Improving Society Chapter 8.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
CHAPTER 18: AN ERA OF REFORM
Advertisements

Chapter 14, Section 3 “Reforming American Society”
New Movements in America
Chapter 12 An Age of Reform
Reform Movements.
Chapter 8 An Age of Reform
Era of Reform REFORM = CHANGE. Sign Title: Beginning of Reform Why did the Second Great Awakening encourage reform? People encouraged to save their souls.
C18: An Era of Reform. C18.2 The Spirit of Reform.
Objectives Discuss what led many Americans to try to improve society in the 1800s. Identify the social problems that reformers tried to solve. Summarize.
Chapter 14, Section 3 Pages Along with the changes in American culture, changes were also taking place in American society. A religious revival.
Reform and the Amerian Culture
TEKS 8C: Calculate percent composition and empirical and molecular formulas. Religion and Reform Movements.
Update Notebooks EQ: What reform movements take shape in this era? TSWBAT evaluate the various reform movements 1/27TJ Administration 67 1/28Louisiana.
Chapter 9.
Chapter 14, Section 3. Dorothea Dix: Helping the Helpless Born on the Main frontier in 1802 Lived with her grandmother and went to school in Boston to.
The Age of Reform $200 $400 $600 $800 $1000 Improving Society
Social Reforms. The Second Great Awakening The Second Great Awakening was a religious movement that stressed free will rather than predestination. One.
REFORM MOVEMENTS SOCIAL REFORM ORGANIZED ATTEMPT TO IMPROVE WHAT IS UNJUST OR IMPERFECT.
Reforming American Society In the Mid-1800’s, several reform movements worked to improve American Education and Society.
By Mr. Linder The Reformers 2 nd Great Awakening The Second Great Awakening – A new interest in religion in the 1820’s and 1830’s in New England & the.
Religious & Women’s Reform Chapter 15. Religious Reform The Second Great Awakening: religious movement that swept America in the early 1800’s The Second.
CHAPTER 14 THE AGE OF REFORM ( ) SOCIAL REFORM.
Obj- SWBAT- Describe how the reform movements of the 1800s affected life in the United States DO NOW- When and how did women receive the right to vote?
Chapter 12 Section 1 Improving Society Discuss what led many Americans to try to improve society in the 1800s. Identify the social problems that reformers.
Chapter 8 An Age of Reform What is REFORM? Use your Greek and Latin knowledge re-form – to make better as by stopping abuses By the mid-1800s,
Do Now! Temperance Movement: The effort to end alcohol abuse. Horace Mann: An educator who advocated for school reform. Dorothea Dix: A reformer who campaigned.
Chapter 8 Section 2 A REFORMING SOCIETY. Reforming Education  Since Colonial times most children taught at home by their parents  Some communities established.
Reforming Society The Big Idea Reform movements in the early 1800s affected religion, education, and society. Main Ideas The Second Great Awakening.
Compare the social and cultural characteristics of the North, the South, and the West during the Antebellum period, including the lives of African-
CHAPTER 8, SECTION 1 NEW MOVEMENTS IN AMERICA. RELIGION SPARKS REFORM Charles Grandison Finney Led revivals (meetings) to revive (awaken) religious feelings.
Bell RingerDate: March 14 th, )Copy down the homework for this week, its due Wednesday! 2) NO BELL RINGERS THIS WEEK. Think about this Question…
Objective and Scales I can describe the expansion of democracy and compare and contrast the various reform movements (temperance, prison/mentally ill,
REFORM MOVEMENTS
Objectives Discuss what led many Americans to try to improve society in the 1800s. Identify the social problems that reformers tried to solve. Summarize.
Religious/Philosophical Reform in the early 1800’s
Religion Sparks Reform
Terms and People social reform – organized attempts to improve conditions of life predestination – the idea that God decided the fate of a person’s soul.
Section One: Improving Society
Questions to Answer Ch. 9 Sec. 2.
Objectives Discuss what led many Americans to try to improve society in the 1800s. Identify the social problems that reformers tried to solve. Summarize.
Changing things for the better.
Objectives Discuss what led many Americans to try to improve society in the 1800s. Identify the social problems that reformers tried to solve. Summarize.
Chapter The Age of Reform ( )
Objectives Discuss what led many Americans to try to improve society in the 1800s. Identify the social problems that reformers tried to solve. Summarize.
Objectives Discuss what led many Americans to try to improve society in the 1800s. Identify the social problems that reformers tried to solve. Summarize.
8th Grade U.S. History Ashlee bunch
Reform movements An Era of Change.
Religion and Reform
Northern Reform Movements
An Era of Reform Chapter 18 Pgs
4.2 A Reforming Society What were the main features of the school, penitentiary, and temperance movements?
15.3 Social and Cultural Change pp
Chapter 14 Section 1.
Reform The Spirit of Reform improvement or change for the better
Chapter 9.2: Movements for Reform
Antebellum Reforms From 1800 to 1840, social reformers fight to end things they consider “social evils” It all starts with a religious revival known as.
Antebellum Reform Movements
Chapter 18 An Era of Reform
The Reforming Spirit.
Compare the social and cultural characteristics of the North, the South, and the West during the Antebellum period, including the lives of African-Americans.
Chapter 15 Review.
13-3 Reforming Society Pages
7.3 The Reforming Spirit A. The Reforming Impulse
An Era of Reform Chapter 18 Pgs
8th Grade U.S. History Ashlee bunch
Northern Reform Movements
The Reformers By Mrs. Andreatta.
Chapter 8 section 2 “A Reforming Society”
Chapter 15 Era of Reform Vocabulary
Presentation transcript:

Improving Society Chapter 8

Reforming the Spirit In the 1830’s many Americans became interested in social reform. -social reform: organized attempts to improve conditions of life. Jacksonian Democracy Democracy in Age of Jackson encouraged reform More white male Americans could vote because most states dropped the property requirements for voting. Some reformers believed all men should vote and be able to hold office, and supported greater legal rights for women. Many reformers spoke out against slavery.

The Second Great Awakening In the early 1800’s, a change in religious ideas sparked the Second Great Awakening Many American Protestants believed in predestination. -predestination: the idea that God decided the fate of a person’s soul even before birth. Leaders of the Second Great Awakening preached that people’s own actions determined their salvation. Charles Finney held the first of many religious revivals. -revival: a huge outdoor religious meeting. People came to believe that, if they can improve themselves, they can improve society as well.

Social Reformers at Work The Temperance Movement Many reformers supported the temperance movement. -temperance movement: an organized effort to end alcohol abuse and problems created by it Women pointed out how they and their children suffered at the hands of husbands and fathers who drank too much. During the 1850’s, supporters of prohibition got nine states to pass laws banning the sale of alcohol. -prohibition: a total ban on the sale and consumption of alcohol

Prison Reform Many people who were in prison were not criminals, but were people who owed money they could not pay back. Often they had to endure poorly heated buildings, inadequate food, and cramped conditions. Over time, Dorothea Dix and others worked to convince state legislature to build new, more sanitary, and more humane prisons. Reforms for the Mentally Ill The mentally ill were often put in jail where they were caged or tied up. Dix persuaded Massachusetts legislature fund a new mental hospital. She also traveled the country urging government to create separate institute, called asylums, for the mentally ill.

Education Reform In 1642 the Puritans of Massachusetts passed a law requiring all large towns to hire teachers and build schools. -publics schools: free schools supported by taxes Need for Better Education Horace Mann took the lead in education reform In 1837, Mann convinced Massachusetts to improve its public school system. By the 1850’s, public schools gained much acceptance in the Northeast. Education for African Americans Southern states prohibited teaching enslaved persons to read. In major northern cities, free African Americans opened their own schools.