 Write down at least five things to describe the man in this picture.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Jesus Christ Wants Us to Love Everyone Primary 3: Lesson 31
Advertisements

The people Look for some people. Write it down. By the water
BY HANNAH The Oregon Trail. My introduction The Oregon Trail was a large wheeled wagon route was 2000-miles (3200-km)that connected the Missouri River.
The Oregon Trail War with Mexico California Gold Rush Pages Workbook 79.
Westward Movement Use a map to illustrate patterns of migration and trade during the period of westward expansion, including the Santa Fe and the Oregon.
A.
Chapter 1 My Dad’s Home I don’t remember this place, I thought. It isn’t home. Not my home. My home is far away, in New Zealand. With Mum. This is a.
Motives for Exploration
Westward Expansion: Lewis and Clark
Year 7 Revision PowerPoint- Abraham & Isaac
Copy these notes into your packet starting on page 4 Routes to the West.
1 Read pages (History) Early American History and Westward Expansion.
Lesson 9: Priesthood Blessings and Ordiances
Preview 1-20 Pick up your Notebooks and a Gray textbook today. TARGET: We will learn to explain the political, economic, and social roots of Manifest Destiny.
Warm-up #7  How had Jackson interacted with Native Americans before the Indian Removal Act?  How does his treatment of Native Americans reflect attitudes.
March 21, 2011 What are at least two reasons why people traveled West? Write these reasons on the inside page of the cream booklet on your desk!
WELCOME TO THE WORLD OF WATCHING HOW THE USA WENT FROM 13 COLONIES TO 50 STATES. SIT BACK AND ENJOY! Westward Expansion.
REVIEW TRIVIA Westward Expansion. Round 1 – Key terms Which key term refers to the kidnapping of American sailors and forcing them to serve in the British.
 the idea that Americans were predestined to occupy the entire North American continent.
MISSIONARIES AT WORK By: Haley, Leah and Layne FAST FUN FACTS Missionaries at work Enjoy By Haley Whitt.
Aim: How did the idea of Manifest Destiny change America? Do Now: Take 3 min. And write Down Whatever you See in the pic.
The Westward Expansion. After the revolutionary war, Americans headed west to find new land and wealth. In 1803 Thomas Jefferson sent Meriwether Lewis.
Although people had begun to move westward almost from the beginnings of European settlement in America, the era of westward expansion began in earnest.
The Western Frontier Lewis and Clark Lewis and Clark:Two Army Captains were sent by Thomas Jefferson to explore and map the Louisiana Purchase.
The people.
A Changing Nation 1-2 A Unit 4
Westward Expansion UNIT 8 Vocabulary Terms
Chapter 4 Show Me The Money Are you ready to lose your money?
OUTLINE OF ENGLISH TEST 1 READING COMPREHENSION FINDING OUT THE MEANING FROM THE CONTEXT GETTING GENERAL AND DETAIL INFORMATION FROM THE TEXT GRAMMAR PRESENT.
I am ready to test!________ I am ready to test!________
Sight Words.
SOCIAL STUDIES Fourth Grade Week Five. Which pioneer crossed the Appalachian Mountains through the Cumberland Gap and helped clear the Wilderness Road?
Westward Expansion The WestTrails to the West Conflict With Mexico A Rush to the West Odds and Ends $200 $400 $600 $800 $1000.
Chapter 8 EARLY 1800’S. MAP 9.1 North America in 1800 In 1800, the new United States of America shared the North American continent with territories held.
Westward Expansion Traveling Through Missouri Preparing for a long overland journey was a big job. Travelers needed basic food items such as flour, butter,
Pioneers move west and make the nation grow.
Pictographs Native Americans. The Girl Who Helped Thunder Long ago, in a village near the Mahicanitewk, the River That Flows with the Tide,
Westward Expansion Jan Barrett Reading Specialist Crestview Elementary March 26, 2002.
EXPANDING FRONTIERS  Homestead Act of acres for 10 dollars and 5 years Transcontinental Railroad completed 1869 Gold and Silver rush.
Day 1 Session 1: Summary Target Pages: 3-16 Step 1: Let’s Warm-up Reading Jack opened his eyes. Glaring hot sunlight flooded into the tree house. “Neat.
Over the river. We came home. Change your clothes.
By: Gavin Felts.  JJacob Yoder became the first person to travel down the Ohio and Mississippi rivers in It happened at the Ohio and Mississippi.
High Frequency Words August 31 - September 4 around be five help next
Chapter 7 Review. The VA Plan – Stated the executive, legislature, and judiciary court system would together and the number of state representatives would.
Sight Words.
High Frequency Words.
American History Unit: Westward Expansion A Day: Wednesday, September 30, 2015.
Fast Phrases 4 second intervals Click to start Repeated Reading practice Contains Fry Words.
Filled to Overflowing Selected Scriptures. “And being assembled together with them, He commanded them not to depart from Jerusalem, but to wait for the.
Rules Always answer in the form of a question Team names & buzzer sounds ready Points to be taken away for wrong answers? (Decide as a class…change this.
GOING WEST. GOING WEST Pioneers made the 2,000 mile trip from Independence Missouri to the Oregon Territory. Many died along the way from disease,
FRY PHRASES Learn these words and you will be well on your way to becoming a great reader!!!
Cultures Clash on the Prairie: Chapter 13 Ms. Garvin US History I.
High Frequency words Kindergarten review. red yellow.
Black Elk Black Elk was a famous Wichasha Wakan of the Oglala Lakota. He was Heyoka and a second cousin of Crazy Horse.Black Elk participated, at about.
A Timeline of Key Events
The Late Settlers Think!
Westward Expansion.
2.6 Writers of History Draw on an Awareness of Timelines
Tricksters and Trailblazers
Westward Expansion: Lewis and Clark
Little Big Horn.
Jefferson Creates His Agrarian Empire
Westward Expansion REVIEW TRIVIA.
Today’s Aim: Did westward expansion ultimately have more of a positive or negative effect on the United States in the 1800s?
Lewis & Clark and the Expansion West
The. the of and a to in is you that with.
The of and to in is you that it he for was.
Manifest Destiny Chapter 9 Section 2.
Santa Fe and Oregon Trails
Presentation transcript:

 Write down at least five things to describe the man in this picture.

What did you write down?  Why did you write what you did?  Did you identify the man as an American Indian? Why or why not?  What would you say about American Indians after seeing this picture?

 Write down at least five things to describe the man in this picture.

What did you write down?  Why did you write what you did?  Did you identify the man as an American Indian? As a chief? Why or why not?  How is what you wrote about this man different from what you wrote about the last man?  Do you think this man would be happy if told the first picture was a drawing of him? Why or why not?

Which picture do you trust to be more truthful?  Indian Chief from Disney’s animated movie Peter Pan (1953)  Lakota medicine man Black Elk, who lived from (Note: Black Elk was NOT a chief!)

What was U.S. Westward Expansion?  Thomas Jefferson and the Louisiana Purchase (1803):  Expanded the U.S. west of the Mississippi by 828,000 miles  Aim: establish American presence in the northwest through trade and settlement Mr. Nussbaum Website:

1840: Major westward immigration  Oregon Trail: Independence, Missouri to Oregon City and Willamette Valley  Pre-Emption Act of 1841 gives squatters’ right to purchase federal land  California Gold Rush  1849; over 50,000 immigrants move along Oregon Trail History Globe:

Westward Expansion was great- right?  Who benefited the most from American Westward Expansion?  What do you think the U.S. government did when settlers wanted to live on land that was already occupied by American Indians?  Did the U.S. government own the land on which settlers were living? How do we say whether someone “owns” something?

What would you do if someone showed up and told you to move out of your house immediately?

How do you think American Indians felt about Westward Expansion?  How can we find out?  Primary resources  Secondary resources  What do we need to be on the lookout for in our research?  Perspective  Bias  Stereotypes

 Write or draw five things you know about American Indians.

Look at the things you starred.  How do you know those facts are true?  Where did you learn those facts? From:  A teacher or parent?  A book? By whom?  A friend?  A picture or movie?  A website or museum?  Which are primary sources? Secondary? Could any contain issues with perspective, bias or stereotype?

Black Elk Speaks: “It was when I was five years old that my Grandfather made me a bow and some arrows. The grass was young and I was horseback. A thunder storm was coming from where the sun goes down, and just as I was riding into the woods along a creek, there was a kingbird sitting on a limb. This was not a dream, it happened. And I was going to shoot at the kingbird with the bow my Grandfather made, when the bird spoke and said: "The clouds all over are one-sided." Perhaps it meant that all the clouds were looking at me. And then it said: "Listen! A voice is calling you!" Then I looked up at the clouds, and two men were coming there, headfirst like arrows slanting down; and as they came, they sang a sacred song and the thunder was like drumming. I will sing it for you. The song and the drumming were like this: Behold, a sacred voice is calling you; All over the sky a sacred voice is calling. I sat there gazing at them, and they were coming from the place where the giant lives (north). But when they were very close to me, they wheeled about toward where the sun goes down, and suddenly they were geese. Then they were gone, and the rain came with a big wind and a roaring. I did not tell this vision to any one. I liked to think about it, but I was afraid to tell it.” - Neihardt, J Black Elk speaks. NY: Washington Square Press.