 Changing Schools  Mass media  Magazines, Radio & Movies  Sports & American Heroes  Literature, Theater, Music and Art.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
CHAPTER 13 SECTION 3 Education and Popular Culture
Advertisements

Chapter 21 Section ’s Popular Culture.
EDUCATION BEFORE THE 1920s ENROLLMENTS TYPES OF COURSES IMMIGRANTS
21:2 Twenties Woman. Women in the 20’s WWI + flu = live it up Asserted independence Rejected traditional values Demanded freedom.
The 1920s The Roaring Twenties. Life in the Jazz Age.
The Main Idea New technologies helped produce a new mass culture in the 1920s. Reading Focus How did mass entertainment change in the 1920s? Who were the.
Cultural Innovations and African American Culture
The Jazz Age Chapter 20 Section 2-3. Literature Ernest Hemingway – wrote about his experiences in WWI For Whom the Bell Tolls A Farewell to Arms F. Scott.
The Roaring Twenties. New Roles for Women During WWI women increasingly worked and expected to continue even after the war Many women in America began.
Education – Popular Culture CHAPTER 13 SECTION 3.
The Jazz Age Section 9.2. Today’s Agenda 9.2 Slide Show Presentations Homework –Read 9.3.
Education and Popular Culture
The 1920’s Education and Popular Culture. Progressive Education – John Dewey By 1914,1 million American students attended high school By 1926, 4 million.
The Roaring 20s: Cultural Innovations Ch 7.2. Tuesday, March 20, 2012 Daily Goal: Understand how the mass media and other Cultural Innovations of the.
17.4. Art  John Marin  Charles Scheeler  Georgia O’Keefe.
Mass Media schooling is expanded to educate the masses: 4 million students attend high school now, sparked by higher edu standards 4 jobs -new coverage.
Mass Media -schooling is expanded to educate the masses -new coverage of events began to shape public opinion -invention of radio became a powerful influence.
Popular Culture in the 1920s Big Idea: The 1920’s were a radically new time for most Americans Essential Question: How did popular culture, the arts, and.
LIFE & CULTURE IN AMERICA IN THE 1920S THE ROARING TWENTIES.
Education and Popular Culture
Education and Pop Culture (Ch. 13, Sec. 3) 1. High School Prepares Students & Media Shapes Culture 2. Heroes Inspire 1920’s America 3. New Styles in Writing,
The 1920’s A New Popular Culture is Born. Radio How did radio help create a common culture in the U.S.? People throughout the country heard the same.
 Mass media: forms of communication, such as newspapers and radio, that reached millions of people.
E DUCATION AND P OPULAR C ULTURE Roaring 20s. E DUCATION million students in high school million Why were more students going to school?
Education and Popular Culture in the 20s How do schools & mass media shape the Jazz Age?
13 sec. 3 Education & Popular Culture. Schools Enrollment went from 1 million to 4 million between Many of the students spoke no English.
Books and Movies of the 1920s Maddie Jackson & Abbey Robertson.
-Fad- an activity or a fashion that is “hot” or “in” for a short time then fades out. -Flagpole sitting -Dance Marathons -The Charleston -Crossword Puzzles.
21-3: Education and Popular Culture. Education before the 1920s Education during the 1920s Enrollments Before the 1920s approximately 1 million high school.
A New Popular Culture is Born. Main Ideas 1.Mass Entertainment of the 1920s 2.An Era of Heroes 3.Arts of the 1920s.
Misleading Prosperity Production increases, causes Income Gap, farmers suffer greatly. Goods bought on credit. – Installment Plan (Pay as you Enjoy) –
A New Popular Culture is Born Unit 2 Section 3 Part 7.
Education and Popular Culture in the 20s How do schools & mass media shape the Roaring 20s?
1920’s Women  Women wanted to break away from tradition.  Flapper- new, assertive woman who challenged the view of traditional women.  Double standard-
The Jazz Age & The Harlem Renaissance
Education and Popular Culture in the 20s
Chapter 10 Section 4 US History
Education and Popular Culture in the 20s
Education and Popular Culture
Mass Media and Pop Culture
Unit Boom and Bust.
Education and Popular Culture
Mass Media schooling is expanded to educate the masses: 4 million students attend high school now, sparked by higher edu standards 4 jobs -new coverage.
The Twenties Woman, Education, and Popular Culture
US History 1920s Popular Culture.
Section 3- Education and Popular Culture
Music and Entertainment
Chapter 13-Section 3- Education and Popular Culture
Education – Popular Culture
LIFE & CULTURE IN AMERICA IN THE 1920S
Vocabulary/Identification
Chapter 13 Section 3 Notes Education More students in High School Why?
Education and Popular Culture in the 20s
The roaring 20’s: culture
The Jazz Age! Cultural Innovations.
A New Mass Culture.
Ch. 21 Sect.1: Changing Ways of Life
What were the Characteristics of Education & Culture During the 1920s?
LIFE & CULTURE IN AMERICA IN THE 1920S
#48 Ch 13 S 3 Details: Read & Notes Ch 13 S 3 ______________.
Welcome Baltimore Polytechnic Institute December 21, 2011 U.S. History
Mass Media -schooling is expanded to educate the masses
Bell Ringer Chapter 20:3 Radio and Movies
The Roaring Life of the 1920s
The Twenties Woman and Popular Culture
US History Roaring 20s.
1920S CULTURE.
Education and Popular Culture
Popular Culture of the 20s
Thursday – December 12th, 2013 Test Make-ups, today after school
Presentation transcript:

 Changing Schools  Mass media  Magazines, Radio & Movies  Sports & American Heroes  Literature, Theater, Music and Art

 Enrollments increases  Types of courses change from only college- prep to vocational training  Immigrants entering schools speak little or no English  Coast of Educating more youth increases dramatically

 Defined  Mass Media: media that reaches a very large audience.  Popular Culture: culture driven by the media and in masses ▪ Examples ▪ Magazines, Radio, Movies: “Talkies” What are some examples of today’s forms of mass media?

Millions flocked to their radios to listen to popular shows such as this one. Avon Comedy Four- Clancys Minstrels 1924 Most powerful media tool at the time: Source of entertainment and news

 Walt Disney's Mickey Mouse : Steamboat Willie (1928) Walt Disney's Mickey Mouse : Steamboat Willie (1928)

 Babe Ruth  7yDSAY&feature=fvw 7yDSAY&feature=fvw  How are sports similar/different today?  Andrew “Rub” Foster  Segregation of sports  “Father of Black Baseball”

Phog Allen- Coach from 1920s-1950s

Becomes the hero that America needs in a time of corruption, excess and crime. Inspires Amelia Earhart

 George Gershwin- blends traditional music with jazz to create a distinctive American sound  &feature=related &feature=related  Georgia O’Keefe

 Sinclair Lewis  Ernest Hemingway  The Sun Also Rises  A Farewell to Arms  F. Scott Fitzgerald  The Great Gatsby  This Side of Paradise Writers of the time criticized American culture because they thought it was shallow and materialistic