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Chapter 9 Progressivism and its impact on the United States

Chapter 9

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Chapter 9. Progressivism and its impact on the United States. Section 1: The progressive era and its impact on Education. Public Schools. Social Response to Education Statistic  < 2% of all students received a high school diploma in 1870 WHY? - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Chapter 9

Chapter 9Progressivism and its impact on the

United States

Page 2: Chapter 9

Section 1: The progressive era and its impact on Education

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Public Schools Social Response to Education

› Statistic < 2% of all students received a high school diploma in 1870

› WHY? Most children had to work to support the

family In most farming communities, children only

went to school from November-April because of harvest

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Public Schools Social Response to Education By 1910, 72% of American children went to

school› WHY?

31 states had laws which required students between the ages of 8-14 to attend school

The 3 R’s were taught to students › Writing› Reading› Arithmetic-ciphering Able to do the very basic

computations Usually taught under the threat of corporal

punishment

Page 5: Chapter 9

Public Schools Social Response to Education McGuffey Readers

› Books which contained excerpts from great literary works such as Shakespeare

Literacy-The ability to read and write in English

Assimilation- Americanization-force feeding

immigrants the ways of America in both culture, cooking and values

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Higher Education (Colleges) Philanthropists

› Wealthy Americans often gave money or founded colleges to train young people the skills needed to succeed in the new industrial revolution.

Public Libraries› With the growth of education and philanthropy,

the need for books and libraries became more important

› Andrew Carnegie- gave over $40 million dollars for public library systems to be created

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Higher Education (Colleges) Diversity in higher education

› Many all male colleges were feeling pressure to admit women, so the colleges started to create separate universities

› Examples Harvard All male school, established Radcliffe

College for women› Co-educational schools

Oberlin, Knox, Antioch, Swarthmore and Bates colleges which were already admitting both men and women before the Civil War.

Women still struggled for equality in scholarships and treatment in the university system.

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Higher Education (Colleges) Diversity in higher education

› Booker T. Washington-› Taught students the skills and attitudes that he

thought would help African Americans succeed in American society

› Taught not about equality but focus on economic security by using vocational skills to be successful

› By succeeding financially, African Americans would eventually gain acceptance by white society.

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Higher Education (Colleges) Diversity in higher education

› W.E.B Du Bois Wanted African Americans to step up and lead

their people in the quest for political, social and civil equality

Wanted people to seek higher educational degrees rather than vocational skills to enable African-Americans to advance in American society.

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Higher Education (Colleges) Diversity

› Groups that fought for equality of African Americans

› The Niagara Movement Founded the W.E.B Du Bois, this group wanted for

full civil liberties and to end racial discrimination› The NAACP

The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People

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Critical Thinking A new athletic complex is being

proposed for Canby which is being paid for by raising taxes on the town. If you could vote would you support this tax increase or would you be opposed? Write your thoughts down in question 5 to defend the side that you are taking and present them in a logical argument to tell others.

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Section 2: New Forms of Entertainment

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Performances and Recreation

“Take me out to the Ball game”› 7th inning stretch › Was created in 1908 to capture the new

American pastime of recreation and leisure› Harry Carrey (Chicago Cubs Play by play)

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Performances and Recreation

Vaudeville› Variety show to entertain › Example

Minstrel Shows› White actors who perpetrated the racial

stereotypes of African-Americans Nickelodeons

› Movie theaters set up in converted stores or warehouses that charged a nickel for admission

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Vaudeville

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Minstrel Shows

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Nickelodeons

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Performances and Recreation

George Eastman› Founder of Eastman Kodak› Created the handheld camera for the common

family to take snapshots and family pictures Circus

› Although still around, they are a shell of what they use to be

› Advance men came early to promote the circus, and several days later the circus cars would pull up and the “Big top” was put up to showcase the talent

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George Eastman & Kodak

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Circus

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Performances and Recreation

Amusement parks› New Technology allowed amusement parks to be

set up and new attractions to be created› The trolley led to the development of rides such

as the ferris wheel and the roller coaster.› Coney Island/ valley fair

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Coney Island

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Newspapers New technology allowed mass production of

printed news and it became a form of entertainment used for recreation

Comics, Sports, Sunday editions made for more interesting reading

Yellow Journalism- Sensational news coverage about murders, scandals, etc.

Page 24: Chapter 9

Newspapers Joseph Pulitzer-owned the St. Louis Post-

Dispatch and the New York World Purpose of his newspapers “Expose all

fraud and sham, fight against all public evils and abuses.”

William Randolph Hearst-owned the New York Journal, which published even more sensationalistic stories › Examples of Yellow Journalism today

Page 25: Chapter 9

Literature Mark Twain

› The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn› “dime” Novels Inexpensive books for a wide

variety of readers› Described people and places of particular

regions of the United States in detail.› Provided information about distant places to

people because of the lack of transportation and travel.

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Political Cartoons

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Political Cartoons Political cartoons are meant to poke fun

at serious issues of the time They have been around since before

our country became our country Here are some examples, try to figure

out what they are trying to say

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One of the First Political Cartoons

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Gun control/Gun Rights

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Political Cartoons about the Democratic party

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Cartoons about political issues

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