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The Examination of Sarah Good

The Examination of Sarah Good. Salem Court Documents, 1692. Focus Lesson. Transcript Bias Loaded questions. Transcript. A written record of information communicated orally such as a: Speech Interview Legal testimony. Bias.

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The Examination of Sarah Good

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  1. The Examination of Sarah Good Salem Court Documents, 1692

  2. Focus Lesson • Transcript • Bias • Loaded questions

  3. Transcript • A written record of information communicated orally such as a: • Speech • Interview • Legal testimony

  4. Bias • A prejudice or mental leaning toward or against some topic, issue or person. • Writers reveal their biases by using word connotations • Interrogators can reveal their biases by asking loaded questions • Questions that make unwarranted presumptions or that force a certain answer. • Do you think the government should be allowed to steal your money to fund useless programs? • Vs. • Do you think your taxes should be raised to fund government programs?

  5. Sarah Good

  6. The Accusations of Witchery Confess to witchcraft= confirmed witch Deny witchcraft= confirmed witch Confess to witchcraft and accuse someone else of bewitching you= confirmed witch but showing signs of breaking Satan’s hold

  7. Sarah Good • Sarah was accused by a group of adolescent girls of bewitching them to suffer symptoms of convulsive fits, hallucinations, loss of appetite, and temporary loss of hearing. • This is the court record from Sarah’s hearing on March 1, 1692. • Good was then jailed, tried in court, found guilty and hanged on July 19th.

  8. The Outcome • After 19 men and women were found guilty and hanged for witchcraft, Puritan leaders began to doubt the accusers and their evidence. • Over the next 20 years, most of the falsely accused were pardoned and awarded financial compensation.

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