various social, political, and economic changes of the times is essential in understanding the period and the effects it had on the world.
Evidence:
Being able to identify and explain the effects of the Industrial Revolution on the living experience of people all of over the world will assist in understanding the different paths societies took as they developed.

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Essential question - How important is sanitation?
Change in the way work is done


Journal Entry (#3) - What was/is “Urban Renewal” in Paris?


There's only soooo  much room and sooooo many resources

Essential Question - Why was he so wrong, or was he?




Men Who Built America
Answers to the questions for part 6 will be due Wednesday Night, Nov 20th



With an investment from Morgan, the Edison Electric Company is created and begins wiring homes in New York. A rival, Nikola Tesla, soon emerges with a different technology for electric light. A battle between Alternating Current (AC) and Direct Current (DC) power ensues. Morgan eventually buys out
Edison and forms General Electric which adopts AC power, setting the stage for the next several decades of electric power. Meanwhile, there is increasing unrest among American workers as the gap between the rich and the poor grows.


Men Who Built America
Answers to the questions for part 7 will be due Sat Night, Nov 23rd


Vanderbilt, Rockefeller, Carnegie and Morgan have gone un-monitored for decades, but American politicians are about to change that. They want to guard against monopolies and an unbalanced use of power. The men, some lifelong enemies, come together with a play to gain influence with the White House. Their candidate, William McKinley, wins the White House and passes legislation favorable to big business. Morgan and Carnegie create U.S. Steel, the first billion-dollar company in the U.S. while Rockefeller takes control of 90 percent of North American oil.



Men Who Built America
Answers to the questions for part 8 will be due Monday Night, Nov 25th


Episode 8: The New Machine
After McKinley is assassinated, Theodore Roosevelt becomes president and quickly passes a series of regulations increasing oversight of American business. Henry Ford devises the plan for a gas-powered car, and he launches the assembly line as an innovative method of production. He targets the middle class with his Model T and changes the landscape of America. The Panama Canal opens up new trade routes. Rockefeller is put on trial for anti-trust violations. He loses in court and his company, Standard Oil, is one of the first monopolies broken up by the U.S. government. J.P. Morgan helps to establish the
Federal Reserve and cements his legacy as the father of modern capitalism. He and other big business leaders become major philanthropists. As the U.S. Army sets sail for Europe in World War I, one thing is clear…these men didn’t discover America, they built it.