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Colonial and Life Today

Colonial and Life Today. Forward. Where do you want to be? Just click on me!. Follow the arrows and numbers!!. -Colonial vocabulary list - Tutorial Subjects about Colonial Life: -Churches -Schools -Farming/food . -Main Menu with Hyperlinks.

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Colonial and Life Today

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  1. Colonial and Life Today Forward

  2. Where do you want to be? Just click on me! Follow the arrows and numbers!! -Colonial vocabulary list - Tutorial Subjects about Colonial Life: -Churches -Schools -Farming/food. -Main Menu with Hyperlinks -symbols on the slideshow that you’ll see throughout -Topic/Subject • - Tutorial Subjects about life today: • Churches • Schools • Farming/Food • Researched Information that will help with creating your Character(Take Notes!!!) • Notes Continued… • Colonial Job Descriptions • Multiple Choice Question - Topic Picture Brain Mixture -Topic Picture class Opinion Mixture -Overall Task -Already know about Colonial Times! We shall share! -What we could compare or Research? -This is the end of the Lesson! -Different? Yet seem the same today.

  3. Symbols You’ll See Throughout! This is the return button you will see on every slide, it navigates you back to the main menu, found: usually in the lower right hand corner RETURN - When you see a teacher standing there with a speech bubble, that is the most important things to be said/read to the class or being done individually. - When you see an blue Arrow pointing to a tip: quick read that and then read to students if you feel the need, as the teacher, that they need to hear it. RETURN

  4. Grade Level: 3rd grade Topic: Colonial life and life now Lesson Plan: Compare and Contrast the two types of living ages Colonial Times and today’s life. Gathering and researching to create a character based on colonial times. Literature on Topic Available to class/read to class:Colonial Life, by Brendan January. Directions: Literature will be available to student at all times, it will be read before this presentation is done. Students will go through the slideshow, creating journal entries when need be, gathering information about a character that will be created and presented to the class/friends. Where the student will get the chance to express what they have learned throughout this presentation. Practicing Comparing and Contrasting by Tip: Students you may have an easier time identifying differences rather than similarities in subjects that seem foreign to you. Create a journal entry on anything that may confuse you! RETURN

  5. Colonial Life Compared to… Return

  6. Our Life Today… Tell me what you see, feel, hear, know or think as you look at this picture. It is only the beginning so no answers will be considered winning, this is an introduction to our life daily function. The world that surrounds you what can you relate to? Remember everyone's life is not the same you know, so share with us every bit that your brain has grown. Write what you think is important in your journals! Title this entry “Our life Today” Return

  7. What we have learned/know TODAY.. What is important, Topics or things We do day by day??? -Jobs -Churches -Schools -Farming/Food -Men, women, children roles -Animals -Wardrobe -Homes -Transportation -Way of fun! Tip: Point out when each photo was taken Today or in Colonial Days. Is this hard to do? Be prepared to be able to do this. RETURN

  8. What Could we research about topic wise when it comes to colonial times and life today put together???? You see there are a lot of things that seem the same as today, right? For example: We eat farming foods still. People still go to church. Journal them down Title this entry “topics that COULD be researched”! We will only review 3 topics! • Jobs • Churches • Farming/Food • Schooling • Protection • How they dressed • Animals • Homes • Men, women, children roles Tip: How did you compare colonial life with life today? How did you come up with these topics? They should respond that you read about Colonial life and thought about life today. You then thought about what is similar and different today. RETURN

  9. Church • Schooling • Farming/food • These are the 3 topics with in Colonial Times and Life today That we will be focusing on! Everything that read and see from this slide on will help you in creating your character from colonial times! The more journaling you do the easier this will be. • Things to write down: • Things that interest you • Jobs Colonial people do • Confusing words • Journal Entries your told to do • Anything that will help build/create your Colonial Character: Facts

  10. Tutorial Slide Explanation of the class chosen topics Comparing and Contrasting Colonial Times And Life Today First, Colonial Times Students, please get out your journals. Colonial Life: will be discussing Churches, Schooling, Food/Farmingwill be discussed in the next few slides, Don’t forget to get your journals out and jot down everything you need to know! Return

  11. Colonial time church Time! Churches: Church was a time of worship, and was done in mainly one building and one religion was practice. The day of worship was always on a Sunday. Sunday was then known as the “resting” day. This was God’s day and no one was allowed to do anything strenuous and everyone showed their appreciation towards God by spending time with their families all day. Return

  12. Colonial Time Schooling • School in Colonial Times: • There were very few schools in this time • Parents taught their kids to read and write using the Bible and hornbook which is a wooden board with a handle. • Boys go to grammar school and even advance onto college if wealthy enough. Boys learn to become shoe keepers and craftsman by assisting and watching men at work, mainly their family members. • Girls have special lessons on how to run a household, singing, play an instrument, sewing, serving tea, manners, and how to have a polite conversation. • Then all grades were mixed K-12. Usually all in one room, there weren’t separate rooms or buildings; this was all done in one small specific room. RETURN

  13. Colonial time Munch Time! • Farming and Food In Colonial Times: • *Very different in many ways than farming is done in today’s day in age. • *The most significant difference was in what crops were grown where. • *The American Colonists got their food from several places. The modern supermarket that we know today, where you can get all kinds of food, was not an option back then. RETURN

  14. Tutorial: Colonial Times Vocabulary Colonial Vocabulary list: The next slide contains a list of vocabulary words that students will be given a printed out copy in order to have for their research when it comes time to taking their projects home, with what ever they do not finish in class. Students Please take whatever time you think you need to copy in your personal journals the important vocabulary that you feel will help you when it comes time to creating your character. Return

  15. -Jerkin- Jacket of cloth or leather, open at the neck, but without sleeves. - Petticoat- women's skirts, often worn several at a time, sometimes the top one was pinned up at intervals showing the one. - Independence- freedom from control by others. - minutemen- members of the colonial troops who had promised to take the field in battle on very short notice. - unite- join together for a common purpose; make as one. - revolution- a significant change in political organization; the act of changing politically by rebelling against the authority in place. - Parliament- the law making body in England. - export- sell goods out of the country. -import- bring goods into the country. - enumerated articles- items that could not be sold to other countries. - Southern Colonies- grew staple crops such as tobacco and rice. - Northern Colonies- traded fur, fish, and grain. - French and Indian War- France and England fought over land in the Ohio river Valley. - Staple Crops- Crops that are produced in large quantities. - Triangular Trade- trade between the colonist, Africa, and the Caribbean islands. -Knit- To make clothing by hand with yarn. -Kerchief- a scarf - Sweeten- to make sweet, by adding sugar or something similar. -Scold- to speak angrily to a person about something they did wrong. -Harbor- A place where sea meets land and ships top to load or unload. - Clever- smart - Manners- using polite ways of doing things is using your manners. -Trencher- a wooden board that colonist used as a plate to eat off of, children had to share one with one another, they were not aloud to have their own. -Pudding- a soft pillow that babies wore around their middles so that they wouldn’t get hurt. -Cloak- like a jacket but looser, more like a cape worn to keep warm. -Loom- a tool used to weave fabric from yarn -Settle- A long wooden bench with high sides that families would sit on in their homes. RETURN

  16. Tutorial Slide Explanation of the class chosen topics Comparing and Contrasting Colonial Times And Life Today Second, Life Today as we know it! Students, please get out your journals. Life Today: will be discussing Churches, Schooling, Food/Farming Just like we did in the previous slides, except now how life is now, how we actual perceive and know it to be. Return

  17. Churches TODAY Church Today: -There are many different religions and different churches people could attend to whether they want to or not. No one is forced to go to church or worship God for that matter. - Not that necessary for everyone to attend. - When you go to church you usually have one person preaching up front and speaking unlike back then everyone did something different. Return

  18. Schooling TODAY! • School Today: • Now today we have separate schools for different grades for example; Elementary K-5, Middle school 6-8 High school 9-12, and then college for however long your degree of choice may take. • Our schools now are a lot bigger than they were back then, when they only had one little room for all grades we know how separate schools to indivualize all the students. • We also have transportation, where the school students are being picked up by the dozens in areas all over the school district, which saves gas and time for the hard working parents and also ensuring that the children are getting to school to not miss out on their opportunity on learning. Return

  19. Food/Farming Life TODAY • Food Today: • All we have to do today is go to the grocery store to buy what we are hungry for to cook at home. It is a lot easier than having to gather the family up to go fishing or hunting to hope in their hearts that they catch something so they have something to put in their stomachs that night and a couple more down the road. • We also do not have to cook every night, fast food or dining out are great options we have today especially for the families who can afford to do so. • Also, today we have a larger variety of food to choose from and pick when we want to eat. Return

  20. Notes You must take, In order to create! 1. Colonial Times are defined by the years 1565-1776. Here, while doing your research at home you could ask your family members about any other members of your family that were born in this time era, maybe they have pictures or newspaper clippings that hold vital information! They began when some settlers came from Spain to live in a colony in America, and ended when the Thirteen English colonies became the United States. 2. People living during this time needed to work hard to provide food, clothing, and shelter for their families. a. Here they made their own clothing b. Most food was hunted or grown c. Homes were built by families, and usually consisted of one room. 3. Strict rules existed for the behavior of children. a. No talking at the dinner table b. Children must stand while eating c. Eating with fingers was considered good manners, as forks havnt been invented yet d. Children chared trenchers (or plates) with one another. e. Misbehavior in school could result in humiliating experiences, like wearing a dunce cap or a branch on the offender’s nose. f. Children must be silent, and must not fall asleep during church. Return

  21. Notes Continued… 4. Schools were small in space. They were heated by stoves and it was the responsibility of the boys in school to bring in the firewood. 5. Sunday’s were the Lord’s Days. Many rules were instituted for this day. a. People spent 4 hours each Sunday in their meetinghouse (church). b. No smiling or whispering was allowed c. No work, Not even that of making a bed was allowed on Sundays. d. Laughing or playing games was allowed e. A man could not shave or cut his hair f. Children could not kiss their mother or fathers on Sundays 7. Punishments for breaking laws could be cruel a. Whippings b. Death c. Public Humiliations 8. Water needed to be carried in from well and heated in order to bathe. 9. People did not often drink the water, because it wasn’t known to be pure. They drank cider and beer. Even the children. 10. Some laws that people were required to follow were; a. Boys had to go to school b. The families of boys who attended school were responsible for paying the schoolmaster, normally in corn. c. Walking around at night was against the law d. People should not use bad words or get drunk e. It was against the law for a baker to bake bad bread, or for a brewer to brew bad beer. f. Everyman was supposed to work on the town roads a few days each month g. A poor mans clothing could not be as fancy as a rich mans clothing h. Sledding in the winter and swimming in the summer were against the law, they were said to be a waste of time. i. Dancing was not allowed, but they did it anyway. Return

  22. Some jobs in Colonial times Apothecary Colonial apothecaries were what we think of as doctors. They treated patients, made and prescribed medicines, made house calls, and taught apprentices. Some even performed surgeries – and remember most surgeries occurred at the time without anesthesia. Even in the 1600s and 1700s, apothecaries were sophisticated in their knowledge of remedies. For example, they knew that calamine could be used to treat itchy skin problems and that heartburn could be cured with chalk (similar to modern-day Tums). Apothecaries often used leeches to “bleed” people and chinchona bark to treat fevers. Some Apothecaries crafted their own remedies from any number of substances, herbs, animal parts, and other mixtures. Wheelwright The wheelwright was important tradesman in colonial towns. They made wheels for wagons, carriages, and riding chairs. Because colonial roads were rocky and rugged, wheels had to be made to handle the rough conditions. Wheelwrights also built or repaired carts, wheelbarrows and wagons. Wheelwrights had to have precise measuring skills as well as knowledge of basic geometry. Wheelwrights were very important in farming regions, where farmers needed wheeled vehicles to move their crops. TIP: Create a Journal Entry Titled “Colonial Jobs” Jot down some ideas to take home! Cooper Coopers were tradesman who made casks, buckets, barrels, and containers for flour, gunpowder, tobacco, shipping, wine, milk, and other liquids. One kind of container, the hogshead, was used to ship huge quantities of tobacco from the colonies to England. Because the demand for containers was high, colonial coopers made millions of such containers every year. Although coopers are traditionally known for creating barrels (casks), it was actually the “tight cooper” who made them. Other coopers began specializing in making specific types of containers that they could mass produce quickly. Wigmaker In affluent villages and cities, full of wealthy landowners and plantations, the wigmaker was very important. Wigmakers made perukes (wigs) and fashioned the hair of the elite. Wigs were made of horse, goat, or yak hair and skillful wigmakers could customize a wig to the preferences of the customer or to the styles popular in London. The wigmaker was especially busy when the courts were in session as the judges and attorneys each required their own specialized hair pieces. Blacksmith The Blacksmith was an essential merchant and craftsman in a colonial town. He made indispensable items such as horseshoes, pots, pans, and nails. Blacksmiths (sometimes called ferriers) made numerous goods for farmers including axes, plowshares, cowbells, and hoes. They also made hammers, candleholders, tools, files, locks, fireplace racks, and anvils. Most of the blacksmith’s work was done in his personal forge in which scalding bars of iron were hammered with heavy sledges to fashion the iron into various shapes. Return

  23. You are a young colonial child, running late to school, your stomach is hungry so you need to eat, In colonial times this is what you would choose to eat • McDonalds • Microwavable hot pocket • Whatever was hunted from father and prepared by mother Correct answer will direct you to the end slide: Wrong answer will bring you back to the question page, this page!

  24. AWESOME JOB! This is the end of the lesson students, Now I know we learned and were shown so many different things back in a time that we never experienced and probably will never be able to. Unless……since we took all this time and effort to make notes and make up characters and people with the notes you took in all your journal entries, we could create our characters and dress up as them and present them on a date where our parents, friends, family, and fellow faculty could come in and watch us! This way you will be able to express how you fell about the colonial times and the life you live now. You could show them all the things you did in order to create your character, all the time and effort you put forth to learn all the new things about a time where you didn’t exist! This is your chance to maybe teach the audience something they didn’t know! Click Here to Return to the Title Slide for next student

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