Collect W.History for Dummies Pass back papers Talking about midterm grades Coach Class (new time)  Mondays 3:15 – 4:00.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Capitalism. Characteristics of Capitalism Land and capital are privately owned. (They are not owned by the government.) Land and capital are privately.
Advertisements

Lesson # 2: Communist Manifesto.  Warm up  Definitions  Communist Manifesto  Occupy Wall Street  Communism v. Capitalism.
Reading The Communist Manifesto Part 1 History of the Bourgeoisie A PowerPoint guide for Introduction to Sociology Students.
Economics of the Industrial Revolution. The Industrial Revolution opened a wide gap between the rich and the poor. While business leaders believed the.
Choose a category. You will be given the answer. You must give the correct question. Choose a category. You will be given the answer. You must give the.
The Industrial Revolution  Review Terms. Agricultural Revolution Cottage Industry Industrial Revolution Why England? Textiles Evolution of power sources.
WarmUp #6 Explain how you think the clothing you are wearing was made or produced. What are the factors of production (or “ingredients”) needed to produce.
Industrial Revolution
What should a person’s pay (income) depend on? Objective: Analyze the effects of industrialization and urbanization on social and economic reform Agenda:
1 Ch. 22: The Industrial Revolution. 2Beginnings Began in Great Britain Began in Great Britain Had the factors of production – Had the factors of production.
 What do you see in the photograph?  What are positives and negatives associated with the theme of the photograph?
Industrial Revolution Summary Society Transformed
Industrial Revolution
 Flocabulary Video – Industrial Revolution.  Agrarian Revolution  Dutch built dikes to protect farmland from the sea and use animal fertilizer to improve.
The Industrial Revolution. Followed the Agricultural Revolution Began in Great Britain – Factors of Production Land Coal Iron Ore Rivers – Provided transportation.
SOL WHII. 9.  The Industrial Revolution began in England and spread to the rest of Western Europe and the United States.
Spread of Industrialization
Industrial Revolution
The Industrial Revolution
Events and Ideas #3 Government Ideology and Economics of the Industrial Era World History Unit 3.
The Industrial Revolution
The First Industrial Revolution
The Industrial Revolution Begins ( ) New Ways of Thinking
Socialism Thinking Skill: Demonstrate an understanding concepts.
Principles of Communism
In the United States, France and Latin America, political revolutions brought in new governments. A different type of revolution now transformed the way.
Industrial Revolution & Age of Reform
The Industrial Revolution
The Industrial Revolution
What do you think changes the way we do work today?
SSWH15 Impact of Industrialization and Urbanization
The Industrial Revolution
The Industrial Revolution
Socialism defined “An ideology arguing that citizens are best served by policies focused on meeting the basic needs of the entire society rather than on.
Industrial Revolution,
The Industrial Revolution
Ch. 9 Industrial Revolution
Industrial Revolution
Industrial Revolution: New Ways of Thinking
Marx and Engels.
Industrial Revolution: New Ways of Thinking
CHAPTER 19 Section 1 Terms, People, and Places
Differing Viewpoints : Industrial Revolution
New Ways of Thinking in the Industrial Revolution
The Age of Reform.
What were the causes and effects of the Industrial Revolution
Industrial Revolution
Standard 15 The student will be able to describe the impact of industrialization, the rise of nationalism, & the major characteristics of worldwide.
Industrial Revolution
Industrial Revolution
Industrial Revolution
Warm Up– November 2 1. What was the Old Regime in France?
What do you think changes the way we do work today?
The Industrial Revolution
Three Economic Systems
Industrial Revolution
ADAM SMITH (1723 – 1790) FATHER OF MODERN CAPITALISM
Industrial Revolution
Industrialization & Urbanization
Warm Up List the 3 branches of Government
Please take out two pieces of binder paper
Ii. Physical effects of the industrial revolution
Innovations in Technology and Transportation
Industrial Revolution & Age of Reform
utopia, and Socialism introduced during the I.R?
Adam Smith, Karl Marx and John Maynard Keynes
Industrial Revolution
Adam Smith Capitalism Business Cycle Unions Karl Marx Proletariat
Industrial Revolution
Presentation transcript:

Collect W.History for Dummies Pass back papers Talking about midterm grades Coach Class (new time)  Mondays 3:15 – 4:00

The Industrial revolution

Objective Students will be able to analyze data on the effects of the industrial revolution on urban centers

Drill 1/23 What is the difference between an “industrialized country” and a “developing country?”

Industrialized nation  Industrial economy, self sufficient, stable market Developing nation  Agricultural economy, unstable market

Early Factories Early mills, usually for textiles, used water power  Placed by a river and the flow of the river turned the mill wheel to generate power  These mills were small

Inventions of the Industrial revolution John McAdam  Paved roads, aka “Macadam” roads Eli Whitney  The Cotton Gin James Watt  Improved the steam engine

Steam Power With the advent of steam boilers, powered by burning coal, larger factories became possible These factories became the centers of the towns they were in EVERYONE would work at the factory

The Steam engine leads to…. Railroads Railroads  The single largest force that drives the industrial revolution  Able to move cargo, materials and people much faster  Connected urban centers in a new way

Urbanization Migration of people from the countryside to urban (city) centers Hallmark of the industrial age

Summary Question What were some positives, and negatives, of this new industrial world?  Write the answer in your notes – this will be the drill for tomorrow

Drill 1/24 What were some positives and negatives of this new industrial world?

Objective Students will be able to illustrate th conditions of the industrial revolution in England using Manchester as a case study HOMEWORK – CH 10 sec , Guided Reading.

A Class Society Prior to the Revolution there are Nobles and everyone else NOW  Upper Class  Lower Class  NEW MIDDLE CLASS! The educated laborers, professionals, have a little money and status

Manchester In North-Central England Began with textile mills Would soon move up to  General manufacturing  Warehousing  Chemical Production

The Manchester Liverpool Railway First passenger railway in Europe Set the 4 ft 8½ in standard for railwaysftin Connected Manchester, Liverpool and other industrial cities along the way

The Manchester Ship Canal Opened in 1894 Turned Manchester from a landlocked city to a major sea-port Again linked the docks of Liverpool with Manchester

Drill 1/24 Why was Manchester considered the first “truly industrialized city in Europe,”?

Objective Students will be able to compare and contrast different economic systems.

Manchester Manchester became the first truly industrialized city in Europe It was the center of much of the industry in England With a partner:  Read the CASE STUDY: Manchester, section of your books – page 258. Answer questions 2-4 at the end

Summary Predict: With the further division of classes in society during the industrial revolution what conflicts could you see arising?

Economic Philosophers

Drill 1/25 Describe the working conditions of Manchester during the industrial revolution

Objective Students will illustrate how enlightenment ideals influenced the economic reformers of the industrial revolution HOMEWORK – CH 10 sec , Guided Reading.

Manchester 1844 Conditions are awful Friedrich Engels spends the year observing the conditions of the working class He is shocked

Friedrich Engels German Philosopher Wrote The Condition of the Working Class in England, 1844 He called Manchester:  “The… highest and most unconcealed pinnacle of the social misery existing in our day.”

Engels and Marx Karl Marx German philosopher/ economist The “Father of Communism” He and Engels wrote “The Communist Manifesto”

The Communist Manifesto Written in 1848  The history of all hitherto existing society is the history of class struggles.class struggles  Freeman and slave, patrician and plebeian, lord and serf, guild-master and journeyman, in a word, oppressor and oppressed, stood in constant opposition to one another, carried on an uninterrupted, now hidden, now open fight, a fight that each time ended, either in a revolutionary re-constitution of society at large, or in the common ruin of the contending classes Freemanpatricianplebeianguildjourneyman

The Bourgeois and the Proletariat Bourgeois  Ruling class Proletariat  Working class The Working class is being exploited and needs to rise up.

A Command Economy The Communist manifesto promotes a COMMAND ECONOMY  An economy where most of the country’s resources, goods and services are controlled by the state

Adam Smith The Wealth of Nations Scottish economist Believed in a Free Market  Where the government had little if any influence

Smith’s “Invisible Hand” Theory that the market was self correcting When left alone the market would go through natural ups and downs due to the actions of buyers and sellers

Classwork Read the section on Adam Smith, use the reading and your books ( CH 9 Sec 4) to complete the questions on the back