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Transcript
UNIT 4
The Industrial Revolution
Standard 10.3 Students analyze the effects of the Industrial Revolution in England, France, Germany, Japan,
and the United States.
Was the Industrial Revolution “progress”?
Imagine a world before factories and mass production. Things were slower, people stayed
close to home and, perhaps, life was simpler. All that changed with the Industrial
Revolution. It was a time of rapid, immense change which led to increased productivity and,
on the other side, class division. In this unit we will be studying how this changed occurred
and reflect on what effect it still has today.
Monday
17A
Tuesday
18B
Agricultural
Revolution PPT/Notes
24B
Wednesday
19A
Urban Game Poster
Mill Times Video
Questions
Friday
21A
27A
HW #2 DUE
QUIZ #2
Urban Game Poster
Expansion Map
28B
3B
4A
Urban Game Poster
Why did England
Industrialize First?
Resource Map
25A
26B
Urban Game Poster
Effects of the Industrial
Revolution Chart
31A
Thursday
20B
1B
2A
HW #3 DUE
QUIZ #3
Urban Game Poster
Rock, Paper, Scissors
Game
Unit 4 Review Sheet
HW #1 DUE
QUIZ #1
Urban Game Poster
Invention Handout
Opening of the
Liverpool-Manchester
Railway
PROJECT DUE
UNIT 4 TEST
Urban Game Poster
Due
Unit 4 Test
7B
HW assignments on the back --------------
HW #1 (10 Points)
DUE: Friday, October 21st
Read Section (pgs. 283-288) in Modern World History.
1) Why might it be easier for large farmers to experiment than for family farmers?
2) Why do you think one invention led to another?
3) How were England’s cotton industry and America’s cotton growers linked?
4) Why did James Watt & Matthew Boulton need each other?
5) What might improved water and road transportation mean for the industrial revolution?
6) Why did entrepreneurs want to link Liverpool and Manchester?
7) How do you think most Britains reacted to the railroads?
8) What were the four factors that contributed to industrialization in Britain?
9) How did a rising population (boom) help the Industrial Revolution?
10) Was the steam engine the greatest invention of the Industrial Revolution? Explain.
Key terms: Use these in your answers.
Enclosures, Jethro Tull, Crop Rotation, Robert Bakewell, Factors of Production, Textiles, James Hargreaves,
James Watt, Entrepreneur, Steamboats, Railroads
HW #2 (10 Points)
DUE: Thursday, October 27th
Read (pgs. 288-299) in Modern World History
1) How do you think merchants viewed their workers?
2) Why might the way merchants make money make landowners look down upon them?
3) Was destroying machines a good solution to the problem?
4) How would joining together in groups help workers win better conditions and higher pay?
5) Why do you think young children continued to do heavy work in Manchester factories even after the Factory
Act?
6) Why might railroads be even more important to United States industrialization than to that of Britain?
7) Why do you think Cockerill took secret plans to Belgium?
8) How did German industry help create political unity?
9) How did the Industrial Revolution shift the world balance of power?
10) What social class expanded as a result of industrialization?
Key terms: Use in your answers.
Urbanization, Elizabeth Gaskell, Urban Living Conditions, Factory Working Conditions, Middle Class
Growth, Ned Ludd, Manchester, Child Labor, Corporation, William Cockerill, Ruhr Valley
HW #3 (10 Points)
DUE: Wednesday, November 2nd
In your textbook read (pgs. 300-306) in Modern World History
1) How does laissez-faire economics reflect Enlightenment ideas of challenging power and authority?
2) How does the utilitarian approach judge the worth of ideas?
3) Why do you think New Harmony lasted only three years?
4) How are the “haves” and the “have-nots” interdependent?
5) Do you think Marx agreed that people work for self-interest?
6) How did the growth of unions help workers?
7) How can slavery be an economic threat?
8) What do lower wages for women suggest about their place in industrial society?
9) What were Adam Smith’s three natural laws of economics?
10) What reforms were adopted to improve the problems that arose due to the Industrial Revolution?
Key terms: Use these in your answers.
Laissez Faire, Adam Smith, Capitalism, John Stuart Mill, Socialism, Karl Marx, Bourgeoisie, Proletariat,
Communism, Trade Unions, Strikes, Factory Act of 1833, Ten Hours Act of 1847, Abolitionists