Announcements : 1: Welcome back! 2: New Bell Ringer procedure! 3: ACP Results! Bell Ringer: January (9), 2018 Materials : 1: Spiral/blank sheet of paper 2: Enlightenment Graphic Organizer 3: One partner 1. Set up your Cornell notes 2. Across the top of your c-notes, write today’s lesson topic: THE ENLIGHTENMENT 3. In the left hand column of your c- notes, write today’s lesson objective in the form of a question: Identify major causes and describe the major effects of the following important turning points in world history from 1750 to 1914: the Enlightenment's impact on political revolution.
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Bell Ringer: January (9), 2: New Bell Ringer 2018 · Bell Ringer: January (9), 2018 ... Idea Thinker Impact Separation of powers Montesquieu France, USA, ... Which Enlightenment ideas
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Announcements:
1: Welcome back!
2: New Bell Ringer
procedure!
3: ACP Results!
Bell Ringer: January (9), 2018
Materials:
1: Spiral/blank
sheet of paper
2: Enlightenment
Graphic Organizer
3: One partner
1. Set up your Cornell notes
2. Across the top of your c-notes, write
today’s lesson topic:
THE ENLIGHTENMENT
3. In the left hand column of your c-
notes, write today’s lesson objective
in the form of a question:
Identify major causes and describe
the major effects of the following
important turning points in world
history from 1750 to 1914: the
Enlightenment's impact on political
revolution.
Announcements
•Welcome Back! Let’s talk about Christmas.
•New “Bell Ringer” procedure!• Instead of doing the summary from the previous
class, we’re going to focus on our new topic for the day. We will do our summaries at the end of class.
•ACP Results are in!!
ACP Results: Regular
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
Percentage Passing Scale Score
ACP Results: This Year versus Last Year
Fall 2017 Fall 2016
ACP Results: PreAP
70
75
80
85
90
95
100
Percentage Passing Scale Score
ACP Results: This Year versus Last Year
Fall 2017 Fall 2016
Materials
1. Blank sheet of paper/notebook/journal
2. Your own personal copy of the “Enlightenment” graphic organizer
3. A partner who is NOT sitting next to you
Reminder: Classroom Policies and Procedures
Policies:
•Bell ringer, notes, and classwork expectations
•No headphones or cell phones
•Respect
Procedures:
•Grades updated M/T
•Missing work available on tjhsworldhistory.weebly.com
•Fire drills/tornado drills
•Tardies
Announcements:
1: Welcome back!
2: New Bell Ringer
procedure!
3: ACP Results!
Bell Ringer: January (9), 2018
Materials:
1: Spiral/blank
sheet of paper
2: Enlightenment
Graphic Organizer
3: One partner
1. Set up your Cornell notes
2. Across the top of your C-notes, write
today’s lesson topic:
THE ENLIGHTENMENT
3. In the left hand column of your c-
notes, write today’s lesson objective
in the form of a question:
Identify major causes and describe
the major effects of the following
important turning points in world
history from 1750 to 1914: the
Enlightenment's impact on political
revolution.
Word Wall Vocabulary:
• Enlightenment: time period where reason was applied to society
• Social Contract: Hobbes- exchange rights for protection
The Founding Fathers thought Hobbes’s ideas would HOBBLE
them!
Turn and Talk
Which Enlightenment ideas influenced the US Constitution?
ANS: All of them, except for Hobbes. The Founders did not want an absolute monarchy.
Ideas of the Enlightenment
•Enlightenment thinkers had the greatest impact on the writers of the U.S. Constitution• They believed governments were meant to protect the rights of their citizens•Ex: “Natural Law”- basic laws of the universe that the government must enforce
Consequences of the Enlightenment•Enlightenment thinkers questioned the idea that kings were appointed by God
•They believed governments should protect peoples’ rights, and if not, they should be overthrown
•Enlightenment ideas led to a revolution America and in France
Turn and Talk
“Men are born free and remain free and equal in rights.”
Which idea of the Enlightenment is expressed in this quote? Clue: which rights?
ANS: Natural law
Guided Practice: Summary
• In the bottom portion of your c-notes, complete a summary over the Enlightenment
•For help, use the following sentence stems:The Enlightenment was…
Some major ideas of the Enlightenment were…
One of the direct effects of the Enlightenment came from Rousseau’s idea, that…
Fun Fact:
• Free speech is a basic right in the US
• In places like China, free speech is not a right
• China also blocks access to websites, including Facebook and YouTube
Guided Practice: Identifying Enlightenment Thinkers•Take a sheet of paper
•Fold it once, hot dog style
•Fold it twice, hamburger style
•You should end up with SIX boxes
Fundamental to U.S. Declaration of Independence; Life, Liberty, Pursuit of Happiness; overthrow governments
that do not serve their citizens
Guaranteed in the U.S. Bill of Rights and the French Declaration of the
Rights of Man and Citizen; European monarchs reduce censorship; freedom
of speech
Women’s rights groups formed across Europe and the United States
Ideas were rejected by the Founding Fathers; Social Contract: trade rights
for protection
France, United States, and Latin American countries all use separation
of powers in their constitutions
Believed that government was formed as an agreement between
free individuals
John Locke Thomas Hobbes
Voltaire Montesquieu
Mary Wollstonecraft Rousseau
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Independent Practice
•Using the stations around the room, choose one thinker and explain in a paragraph on your blank sheet of paper why you agree or disagree with that thinker. Use specific evidence, 5-7 sentences