Agenda To Get: To Do: Guided notes Blank sheet of paper Your seat

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Modern World History Chapter 9 The Industrial Revolution
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Presentation transcript:

Agenda To Get: To Do: Guided notes Blank sheet of paper Your seat A textbook To Do: Begin: Industrial Revolution Agenda Big Idea - The world drastically changed between the years of 1750-1914. Guiding Question – How is the world today a product of this time period? I can… Explain the factors that allowed the Industrial Revolution to start in England

Reminder… Things you need for this class! Pen or Pencil (you may find highlighters useful this semester) 3 ring binder with AT LEAST SIX tab dividers You may recycle from last semesters if you do not want to keep those materials Materials for class can be found at: www.broderickvpa.weebly.com

Define Key Terms – 10 minutes

The Age of Revolutions (“Romantically” depicted…) Political Industrial Big Idea - The world drastically changed between the years of 1750-1914. Guiding Question – How is the world today a product of this time period?

Forces of Change 1750-1914 Intellectual ideas challenge the status quo Social hierarchy, forms of government, etc. Population Revolutions Population jump after 1730 France: 50% increase Britain and Prussia: 100% increase Occurred because Increased government control (less diseased animals traveling across borders) The potato cause increased nutrition Lasting impact: Reduced the death rate, increased the birth rate

Population Pressure Upper class families Tighten up positions Harder to obtain a position in the aristocracy, state, church… caused cries for change from other groups Pushed more people into the working class Proto-industrialization Precursor to the Industrial Revolution where individuals were making goods based on merchant needs Caused a change in clothing, increase in pre-marital sex, increase in bastard babies, defiance of authority because no ability to deny the inheritance.

Pre-Industrial Domestic System Work from home or “cottage industry” Wool taken from sheep Wool spun into thread on wheel Thread weaved on loom into cloth Cloth sold at market for high cost Cloth dyed into color

The Industrial Revolution What was it and why did it occur in England? Objective: To understand what the Industrial Revolution was and why it began in England Assignment: In groups of three, you will answer the questions on the back of your learning guide while traveling around the room to look at the mini-resource posters. Time allowed: 3 minutes each mini poster.

Connection Activity – 20 points Take out a blank sheet of paper and put your name at the top. Choose one item you have with you today (not your phone!) (Clothing, technology, school supplies, etc.) Do the following for each item: 1. What is it and what is it used for? 2. Where was it made? 3. What is it made from? 4. How was it made? 5. How did it get to you? Next, answer the following for your item: 1. What processes of industrialization allowed you to have this item? 2. How does this object impact your daily life? (why do you have it with you EVERYDAY?

Item#1 What is it and what is it used for? 2. Where was it made? 3. What is it made from? 4. How was it made? 5. How did it get to you? Pick one of the items and answer the following: 1. What processes of industrialization allowed you to have this item? 2. How does this object impact your daily life? (why do you have it with you EVERYDAY?

Broderick Example 1. Highlighter Pen – reading and making notes 2. Japan 3. Plastic and chemicals for the yellow dye color 4. Plastic production plant, factory assembly line, laboratory for dye creation 5. Bought it from Staples Mass production, assembly line, global corporations to facilitate international trade networks, advances in transportation and navigation, fuel production, etc. It helps me focus material for lesson plan creation and summarization

Container Ship

Transportation Percentage

Exit Slip put on the back of the connection activity, complete, then turn in to class drawer when finished When did the Industrial Revolution take place? Where did the Industrial Revolution start? Name the three factors of production. Industrialization used what sort of technology to produce items faster? Where did the money in England come from to invest in industrialization?

Exit Slip put on the back of the connection activity, complete, then turn in to class drawer when finished When did the Industrial Revolution take place? 1750-1914 2. Where did the Industrial Revolution start? England 3. Name the three factors of production. Land, labor, capital ($$$) 4. Industrialization used what sort of technology to produce items faster? machines 5. Where did the money in England come from to invest in industrialization? Slave Trade and Mercantilism Modern Industrial Process – single use plastic bottles https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Gt9DRifRwn0

The Industrial Revolution Summary The Industrial Revolution, which took place from the 18th to 19th centuries, was a period during which predominantly agrarian, rural societies in Europe and America became industrial and urban. Prior to the Industrial Revolution, which began in Britain in the late 1700s, manufacturing was often done in people’s homes, using hand tools or basic machines. Industrialization marked a shift to powered, special-purpose machinery, factories and mass production

A lesson in the industrial Revolution The Urban Game A lesson in the industrial Revolution

Directions Get a piece of poster paper and a partner Get a cup of markers Draw the requested items presented on each slide. THINK about the implications of what you are creating. You will be evaluated on your poster and a short quiz at the end of the activity.

1700 - England Draw a river across your paper connecting east to west. The river should be about an inch wide. Draw a wooden bridge across the river, 4 roads originating from each direction, 10 houses, a church, a cemetery, a store, a pub, a coal mine, and a lot of trees all over the poster paper.

1745 Build yourself 1 nice home anywhere on the map you would like it to be. Construct the canal – it must run parallel to the river an artificial waterway constructed to allow the passage of boats or ships inland or to convey water for irrigation.

1750 Add 7 houses

1760 Take away half of your commons and add 1 more nice house

1773 Add one factory. The cotton factory must be located on the river bank

1774 Add 5 houses, 1 church, 1 pub, and 1 store. You may draw additional roads and 1 bridge. Add 5 new factories

1780 Add 5 tenements

1781 Add 1 store, 1 pub, and 1 church Add 1 school for boys

1782 Add 2 more pubs

1783 Add 2 large, special, luxury homes

1784 Add 10 more factories. Add a huge monster house

1800 Add 1 new coal mine and a new iron bridge to replace the old wooden bridge

1815 Add a cemetery, complete with headstones

1820 Add 1 railroad line connecting your factory district to the outer coal mining region

1827 Add 1 jail and 2 pubs

1837 Draw street lights, lining your business and community streets

1838 Add 2 hospitals and 1 cemetery

1840 Add one more railroad line

1842 Add 20 houses, 5 tenements, 2 stores, 1 church, 5 factories, 1 pub, and other huge, nice house

1845 Add 1 museum, 1 university, 2 theaters, 2 private schools

1850 Add 3 more cemeteries, 1 jail, 3 more hospitals - all to accommodate the victims of urban life.

Analysis John Constable’s The Hay Wain

Exit Slip Write this on today’s learning guide. What were the effects of the industrial revolution on the physical surroundings? What were the effects on the people? How was the population changing? What is a positive and a negative outcome of the industrial revolution?