1.Come in quietly. 2.Find your assigned seat. 3. Get a pencil, if you do not already have one.

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Presentation transcript:

1.Come in quietly. 2.Find your assigned seat. 3. Get a pencil, if you do not already have one.

What Did We Talk About Yesterday?

Struggles in History

Pillars Whole Class Activity Respect Listen to the speakers. Speak and respond appropriately to others. Speak only when it is your turn. Responsibility Listen and watch. Complete task. Raise your hand to speak. Safety Remain seated unless given permission.

What can your mom, step mom, aunt, or grandmother do today?

What is a Primary Source? A first-hand, original account, record, or evidence about a person, place, object, or an event. Oral histories, objects, photographs, and documents such as newspapers, ledgers, census records, diaries, journals, and inventories, are primary sources.

Your Source Packet It contains all of the sources you will examine. You need to read each segment or examine the pictures provided. Ask yourself, what do I see? Make notes about what you see. Answer the questions using the source.

Document 1: Excerpt from the Declaration of Sentiments “The history of mankind is a history of repeated injuries and usurpations (wrongs) on the part of man toward woman, having in direct object the establishment of an absolute tyranny (having absolute power) over her. To prove this, let facts be submitted to a candid world. He has never permitted her to exercise her inalienable right to the elective franchise(vote). He has compelled her to submit to laws, in the formation of which she had no voice. He has made her, if married, in the eye of the law, civilly dead. He has taken from her all right in property, even to the wages she earns.”

Guiding Questions 1.What is occurring with the women in this cartoon? 2.How would a male reader react to this cartoon in 1869? Justify your reasoning

Document 3

Guiding Questions 1.What purpose does this pamphlet serve? 2.Who is the intended audience of this pamphlet? 3. What is the attitudes towards the women’s rights movement?

Essential Question

Choice 1 In your newspaper, you observe the cartoon above and the negative light it sheds on the Suffrage Movement. As a supporter, you decide to write an editorial in response to the cartoon. Be sure to include information you gleaned from your source packet.

Choice 2 Imagine you lived at the time of Thomas Jefferson. Craft a letter to him regarding the inclusion of women in the Declaration of Independence. Complete the following R.A.F.T. using your knowledge of women’s suffrage. Role: Suffragette Audience: Thomas Jefferson Format: Letter Topic: We deserve to be included too!

Choice 3 Imagine you are a woman living in the early 1900s. You have just received a Valentine postcard from your husband. Create a card based on the ideas of the Suffrage Movement for your husband. Remember that it must express the ideals of the movement and the importance of equality.

Choice 4 Design a poster in support of the Suffrage Movement. Your poster must include names and ideas about the movement, a catchy title, key information about the movement, and pictures related to the movement. It must be colorful and appealing to the eye.