What types of careers do women have today?

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
My Five Senses Created by:.
Advertisements

Section 3 The Movement for Women’s Rights
The Suffragette Movement
Objectives Explain how the women’s suffrage movement began.
Role of women in 1930.
Chapter 25 Section 1 The Cold War Begins Chapter 13 Section 1 Technology and Industrial Growth Chapter 25 Section 1 The Cold War Begins The Women’s Movement.
Elizabeth Cady Stanton November 12 th 1815 – October 26 th 1902.
Descriptive Writing Tell Me All About It Copying permitted.
Descriptive Writing – First Practice Take out a blank piece of notebook paper and number Please know you will eventually be submitting this to turnitin.
Josh Scaringe. Early Life  Born on October 11 th 1884  One of 3 children to her parents  Was privately tutored as a child  Lived in Italy for a portion.
Writing a Personal Narrative. What is a Personal Narrative? A Personal Narrative is a form of writing in which the writer relates an event, incident,
Descriptive Writing Style Using the five senses….
Do Now "Now that you have completed two different personality surveys and have seen the results, how accurate do you think they are? Do you think that.
Chapter 15 Section 3. How did the women’s suffrage movement begin? Women participated in abolitionism and other reform efforts. Some women activists also.
Imagery “Showing vs. Telling”. Imagery Creates a picture in a reader’s mind Descriptive language that appeals to all 5 senses: Touch, Smell, Taste, Sight,
SETTING Setting.... SETTING Setting: is the time and place, in which the story events happen. a)The setting is crucial to what characters think and do.
Concrete Words and Sensory Details. Concrete Words  These words are exact and specific.  We use concrete words in our writing to better SHOW the reader.
Starter : What can you infer from this picture about the status of women in the first decade of the 20 th Century?
Science Foundation The Human Body. We have talked a lot about nature and how nature is science. Did you know that our bodies are science too?
Writing a Personal Narrative
AMENDMENT XIX The right of citizens of the United States to vote shall not be denied or abridged by the United States or by any State on account of sex.
“The Cruelest Journey 600 Miles to Timbuktu” by Kira Salak pg 421
NARRATIVES MAIN GOAL: Tell a sequence of events & scenes Develop PLOT
Writing a Personal Narrative
Warm Up a You will be given 5 minutes to draw and complete a chart highlighting the Egyptian social classes. (Use last classes notes!)
Women’s Suffrage Movement
Assisting with the Nursing Process
Objectives Explain how the women’s suffrage movement began.
Women’s Suffrage Movement
Warm-up: What do you think this cartoon means?.
WOMEN’S RIGHTS MOVEMENT
Being the Scientist… What do YOU think? What did YOU find?
Raised By Unit Objective: Analyze and write a poem using vivid language to paint a picture for the reader.
Warm-up: What do you think this cartoon means?.
AP Warm-Up #1 Please write the prompt and respond in complete sentences. Prompt: Describe the inhabitants of each floor. What does this drawing suggest.
Warm Up: Fill out your table of contents.
The Slave Trade Triangle
Personal Narratives How to write your own!.
Chapter 9-Section 2: Women in Public Life
Warm Up: Take a walk around the classroom to look at the memorials your classmates created. What images are particularly powerful? Why? What do you.
Writing an Introduction
Warm Up 1/8 What was life like for women during the Progressive Era? What was their status in the workforce, society, and politics?
Welcome! November 15th, 2017 Wednesday
Essential Question: How did women of the nineteenth century use a national document of independence dating from the eighteenth century to make their argument.
Section 3 The Movement for Women’s Rights
Woman's Movement: The Right to Vote
Athens vs. Sparta Caricature Poster
What name would give this baby?
Women’s Suffrage Movement
Early 19c Women Unable to vote. Legal status of a child.
Women’s suffrage quiz:
The of and to in is you that it he for was.
Don’t Make a Scene! BUILD ONE!
Explain in at least 3 complete sentences.
Number in the Middle.
How is the relation between reason and emotion described?
Is this respect. What does this tell me about you
List three facts from the video.
NARRATIVES Main Aim Is To: Tell a sequence of events & scenes
Creating an Essay 1st Paragraph - Introduction "hook statement”, plus a sentence which tells what the essay will be about, plus the thesis statement.
Who might have used this to prove their point?
Seneca Falls 1848 “Resolved, that woman is man's equal, was intended to be so by the Creator, and the highest good of the race demands that she should.
Women’s Suffrage Movement
Thinking like a Scientist
Delving into Perspective
Women’s Long Road Teacher Materials, Lesson 1 Maine State Museum 2019
Descriptive Writing – First Practice
Types of Expository Writing
Presentation transcript:

What types of careers do women have today? Warm Up: What types of careers do women have today? Write down as many as you can think of!

Today’s Question: What was the role of women in the early and middle 1800s? How did the women’s suffrage movement begin?

Today’s Activities Notes on the role of women in the 1800s Pictures: women in the 1800s In groups: read about one women’s suffrage activist Create sensory figures

Separate Worlds Women were expected to be _______ wives and devoted ________ whose place was in the home. Men were expected to earn an ______ and take part in ______.

Legal Status Under the law, when a woman married, she was considered the __________ of her husband. Women were: Denied the right to __________. Denied ___________ opportunities, especially higher education. Denied _________ opportunities in business. Limited in the right to own ___________.

Pictures of Women in the 1800s: You will have 30 seconds to look at your picture and write down your observations on the back!

Women’s suffrage is the right of women to vote and hold public office

Early Women’s Suffrage Activists:

Women’s Suffrage Activists Read the biography and answer the questions Discuss questions with your group, make sure everyone has the correct answers—agree on 2 important facts to tell the class Divide your group into 2. Each smaller group will create a sensory figure to describe your activist.

Sensory Figure: Sensory figures are simple drawings of historical figures with descriptions of what they might have thought, seen, heard, touched, said, or felt. Each of the descriptions contains words and/or symbols and is placed near the part of the body that relates to the sense. Make sure you have:   Seven sentences or phrases that represent what each figure might see, hear, smell, say, touch, think, and feel (emotions). Make sure the sentences or symbols represent important experiences, thoughts, and feelings of the character.