Immigration Unit PPT Mr. Macpherson 9/10 th grade Resource Lab.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Immigration US History.
Advertisements

Coming to America “Immigration is painful to all men”
Immigration.
Patterns of Immigration Identify patterns of immigration and the causal factors that led to immigration to the United States of America (i.e., crop.
Immigration A History of the United States. The New Colossus by Emma Lazarus Give me your tired, your poor, Your huddled masses yearning to breathe free,
Review for Test on Immigration
Immigration Page 15 Melting Pot U.S. is a land of immigrants Blending of many different cultures.
The Cold War BeginsTechnology and Industrial GrowthThe Cold War Begins Section 1 The New Immigrants Compare the “new immigration” of the late 1800s to.
1. Demography : The study of the size, growth and distribution of human populations Gathering this information helps us discover who the American people.
Immigration: There’s No Place Like Home Between 1860 and 1900, almost 14 million people came to America looking for new opportunities and a new home.
“A Portrait of Americans”
OTHER GROUPS DURING THE AGE OF JACKSON. Immigration  Until 1850, most immigrants coming to America came from northern and western Europe  Especially.
Immigration US History.
Land of immigrants where cultures blended together
IMMIGRATION AMAL H., ZAHRA A., & MARISSA M. | PARADA | DECEMBER.
Chapter 1: A Portrait of Americans Social Science.
Immigration What positive and negative effects did immigration have on America and the immigrants themselves?
" America" Music Video LEARNING TARGETS 1.Identify places in the world from which your ancestors immigrated and share why they came to the U.S. 1.Describe.
A historical look at who and why has entered the U.S. over the past 200 years.
Immigration: There’s No Place Like Home Between 1860 and 1900, almost 14 million people came to America looking for new opportunities and a new home.
Key Vocabulary Ellis Island Angel Island Chinese Exclusion Act (1882) Gentlemen’s Agreement (1907) Nativism Xenophobia.
Immigration Old Immigration VS New Immigration.
 Imagine you are immigrating to a new country in  If you could only bring one suitcase of belongings to your new country what would you take? 
Immigration. IRELAND Potato famine Settled in – New York City, *Boston, *Chicago – *became political powers moved across the country *worked.
Urban America: 1865 – 1896 Immigration
Immigration Industrialization drew a flood of immigrants to the United States.
US on the Map. European Map At the top, write “Changes in Immigration to the US”
Patterns in U.S. Immigration US History: Spiconardi.
Gilded Age Immigration SOL 8A. In the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, economic opportunity, industrialization, technological change, and.
Immigration to the United States Immigrants came to America for many reasons and faced a number of challenges.
Immigration in the U.S.. I. Waves of Immigration  Colonial Immigration: 1600s s  “Old” Immigration:  “New” Immigration:
Is the Land of Freedom and Justice for All? From Sea to Shiny Sea? Are We There Yet?
Civics Lecture #2 America: A Cultural Mosaic. What is the American Identity American Identity 1.We are a nation of immigrants. people moving from one.
Immigration (1870s-1920s) SOL: VUS.8a Objective: The student will demonstrate knowledge of how the nation grew and changed form the end of Reconstruction.
Immigration Industrialization drew a flood of immigrants to the United States.
Immigration 189O Most immigrants settled in the cities of the east coast in which they landed About 23 million immigrants came to the U.S. between.
Immigration Target 2 I can identify the reason why people came to America after the Civil War through World War One I can identify and explain the problems.
Following the Civil War, the westward movement of settlers intensified in the vast region between the Mississippi River and the Pacific Ocean. The years.
Immigration in the Gilded Age. I. Waves of Immigration  Colonial Immigration: 1600s s  “Old” Immigration:  “New” Immigration:
Why was the U.S. known as a “Melting Pot”? Land of immigrants where cultures blended together.
Immigration in the late 1800s
Immigration and the Industrial revolution
Immigration to America
Immigration.
Ch. 15 – Politics, Immigration, & Urban Life (1870 – 1915)
Industrialization Unit #5.
Americans.
Irish Immigrants Immigration to the United States increased dramatically between The largest group of immigrants to the United States at that.
Review for Test on Immigration
Do Now (Insert Date): Come in QUIETLY
Immigration and urbanization
Immigration During the Gilded Age
Old Immigration US History.
U.S. History & Government
AIM: To re-examine the difference between “old” and “new” immigration.
US History Immigration.
WESTWARD MOVEMENT.
Essential Questions: How did the shift of immigrant origins affect urban America? What role did Ellis Island play in immigration? What caused the rise.
Patterns in U.S. Immigration
Gilded Age: New Immigration
Definitions Push Factor: A reason why someone would be forced to/choose to move, migrate, emigrate from a certain place. Pull Factor: A reason why someone.
U.S. History & Government
The New Immigrants.
Immigration and urbanization
Objectives Compare the “new immigration” of the late 1800s to earlier immigration. Explain the push and pull factors leading immigrants to America. Describe.
Old Immigration US History.
Immigration in the Gilded Age
Immigrants in America Millions of immigrants moved to the United States in the late 1800’s & early 1900’s. Map of immigration
Objectives Compare the “new immigration” of the late 1800s to earlier immigration. Explain the push and pull factors leading immigrants to America. Describe.
Review for Test on Immigration
Presentation transcript:

Immigration Unit PPT Mr. Macpherson 9/10 th grade Resource Lab

Day 1

Warm-up  You’ve just been elected the ultimate ruler of a new country.  Think: How would you design your perfect society? What rules does it have? What type of things does your society value?  Think of it this way… you’re a “founding father (or mother)” of a country.  Create a list of the top 10 rules in your society or country. Be ready to share and justify your answers.

Your rules! If you ran a country…  Now it’s your turn to decide and be immigration police.  Read the following scenarios and decide:  Do you want this person in your country?

History of Immigration Outline  Colonial  Old  New  Current Issues/ Update WOW! From 1865 to million people arrived from abroad!

Colonial Immigration  Ran from the first people from England to Declaration of Independence  Places of Origin: English, Scotch-Irish, German, Swedish, Dutch and African  Reasons: political and religious freedom, economics, and as slaves  Settled on east coast  Africans eventually settled in the South

ProblemsContributions  Native American conflicts  Building farms homes and a new life in unknown territory  Language  Government  Religion  Cultural Traditions

Old Immigration Reasons  Ran from est. of U.S. until about 1850  Most from Northern and Western Europe, especially Ireland, Germany, and Scandinavia  Famine from failure of the Potato Crop in Ireland  Revolutions in Germany  Economic Opportunity

DifficultiesContributions  Irish and German Catholics often faced hostility on arrival  Many feared competition for jobs from the new immigrants  RR s and Canals  Labored in factories.  Brought advanced farming techniques  Idea of Kindergarten and other educational techniques

New Immigration  From 1850 to 1924  From Southern and Eastern and Europe, Usually Poland, Italy,and Russia as well as substantial numbers of Japanese and Chinese

Reasons Places  Hope for greater economic opportunity  Political Freedom  Religious Freedom  Cities, especially industrial centers and ports  Often were concentrated in Ghettos  Asian Immigrants settled on the West Coast (usually California)

DifficultiesContributions  Fear of losing their religious and cultural heritage  Reactions of fear and hostility from native born Americans  Discrimination in jobs and Immigration  Competition from other minority groups  Italian and Jewish girls Worked in Sweatshops of the garment industry  Poles and Slavs labored in coal mines and steel mills of Pa. And Midwest  Chinese built transcontinental RR and aided expansion as well as contributing to U.S. cultural diversity

Reaction to Immigration  Brought new wave of Nativism  Often Racism came from descendants of Old Immigrants  Belief was traditions of Immigrants have negative impact on U.S. society  Felt Immigrants kept wages low  Jokes and stereotypes common  Tried to Influence law against natives

Immigrants and Society: Theories of Different Absorption  Assimilation : Immigrants disappear into established culture. Give up traditions and attitudes to be accepted.  Pluralism: recognizes that groups do not always lose distinctive characters. Can live with each group making different contributions. Often called Salad Bowl Theory  Melting Pot Theory : People from Various cultures met in U.S. to form new American.  Groups not easily distinguished (all one new mixture)