US History Assignments
The Gilded Age & Progressive Era Assessment
Fourth Period: 11:20am to 12:09pm
Fifth Period: 12:49pm to 1:39pm
Sixth Period: 1:42pm to 2:32pm
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The Gilded Age & Progressive Era Assessment
Each unit will have one summative assessment at the end that test how well you have learned key standards and ideas. Unit assessments are worth 50 points and the following is the standard breakdown:
15 vocabulary matching questions (1 point each)
5 true/false questions (1 point each)
18 multiple choice questions (1 points each)
3 short answer questions (4 points each)
1 extra credit short answer question (4 point maximum)
The Gilded Age & Progressive Era Assessment Review
Fourth Period: 1:12pm to 1:49pm
Fifth Period: 1:52pm to 2:29pm
Sixth Period: 2:32pm to 3:10pm
——————————————————————————————
The Gilded Age & Progressive Era Assessment
Each unit will have one summative assessment at the end that test how well you have learned key standards and ideas. Unit assessments are worth 50 points and the following is the standard breakdown:
15 vocabulary matching questions (1 point each)
5 true/false questions (1 point each)
18 multiple choice questions (1 points each)
3 short answer questions (4 points each)
1 extra credit short answer question (4 point maximum)
The Gilded Age & Progressive Era Cornell Notes
Fourth Period: 10:58am to 11:41am
Fifth Period: 12:16pm to 12:59pm
Sixth Period: 1:02pm to 1:50pm
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The Gilded Age & Progressive Era Cornell Notes
Fill out the Gilded Age & Progressive Era Cornell Notes to review all of the information covered over the course of the unit. Once you finish, we will be going over an example outline as a class. If you are absent, please print out the attached PDF and watch the attached video to finish this assignment.
Note: This is a paper assignment, you will need to take a picture or add a video if we are online or you are on contract/independent study. If we are in-person, you do not need to do anything here.
The Gilded Age & Progressive Era Outlining
Fourth Period: 1:12pm to 1:49pm
Fifth Period: 1:52pm to 2:29pm
Sixth Period: 2:32pm to 3:10pm
——————————————————————————————
The Gilded Age & Progressive Era Cornell Notes
Fill out the Gilded Age & Progressive Era Cornell Notes to review all of the information covered over the course of the unit. Once you finish, we will be going over an example outline as a class. If you are absent, please print out the attached PDF and watch the attached video to finish this assignment.
Note: This is a paper assignment, you will need to take a picture or add a video if we are online or you are on contract/independent study. If we are in-person, you do not need to do anything here.
The Progressive Era Vocabulary Quiz & Gallery Walk
Fourth Period: 11:20am to 12:09pm
Fifth Period: 12:49pm to 1:39pm
Sixth Period: 1:42pm to 2:32pm
——————————————————————————————
The Gilded Age & Progressive Era Vocabulary Quiz (2)
Each unit will have one or two vocabulary quizzes that test how well you have learned key vocabulary words and concepts. Vocabulary quizzes are worth 25 points and the following is the breakdown:
15 vocabulary matching questions (0.5 points each)
3 academic vocabulary sentences (1 point each)
4 multiple choice questions (0.5 points each)
12.5 points are automatically given
ACADEMIC VOCABULARY WORDS
Persecution
Differentiate
Forum
Expose
Radical
Ph.D.
Convey
Compulsory
——————————————————————————————
Postbellum America Gallery Walk
Today, we will be doing a gallery walk activity where you will be walking around the room and looking at a number of images. At each station, you will need to do some research into what the picture is, what country it is in, what its significance is, and what your opinion of the picture is.
A Changing American Culture (8)
Fourth Period: 11:20am to 12:09pm
Fifth Period: 12:49pm to 1:39pm
Sixth Period: 1:42pm to 2:32pm
——————————————————————————————
The Gilded Age & Progressive Era Readings & Checkpoints
Over the course of the unit, we will be going through different sections of the textbook in class. Whenever we start a reading, the questions will be due the next day and there will be a reading checkpoint made available after school for homework (unless there are other instructions). The Google Forms online correspond to a specific topic/lesson in the textbook.
A Changing American Culture
Progressives fought for reforms in government and society. The Progressive Era also was a time of enormous change in American culture. Cities, sports, education, and the arts all broke new cultural ground.
Progress and Setbacks for Social Justice (7)
Fourth Period: 10:58am to 11:41am
Fifth Period: 12:16pm to 12:59pm
Sixth Period: 1:02pm to 1:50pm
——————————————————————————————
The Gilded Age & Progressive Era Readings & Checkpoints
Over the course of the unit, we will be going through different sections of the textbook in class. Whenever we start a reading, the questions will be due the next day and there will be a reading checkpoint made available after school for homework (unless there are other instructions). The Google Forms online correspond to a specific topic/lesson in the textbook.
Progress and Setbacks for Social Justice
The struggle of women for suffrage, or the right to vote, went back many years. The Seneca Falls Convention in 1848 called for many reforms, including women’s suffrage.
The Rise of Progressivism (6)
Fourth Period: 1:12pm to 1:49pm
Fifth Period: 1:52pm to 2:29pm
Sixth Period: 2:32pm to 3:10pm
——————————————————————————————
The Gilded Age & Progressive Era Readings & Checkpoints
Over the course of the unit, we will be going through different sections of the textbook in class. Whenever we start a reading, the questions will be due the next day and there will be a reading checkpoint made available after school for homework (unless there are other instructions). The Google Forms online correspond to a specific topic/lesson in the textbook.
The Rise of Progressivism
The late 1800s has been called the Gilded Age. The name came from an 1873 novel by Mark Twain and Charles Dudley Warner titled The Gilded Age, which poked fun at the era’s greed and political corruption. Gilded means coated with a thin layer of gold. It implies that a surface glitter hides a darker reality. For many Americans, the novel captured the spirit of the time. In the words of one observer, it was government “of, by, and for the rich.” The Progressive reform movement received a huge boost when Theodore Roosevelt became President in 1901. He was the first of three Presidents who used their power as the nation’s chief executive to fight for Progressive causes.
Immigration and Urbanization (5)
Fourth Period: 11:20am to 12:09pm
Fifth Period: 12:49pm to 1:39pm
Sixth Period: 1:42pm to 2:32pm
——————————————————————————————
The Gilded Age & Progressive Era Readings & Checkpoints
Over the course of the unit, we will be going through different sections of the textbook in class. Whenever we start a reading, the questions will be due the next day and there will be a reading checkpoint made available after school for homework (unless there are other instructions). The Google Forms online correspond to a specific topic/lesson in the textbook.
Immigration and Urbanization
Between 1865 and 1915, more than 25 million immigrants poured into the United States. They came full of hope and excitement but also with some anxiety. Economic opportunity meant jobs, and the nation’s ever-expanding industries provided them. New immigrants, along with Americans fresh off the farm, poured into the cities in search of factory work. City populations swelled.
Political Geography Quiz (4) & Civics Reform Project
Fourth Period: 11:20am to 12:09pm
Fifth Period: 12:49pm to 1:39pm
Sixth Period: 1:42pm to 2:32pm
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Political Geography Quiz (4)
Like vocabulary quizzes, geography quizzes are also worth 25 points and will test how well you have learned certain aspects of American geography. For the quiz, you will have to match certain regions and/or countries with their location on the map. The following is the breakdown:
25 matching questions (0.5 points each)
12.5 points are automatically given
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Civics Reform Project
What positive impact could you have made as an informed citizen during the Gilded Age?
During the Gilded Age, there were a number of issues that were causing problems in the United States from child labor to unfair business practices. Pretend you are living during the Gilded Age, what reforms would you want to see? Let’s start with the ultimate goal, and then work backward: For this project, you will create an infographic, a letter to a local official, create a soapbox speech, or PSA on a topic of your choice inspired by the Driving Question (DQ) that is posted above.
Audience: In choosing an audience, you want to think about who is most affected by your issue and people who can help you in your cause. It should not be “everyone” or “anyone who wants to listen” but rather specific groups of people who have a vested interest in your topic. We will be using Project-Based Learning strategies to complete our project. Please refer to the schedule below for a general guide to assist with your planning.
Tuesday: Fill out the claim, evidence, and reasoning (CER) document. You are going to want to research and find credible sources to help you determine a path forward for your topic. You also need to come up with your driving question.
Civics Reform Project
Fourth Period: 11:20am to 12:09pm
Fifth Period: 12:49pm to 1:39pm
Sixth Period: 1:42pm to 2:32pm
——————————————————————————————
Civics Reform Project
What positive impact could you have made as an informed citizen during the Gilded Age?
During the Gilded Age, there were a number of issues that were causing problems in the United States from child labor to unfair business practices. Pretend you are living during the Gilded Age, what reforms would you want to see? Let’s start with the ultimate goal, and then work backward: For this project, you will create an infographic, a letter to a local official, create a soapbox speech, or PSA on a topic of your choice inspired by the Driving Question (DQ) that is posted above.
Audience: In choosing an audience, you want to think about who is most affected by your issue and people who can help you in your cause. It should not be “everyone” or “anyone who wants to listen” but rather specific groups of people who have a vested interest in your topic. We will be using Project-Based Learning strategies to complete our project. Please refer to the schedule below for a general guide to assist with your planning.
Tuesday: Fill out the claim, evidence, and reasoning (CER) document. You are going to want to research and find credible sources to help you determine a path forward for your topic. You also need to come up with your driving question.
Civics Reform Project
Fourth Period: 10:58am to 11:41am
Fifth Period: 12:16pm to 12:59pm
Sixth Period: 1:02pm to 1:50pm
——————————————————————————————
Civics Reform Project
What positive impact could you have made as an informed citizen during the Gilded Age?
During the Gilded Age, there were a number of issues that were causing problems in the United States from child labor to unfair business practices. Pretend you are living during the Gilded Age, what reforms would you want to see? Let’s start with the ultimate goal, and then work backward: For this project, you will create an infographic, a letter to a local official, create a soapbox speech, or PSA on a topic of your choice inspired by the Driving Question (DQ) that is posted above.
Audience: In choosing an audience, you want to think about who is most affected by your issue and people who can help you in your cause. It should not be “everyone” or “anyone who wants to listen” but rather specific groups of people who have a vested interest in your topic. We will be using Project-Based Learning strategies to complete our project. Please refer to the schedule below for a general guide to assist with your planning.
Tuesday: Fill out the claim, evidence, and reasoning (CER) document. You are going to want to research and find credible sources to help you determine a path forward for your topic. You also need to come up with your driving question.
Civics Reform Project
Fourth Period: 11:20am to 12:09pm
Fifth Period: 12:49pm to 1:39pm
Sixth Period: 1:42pm to 2:32pm
——————————————————————————————
Civics Reform Project
What positive impact could you have made as an informed citizen during the Gilded Age?
During the Gilded Age, there were a number of issues that were causing problems in the United States from child labor to unfair business practices. Pretend you are living during the Gilded Age, what reforms would you want to see? Let’s start with the ultimate goal, and then work backward: For this project, you will create an infographic, a letter to a local official, create a soapbox speech, or PSA on a topic of your choice inspired by the Driving Question (DQ) that is posted above.
Audience: In choosing an audience, you want to think about who is most affected by your issue and people who can help you in your cause. It should not be “everyone” or “anyone who wants to listen” but rather specific groups of people who have a vested interest in your topic. We will be using Project-Based Learning strategies to complete our project. Please refer to the schedule below for a general guide to assist with your planning.
Tuesday: Fill out the claim, evidence, and reasoning (CER) document. You are going to want to research and find credible sources to help you determine a path forward for your topic. You also need to come up with your driving question.
Civics Reform Project
Fourth Period: 11:20am to 12:09pm
Fifth Period: 12:49pm to 1:39pm
Sixth Period: 1:42pm to 2:32pm
——————————————————————————————
Civics Reform Project
What positive impact could you have made as an informed citizen during the Gilded Age?
During the Gilded Age, there were a number of issues that were causing problems in the United States from child labor to unfair business practices. Pretend you are living during the Gilded Age, what reforms would you want to see? Let’s start with the ultimate goal, and then work backward: For this project, you will create an infographic, a letter to a local official, create a soapbox speech, or PSA on a topic of your choice inspired by the Driving Question (DQ) that is posted above.
Audience: In choosing an audience, you want to think about who is most affected by your issue and people who can help you in your cause. It should not be “everyone” or “anyone who wants to listen” but rather specific groups of people who have a vested interest in your topic. We will be using Project-Based Learning strategies to complete our project. Please refer to the schedule below for a general guide to assist with your planning.
Tuesday: Fill out the claim, evidence, and reasoning (CER) document. You are going to want to research and find credible sources to help you determine a path forward for your topic. You also need to come up with your driving question.
The Gilded Age Vocabulary Quiz & Political Geography
Fourth Period: 11:20am to 12:09pm
Fifth Period: 12:49pm to 1:39pm
Sixth Period: 1:42pm to 2:32pm
——————————————————————————————
The Gilded Age & Progressive Era Vocabulary Quiz (1)
Each unit will have one or two vocabulary quizzes that test how well you have learned key vocabulary words and concepts. Vocabulary quizzes are worth 25 points and the following is the breakdown:
15 vocabulary matching questions (0.5 points each)
3 academic vocabulary sentences (1 point each)
4 multiple choice questions (0.5 points each)
12.5 points are automatically given
ACADEMIC VOCABULARY WORDS
Lure
Consequently
Mechanization
Resist
Efficiency
Devise
Endorse
Prohibit
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North America Atlas (Political Geography)
As we go over the political geography of North America, you will fill out the paper atlas that was passed out at the beginning of the school year. The fourth checkpoint will include the page with the map of the political geography of North America.
Note: This is a paper assignment, you will need to take a picture or add a video if we are online or you are on contract/independent study. If we are in-person, you do not need to do anything here.
The Labor Movement (4)
Fourth Period: 11:20am to 12:09pm
Fifth Period: 12:49pm to 1:39pm
Sixth Period: 1:42pm to 2:32pm
——————————————————————————————
The Gilded Age & Progressive Era Readings & Checkpoints
Over the course of the unit, we will be going through different sections of the textbook in class. Whenever we start a reading, the questions will be due the next day and there will be a reading checkpoint made available after school for homework (unless there are other instructions). The Google Forms online correspond to a specific topic/lesson in the textbook.
The Labor Movement
Before the Civil War, most factories were small and family-run. Bosses knew their workers by name and chatted with them about their families. Because most workers had skills that the factory needed, they could bargain with the boss for better wages. By the late 1800s, though, factories had changed, and workers needed to adapt.
Industry and Corporations (3)
Fourth Period: 10:58am to 11:41am
Fifth Period: 12:16pm to 12:59pm
Sixth Period: 1:02pm to 1:50pm
——————————————————————————————
The Gilded Age & Progressive Era Readings & Checkpoints
Over the course of the unit, we will be going through different sections of the textbook in class. Whenever we start a reading, the questions will be due the next day and there will be a reading checkpoint made available after school for homework (unless there are other instructions). The Google Forms online correspond to a specific topic/lesson in the textbook.
Industry and Corporations
The railroads that arose after the Civil War were big businesses. Other big businesses followed as entrepreneurs, industrialists, and bankers found new ways to increase economic efficiency and the output of goods. In the process, they brought prosperity to the country and fabulous wealth to themselves.
The U.S. Patent Office had never seen a year like 1897. An average of nearly 60 patents, or licenses for new inventions, were being granted every day. By year’s end, Americans had registered some 21,000 patents, more than the total recorded in the entire 1850s.
Western Agriculture (2)
Fourth Period: 11:20am to 12:09pm
Fifth Period: 12:49pm to 1:39pm
Sixth Period: 1:42pm to 2:32pm
——————————————————————————————
The Gilded Age & Progressive Era Readings & Checkpoints
Over the course of the unit, we will be going through different sections of the textbook in class. Whenever we start a reading, the questions will be due the next day and there will be a reading checkpoint made available after school for homework (unless there are other instructions). The Google Forms online correspond to a specific topic/lesson in the textbook.
Western Agriculture
While Reconstruction shaped the South following the Civil War, other events were occurring throughout the American West. The vast landscape of the Great Plains offered both promise and problems.
Mining, Railroads, and the Economy (1)
Fourth Period: 11:20am to 12:09pm
Fifth Period: 12:49pm to 1:39pm
Sixth Period: 1:42pm to 2:32pm
——————————————————————————————
The Gilded Age & Progressive Era Readings & Checkpoints
Over the course of the unit, we will be going through different sections of the textbook in class. Whenever we start a reading, the questions will be due the next day and there will be a reading checkpoint made available after school for homework (unless there are other instructions). The Google Forms online correspond to a specific topic/lesson in the textbook.
Mining, Railroads, and the Economy
The lure of silver and gold drew eager prospectors to the West starting well before the Civil War. After the war, the railroads carried hordes of eager settlers to the West, along with the goods they would need to make a life in this region. In the process, the railroads promoted economic expansion and the growth of cities.
The Gilded Age & Progressive Era Assessment
First Period: 8:30am to 9:21am
Third Period: 10:27am to 11:17am
Sixth Period: 1:42pm to 2:32pm
——————————————————————————————
The Gilded Age & Progressive Era Assessment
Each unit will have one summative assessment at the end that test how well you have learned key standards and ideas. Unit assessments are worth 50 points and the following is the standard breakdown:
15 vocabulary matching questions (1 point each)
5 true/false questions (1 point each)
18 multiple choice questions (1 points each)
3 short answer questions (4 points each)
1 extra credit short answer question (4 point maximum)
The Gilded Age & Progressive Era Assessment Review
First Period: 10:35am to 11:12am
Third Period: 11:55am to 12:32pm
Sixth Period: 2:32am to 3:10pm
——————————————————————————————
The Gilded Age & Progressive Era Assessment
Each unit will have one summative assessment at the end that test how well you have learned key standards and ideas. Unit assessments are worth 50 points and the following is the standard breakdown:
15 vocabulary matching questions (1 point each)
5 true/false questions (1 point each)
18 multiple choice questions (1 points each)
3 short answer questions (4 points each)
1 extra credit short answer question (4 point maximum)
The Gilded Age & Progressive Era Outlining
First Period: 8:30am to 9:13am
Third Period: 10:12am to 10:55am
Sixth Period: 1:02pm to 1:50pm
——————————————————————————————
The Gilded Age & Progressive Era Outline
Fill out the Gilded Age & Progressive Era Outline with a partner to review all of the information covered over the course of the unit. Once you finish, we will be going over an example outline as a class. If you are absent, please print out the attached PDF and watch the attached video to finish this assignment.
Note: This is a paper assignment, you will need to take a picture or add a video if we are online or you are on contract/independent study. If we are in-person, you do not need to do anything here.
The Gilded Age & Progressive Era Outlining
First Period: 10:35am to 11:12am
Third Period: 11:55am to 12:32pm
Sixth Period: 2:32am to 3:10pm
——————————————————————————————
The Gilded Age & Progressive Era Outline
Fill out the Gilded Age & Progressive Era Outline with a partner to review all of the information covered over the course of the unit. Once you finish, we will be going over an example outline as a class. If you are absent, please print out the attached PDF and watch the attached video to finish this assignment.
Note: This is a paper assignment, you will need to take a picture or add a video if we are online or you are on contract/independent study. If we are in-person, you do not need to do anything here.
The Gilded Age & Progressive Era Outlining
First Period: 10:35am to 11:12am
Third Period: 11:55am to 12:32pm
Sixth Period: 2:32am to 3:10pm
——————————————————————————————
The Gilded Age & Progressive Era Outline
Fill out the Gilded Age & Progressive Era Outline with a partner to review all of the information covered over the course of the unit. Once you finish, we will be going over an example outline as a class. If you are absent, please print out the attached PDF and watch the attached video to finish this assignment.
Note: This is a paper assignment, you will need to take a picture or add a video if we are online or you are on contract/independent study. If we are in-person, you do not need to do anything here.
The Progressive Era Vocabulary Quiz & Gallery Walk
First Period: 8:30am to 9:21am
Third Period: 10:27am to 11:17am
Sixth Period: 1:42pm to 2:32pm
——————————————————————————————
The Gilded Age & Progressive Era Vocabulary Quiz (2)
Each unit will have one or two vocabulary quizzes that test how well you have learned key vocabulary words and concepts. Vocabulary quizzes are worth 25 points and the following is the breakdown:
15 vocabulary matching questions (0.5 points each)
3 academic vocabulary sentences (1 point each)
4 multiple choice questions (0.5 points each)
12.5 points are automatically given
ACADEMIC VOCABULARY WORDS
Persecution
Differentiate
Forum
Expose
Radical
Ph.D.
Convey
Compulsory
——————————————————————————————
Postbellum America Gallery Walk
Today, we will be doing a gallery walk activity where you will be walking around the room and looking at a number of images. At each station, you will need to do some research into what the picture is, what country it is in, what its significance is, and what your opinion of the picture is.
A Changing American Culture (8)
First Period: 8:30am to 9:21am
Third Period: 10:27am to 11:17am
Sixth Period: 1:42pm to 2:32pm
——————————————————————————————
The Gilded Age & Progressive Era Readings & Checkpoints
Over the course of the unit, we will be going through different sections of the textbook in class. Whenever we start a reading, the questions will be due the next day and there will be a reading checkpoint made available after school for homework (unless there are other instructions). The Google Forms online correspond to a specific topic/lesson in the textbook.
A Changing American Culture
Progressives fought for reforms in government and society. The Progressive Era also was a time of enormous change in American culture. Cities, sports, education, and the arts all broke new cultural ground.
Progress and Setbacks for Social Justice (7)
First Period: 8:30am to 9:13am
Third Period: 10:12am to 10:55am
Sixth Period: 1:02pm to 1:50pm
——————————————————————————————
The Gilded Age & Progressive Era Readings & Checkpoints
Over the course of the unit, we will be going through different sections of the textbook in class. Whenever we start a reading, the questions will be due the next day and there will be a reading checkpoint made available after school for homework (unless there are other instructions). The Google Forms online correspond to a specific topic/lesson in the textbook.
Progress and Setbacks for Social Justice
The struggle of women for suffrage, or the right to vote, went back many years. The Seneca Falls Convention in 1848 called for many reforms, including women’s suffrage.
The Rise of Progressivism (6)
First Period: 10:35am to 11:12am
Third Period: 11:55am to 12:32pm
Sixth Period: 2:32am to 3:10pm
——————————————————————————————
The Gilded Age & Progressive Era Readings & Checkpoints
Over the course of the unit, we will be going through different sections of the textbook in class. Whenever we start a reading, the questions will be due the next day and there will be a reading checkpoint made available after school for homework (unless there are other instructions). The Google Forms online correspond to a specific topic/lesson in the textbook.
The Rise of Progressivism
The late 1800s has been called the Gilded Age. The name came from an 1873 novel by Mark Twain and Charles Dudley Warner titled The Gilded Age, which poked fun at the era’s greed and political corruption. Gilded means coated with a thin layer of gold. It implies that a surface glitter hides a darker reality. For many Americans, the novel captured the spirit of the time. In the words of one observer, it was government “of, by, and for the rich.” The Progressive reform movement received a huge boost when Theodore Roosevelt became President in 1901. He was the first of three Presidents who used their power as the nation’s chief executive to fight for Progressive causes.
Immigration and Urbanization (5)
First Period: 8:30am to 9:21am
Third Period: 10:27am to 11:17am
Sixth Period: 1:42pm to 2:32pm
——————————————————————————————
The Gilded Age & Progressive Era Readings & Checkpoints
Over the course of the unit, we will be going through different sections of the textbook in class. Whenever we start a reading, the questions will be due the next day and there will be a reading checkpoint made available after school for homework (unless there are other instructions). The Google Forms online correspond to a specific topic/lesson in the textbook.
Immigration and Urbanization
Between 1865 and 1915, more than 25 million immigrants poured into the United States. They came full of hope and excitement but also with some anxiety. Economic opportunity meant jobs, and the nation’s ever-expanding industries provided them. New immigrants, along with Americans fresh off the farm, poured into the cities in search of factory work. City populations swelled.
Political Geography Quiz (4) & Civics Reform Project
First Period: 8:30am to 9:21am
Third Period: 10:27am to 11:17am
Sixth Period: 1:42pm to 2:32pm
——————————————————————————————
Political Geography Quiz (4)
Like vocabulary quizzes, geography quizzes are also worth 25 points and will test how well you have learned certain aspects of American geography. For the quiz, you will have to match certain regions and/or countries with their location on the map. The following is the breakdown:
25 matching questions (0.5 points each)
12.5 points are automatically given
——————————————————————————————
Civics Reform Project
What positive impact could you have made as an informed citizen during the Gilded Age?
During the Gilded Age, there were a number of issues that were causing problems in the United States from child labor to unfair business practices. Pretend you are living during the Gilded Age, what reforms would you want to see? Let’s start with the ultimate goal, and then work backward: For this project, you will create an infographic, a letter to a local official, create a soapbox speech, or PSA on a topic of your choice inspired by the Driving Question (DQ) that is posted above.
Audience: In choosing an audience, you want to think about who is most affected by your issue and people who can help you in your cause. It should not be “everyone” or “anyone who wants to listen” but rather specific groups of people who have a vested interest in your topic. We will be using Project-Based Learning strategies to complete our project. Please refer to the schedule below for a general guide to assist with your planning.
Tuesday: Fill out the claim, evidence, and reasoning (CER) document. You are going to want to research and find credible sources to help you determine a path forward for your topic. You also need to come up with your driving question.