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Title: Journal Topic:


1
Journal Topic
If you were a parent and one of your children ran
away, what would you do once the child had been
returned? Would you (1) punish the child to
discourage him or her from running away again or
(2) accept a promise from the child that he or
she would never run away again? Vote with
clicker and support your answer in your notebook
  1. Punish
  2. Accept Promise

2
Activity 1 Students Rights
  • 10 Same Rights as Teachers
  • 1 No Rights

Same Rights as Teachers
No Rights!
8
5
6
7
9
1
4
2
3
10
3
Current Students Rights
  1. No rights
  2. Choice Two
  3. A few rights
  4. Choice Four
  5. Decent amount
  6. Choice Six
  7. Choice Seven
  8. Lots of rights
  9. Choice Nine
  10. Same rights at teachers

4
Food
  1. No rights
  2. Choice Two
  3. A few rights
  4. Choice Four
  5. Decent amount
  6. Choice Six
  7. Choice Seven
  8. Lots of rights
  9. Choice Nine
  10. Same rights at teachers

5
Curriculum
  1. No rights
  2. Choice Two
  3. A few rights
  4. Choice Four
  5. Decent amount
  6. Choice Six
  7. Choice Seven
  8. Lots of rights
  9. Choice Nine
  10. Same rights at teachers

6
Restroom/Drink
  1. No rights
  2. Choice Two
  3. A few rights
  4. Choice Four
  5. Decent amount
  6. Choice Six
  7. Choice Seven
  8. Lots of rights
  9. Choice Nine
  10. Same rights at teachers

7
Punishments
  1. No rights
  2. Choice Two
  3. A few rights
  4. Choice Four
  5. Decent amount
  6. Choice Six
  7. Choice Seven
  8. Lots of rights
  9. Choice Nine
  10. Same rights at teachers

8
Classes
  1. No rights
  2. Choice Two
  3. A few rights
  4. Choice Four
  5. Decent amount
  6. Choice Six
  7. Choice Seven
  8. Lots of rights
  9. Choice Nine
  10. Same rights at teachers

9
Restroom/Drink
  1. No rights
  2. Choice Two
  3. A few rights
  4. Choice Four
  5. Decent amount
  6. Choice Six
  7. Choice Seven
  8. Lots of rights
  9. Choice Nine
  10. Same rights at teachers

10
Soda
  1. No rights
  2. Choice Two
  3. A few rights
  4. Choice Four
  5. Decent amount
  6. Choice Six
  7. Choice Seven
  8. Lots of rights
  9. Choice Nine
  10. Same rights at teachers

11
Seating
  1. No rights
  2. Choice Two
  3. A few rights
  4. Choice Four
  5. Decent amount
  6. Choice Six
  7. Choice Seven
  8. Lots of rights
  9. Choice Nine
  10. Same rights at teachers

12
Seating
  1. No rights
  2. Choice Two
  3. A few rights
  4. Choice Four
  5. Decent amount of rights
  6. Choice Six
  7. Choice Seven
  8. Lots of rights
  9. Choice Nine
  10. Same rights at teachers

13
Reconstruction
  • What is it? Write in Section 3 of notebook what
    you think (90 seconds)
  • What problems would the nation face after the
    Civil War?
  • Should the south be punished?

14
Should the south be punished?
  1. Yes
  2. No

15
US History Timeline
Columbus Arrives in America- 1492
US writes new Constitution 1787
Revolutionary War Begins 1775
2
1
Spanish-American War of 1898
Missouri Compromise 1820
4
Civil War Ends 1865
3
  1. A
  2. B
  3. C
  4. D

16
Reconstruction KUD
  • Know
  • Reconstruction was a time period after the Civil
    War when the country was put back together
  • Ways southerners kept African Americans from
    voting
  • Ways Republicans tried to help improve conditions
    in south for Freedmen
  • Understand
  • Cause and effect relationship between
    Reconstruction policies and Southern racism
  • That the election of Rutherford B. Hayes resulted
    in a compromise that gave power back to
    southerners who wanted to keep African Americans
    inferior
  • Do
  • Place era of Reconstruction on a US history
    timeline in the correct spot
  • List 5 conditions in the south that kept African
    Americans from having full citizenship equal to
    that of whites

17
Read p. 323- Intro to Reconstruction
  1. Who killed Lincoln? How?
  2. Who would be in charge of Reconstruction?
  3. Reconstruction- time period after the Civil War
    when southern states would be rebuilt and allowed
    back into union

Full Citizenship
Limited Citizenship
8
5
6
7
9
1
4
2
3
10
18
Activity 2 Summarize and Present
  • Groups will read assigned sections
  • Groups will summarize main points from Events
    handed to them on cards (each member writes)
  • Groups will share main points with class
  • Students will decide whether each event was a
    step towards Full Citizenship or Limited
    Citizenship

Limited Citizenship
Full Citizenship
8
5
6
7
9
1
4
2
3
10
19
Journal Entry- Day 2 Reconstruction
  • Imagine you had been a slave and just found out
    slavery is ended
  • Write a letter telling how you feel, what
    problems you face, and what you plan to do

20
Would you prefer 3 small tests or 1 big test over
the New Unit?- Reconstruction- Tensions in
the West- Industry and Immigration
  1. 3 small tests
  2. 1 big test

21
Journal Topic
  • Write everything you know about Reconstruction so
    far

22
Presidential Reconstruction
  • Thirteenth Amendment-
  • Made slavery illegal (abolished)
  • Freedmens Bureau-
  • Provided food, medical care, and education for
    African Americans and poor whites
  • 3. Black Codes-
  • Unfair laws that kept African Americans from
    achieving full citizenship
  • Examples
  • No vote
  • No service on jury
  • Required to work
  • Arrested if no job
  • Segregation

23
Journal Topic
  • Write everything you know about Reconstruction so
    far

24
(No Transcript)
25
Destruction of the South
  • Southern towns and farms completely destroyed
    during war
  • Poor whites worried about job competition
  • With who?
  • Most African Americans stayed on plantations
    where they had been slaves

26
(No Transcript)
27
Freedmens Bureau
  • Handed out 21 million rations of food to
    southerners over 5 years
  • 1 ration was enough cornmeal, flour, and sugar to
    feed someone for a week
  • Gave to poor whites as well as blacks
  • 4,300 schools opened and 1st black colleges

28
US History Timeline
Columbus Arrives in America- 1492
US writes new Constitution 1787
Revolutionary War Begins 1775
2
1
Spanish-American War of 1898
Missouri Compromise 1820
4
Civil War Ends 1865
3
  1. A
  2. B
  3. C
  4. D

29
Congressional Reconstruction
  • Civil Rights Act of 1866
  • Said freedmen were full citizens with the same
    rights as whites
  • 14th Amendment
  • Made former slaves citizens with full rights
  • 3. Military Reconstruction Act
  • Said new state governments in the south had to be
    elected by both blacks and whites. Military
    governs south
  • Sharecropping
  • Former slaves rented farm land from plantation
    owners. Paid in either cash or crops. Led to
    debt and poverty

30
Journal 5-15
  • Fruits and Vegetables

31
(No Transcript)
32
Andrew Johnson
  • Southern Democrat disagreed with congress on 14th
    Amendment, Reconstruction policies, and Civil
    Rights for African Americans
  • Johnson was impeached
  • Put on charges that COULD lead to removal from
    office
  • Escaped removal by 1 vote in senate

33
Sharecropping Activity
  • Groups of 3 workers
  • I will allow you to work on my land since you
    have none
  • I will rent you supplies and sell you cotton and
    seeds
  • I will allow you to use my cotton gin
  • You will grow cotton and prepare to sell it
  • WE will share the profits

34
Sharecropping Activity (cont.)
  • You will have 5 minutes to grow
  • as many cotton plants as possible
  • In order to count they must look
  • almost exactly like the one here
  • At the conclusion of 5 minutes we will weigh
    your cotton for sale
  • Your expenses will be deducted from the amount of
    sales

35
Sharecropping Activity (cont.)
  • Gather supplies
  • 5 minutesReadySet
  • Go!

36
Southern Reconstruction
  • 1868 Election
  • Ulysses Grant elected. He promised to protect
    rights of African Americans
  • 15th Amendment
  • Protected rights of African Americans to vote
  • New State Constitutions
  • Guaranteed right to vote for every adult male
    and called for public schools throughout south

37
Journal
  • What are some things that were unfair for
    Freedmen during Reconstruction?

38
End of Reconstruction
  • Ku Klux Klan
  • Secret group of racist whites formed to drive
    African Americans out of political life
  • Enforcement Acts
  • Laws made it illegal to keep someone from
    voting by bribery, force, or intimidation
  • 3. Amnesty Act of 1872
  • Allowed former Confederates to vote (that right
    had been taken away after the Civil War)
  • Compromise of 1877
  • Removed federal troops from south and returned
    power to former slave holders after results of
    Rutherford B. Hayes election were announced

39
(No Transcript)
40
Progress Stalled
  • Ku Klux Klan- What do you know?
  • Wore robes and masks
  • Burned crosses
  • Used violence
  • Spread fear and terror to potential voters

41
Reconstruction Reversed
  • Poll Tax
  • High tax paid in order for African Americans to
    vote
  • Literacy Tests
  • Reading test to vote always rigged for African
    Americans
  • 3. Jim Crow Laws
  • Laws in south that segregated blacks and whites
  • Plessy v. Ferguson
  • Supreme Court case that ruled segregation was
    legal as long as separate facilities were
    roughly equal

42
(No Transcript)
43
Leaving Reconstruction Behind
  • Examples of segregation?
  • Grandfather Clause
  • For voting tests and poll taxes
  • Laws protecting Civil Rights in south were thrown
    out
  • Plessy v Ferguson was killer!!
  • 2,000 African Americans lynched between 1892 and
    1903

44
Activity 3- Literacy Test
  • You will be given a test to prove you can read.
    People who cannot read cannot vote because they
    cannot make good decisions.

45
Read each word after it appears
  • Bicycle
  • School
  • Radio
  • Interstate
  • Apple
  • Telegraph

46
Passed
47
Read each word after it appears
  • Infectious
  • Catastrophe
  • Unprecedented
  • Contentious
  • Alimony

48
You Failed
49
Activity 4- Civics Test
  • This is a test to determine your knowledge of the
    country you live in. People who want to vote
    must pass this test with 80 correct

50
Civics Test
  • This test is for clicker s 1-15
  • Everyone else put your clickers down

51
How many states make up the US?
  1. 25
  2. 48
  3. 50
  4. 55

52
How many stripes are on the US Flag?
  1. 9
  2. 11
  3. 13
  4. 50

53
Who is the United States current President?
  1. George W. Bush
  2. William J. Clinton
  3. Barack H. Obama
  4. Gerald M. Ford

54
The United States capitol is located in what
city?
  1. Miami
  2. Washington D.C.
  3. Philadelphia
  4. Chicago

55
Which US state is located in the south?
  1. Mississippi
  2. Iowa
  3. Minnesota
  4. New York

56
Participant Scores
50 John Czarnecki 50 Carly Donahue
50 Maria Korndorf 50 Maggie Burke
50 Sydney Speetzen 40 Ryan Walsh
50 Cassie Booth 30 Bailey Hanna
50 Susan Li
50 Kate Kruse
50 Isabel Noble
50 Nick Kelly
50 Devon Rockhold
50 Sky Jahns
57
Reset Slides Now
58
Civics Test
  • This test is for clicker s 16-30
  • Everyone else put your clickers down

59
How many Presidents has the US had?
  1. 41
  2. 43
  3. 44
  4. 46

60
What amendment got rid of poll taxes?
  1. 18th
  2. 21st
  3. 23rd
  4. 24th

61
What was the 35th state admitted to the US?
  1. Arizona
  2. West Virginia
  3. Colorado
  4. Wisconsin

62
From which state were most Presidents born?
  1. Virginia
  2. Ohio
  3. New York
  4. Pennsylvania

63
How many members make up the House of
Representatives?
  1. 100
  2. 415
  3. 435
  4. 465
  5. 485
  6. 455

64
Participant Scores
50 John Czarnecki 50 Carly Donahue
50 Maria Korndorf 50 Maggie Burke
50 Sydney Speetzen 40 Ryan Walsh
50 Cassie Booth 30 Bailey Hanna
50 Susan Li 20 Bailee Longanecker
50 Kate Kruse
50 Isabel Noble
50 Nick Kelly
50 Devon Rockhold
50 Sky Jahns
65
Video Example- Voter Registration
66
Overview Video- Reconstruction
  • Video 1

67
At the end of Reconstruction
BACK
  1. No citizenship
  2. Choice Two
  3. Little citizenship
  4. Choice Four
  5. Decent amount of citizenship
  6. Choice Six
  7. Choice Seven
  8. Lots of citizenship
  9. Choice Nine
  10. Full Citizenship

68
US History Timeline
Columbus Arrives in America- 1492
US writes new Constitution 1787
Revolutionary War Begins 1775
2
1
Spanish-American War of 1898
Missouri Compromise 1820
4
Civil War Ends 1865
3
  1. A
  2. B
  3. C
  4. D

69
Reconstruction KUD
  • Know
  • Reconstruction was a time period after the Civil
    War when the country was put back together
  • Ways southerners kept African Americans from
    voting
  • Ways Republicans tried to help improve conditions
    in south for Freedmen
  • Understand
  • Cause and effect relationship between
    Reconstruction policies and Southern racism
  • That the election of Rutherford B. Hayes resulted
    in a compromise that gave power back to
    southerners who wanted to keep African Americans
    inferior
  • Do
  • Place era of Reconstruction on a US history
    timeline in the correct spot
  • List 5 conditions in the south that kept African
    Americans from having full citizenship equal to
    that of whites

70
(No Transcript)
71
13th Amendment
BACK
  1. No citizenship
  2. Choice Two
  3. Little citizenship
  4. Choice Four
  5. Decent amount of citizenship
  6. Choice Six
  7. Choice Seven
  8. Lots of citizenship
  9. Choice Nine
  10. Full Citizenship

72
Freedmens Bureau
BACK
  1. No citizenship
  2. Choice Two
  3. Little citizenship
  4. Choice Four
  5. Decent amount of citizenship
  6. Choice Six
  7. Choice Seven
  8. Lots of citizenship
  9. Choice Nine
  10. Full Citizenship

73
Black Codes
BACK
  1. No citizenship
  2. Choice Two
  3. Little citizenship
  4. Choice Four
  5. Decent amount of citizenship
  6. Choice Six
  7. Choice Seven
  8. Lots of citizenship
  9. Choice Nine
  10. Full Citizenship

74
Civil Rights Act 1866
BACK
  1. No citizenship
  2. Choice Two
  3. Little citizenship
  4. Choice Four
  5. Decent amount of citizenship
  6. Choice Six
  7. Choice Seven
  8. Lots of citizenship
  9. Choice Nine
  10. Full Citizenship

75
14th Amendment
BACK
  1. No citizenship
  2. Choice Two
  3. Little citizenship
  4. Choice Four
  5. Decent amount of citizenship
  6. Choice Six
  7. Choice Seven
  8. Lots of citizenship
  9. Choice Nine
  10. Full Citizenship

76
Military Reconstruction
BACK
  1. No citizenship
  2. Choice Two
  3. Little citizenship
  4. Choice Four
  5. Decent amount of citizenship
  6. Choice Six
  7. Choice Seven
  8. Lots of citizenship
  9. Choice Nine
  10. Full Citizenship

77
Sharecropping
BACK
  1. No citizenship
  2. Choice Two
  3. Little citizenship
  4. Choice Four
  5. Decent amount of citizenship
  6. Choice Six
  7. Choice Seven
  8. Lots of citizenship
  9. Choice Nine
  10. Full Citizenship

78
Election of 1868
BACK
  1. No citizenship
  2. Choice Two
  3. Little citizenship
  4. Choice Four
  5. Decent amount of citizenship
  6. Choice Six
  7. Choice Seven
  8. Lots of citizenship
  9. Choice Nine
  10. Full Citizenship

79
15th Amendment
BACK
  1. No citizenship
  2. Choice Two
  3. Little citizenship
  4. Choice Four
  5. Decent amount of citizenship
  6. Choice Six
  7. Choice Seven
  8. Lots of citizenship
  9. Choice Nine
  10. Full Citizenship

80
New State Constitutions
BACK
  1. No citizenship
  2. Choice Two
  3. Little citizenship
  4. Choice Four
  5. Decent amount of citizenship
  6. Choice Six
  7. Choice Seven
  8. Lots of citizenship
  9. Choice Nine
  10. Full Citizenship

81
Ku Klux Klan
BACK
  1. No citizenship
  2. Choice Two
  3. Little citizenship
  4. Choice Four
  5. Decent amount of citizenship
  6. Choice Six
  7. Choice Seven
  8. Lots of citizenship
  9. Choice Nine
  10. Full Citizenship

82
Enforcement Acts
BACK
  1. No citizenship
  2. Choice Two
  3. Little citizenship
  4. Choice Four
  5. Decent amount of citizenship
  6. Choice Six
  7. Choice Seven
  8. Lots of citizenship
  9. Choice Nine
  10. Full Citizenship

83
Amnesty Act of 1872
BACK
  1. No citizenship
  2. Choice Two
  3. Little citizenship
  4. Choice Four
  5. Decent amount of citizenship
  6. Choice Six
  7. Choice Seven
  8. Lots of citizenship
  9. Choice Nine
  10. Full Citizenship

84
Compromise of 1877
BACK
  1. No citizenship
  2. Choice Two
  3. Little citizenship
  4. Choice Four
  5. Decent amount of citizenship
  6. Choice Six
  7. Choice Seven
  8. Lots of citizenship
  9. Choice Nine
  10. Full Citizenship

85
Poll Tax
BACK
  1. No citizenship
  2. Choice Two
  3. Little citizenship
  4. Choice Four
  5. Decent amount of citizenship
  6. Choice Six
  7. Choice Seven
  8. Lots of citizenship
  9. Choice Nine
  10. Full Citizenship

86
Literacy Tests
BACK
  1. No citizenship
  2. Choice Two
  3. Little citizenship
  4. Choice Four
  5. Decent amount of citizenship
  6. Choice Six
  7. Choice Seven
  8. Lots of citizenship
  9. Choice Nine
  10. Full Citizenship

87
Jim Crow Laws
BACK
  1. No citizenship
  2. Choice Two
  3. Little citizenship
  4. Choice Four
  5. Decent amount of citizenship
  6. Choice Six
  7. Choice Seven
  8. Lots of citizenship
  9. Choice Nine
  10. Full Citizenship

88
Plessy v. Ferguson
BACK
  1. No citizenship
  2. Choice Two
  3. Little citizenship
  4. Choice Four
  5. Decent amount of citizenship
  6. Choice Six
  7. Choice Seven
  8. Lots of citizenship
  9. Choice Nine
  10. Full Citizenship
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