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20 Week Observations

20 Week Observations Many students are completing their homework and improving their writing skills. Several students are taking advantage of extra credit and have averages over 100% Areas that needs improvement:

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20 Week Observations

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  1. 20 Week Observations • Many students are completing their homework and improving their writing skills. • Several students are taking advantage of extra credit and have averages over 100% • Areas that needs improvement: • homework- it is now worth 45 points per assignment- several students are not attempting and copy from my power point. Or copying from another student. • lack of quiz/exam preparation. Few students are reviewing their notes and re-reading the section/chapter

  2. Class Time- Too many students not ready or listening to directions. Have to remind you what task we are on and to update your homework, take notes on an important topic. Not ready at the beginning of class- does not have notebook, pencil/pen, homework, etc. Disrupting class- talking during instruction, sharpening pencil, picking the end of the pencil, and then re-sharpen.

  3. Objectives Discover the role that African Americans played in the American Revolution. Find out how the war affected women and other civilians. Learn about the progress of the fighting on the western frontier and at sea.

  4. Terms and People enlist– sign up for duty civilian– person not in the military continental– paper money printed by the Continental Congress George Rogers Clark– Virginian who led American troops against the British on the western frontier

  5. Terms and People (continued) Bernardo de Gálvez – governor of Louisiana who played a major role in Spanish attacks against the British John Paul Jones– American naval commander who won a key battle against the British privateer– armed civilian ship given its government’s permission to attack enemy ships and keep their goods

  6. How did the effects of the war widen? Quick Essay While Continental soldiers faced battle in the thirteen colonies, many people in other places also felt the war’s effects. American Revolution Native Americans Western settlers Women African Americans

  7. African Americans fought on both sides during the American Revolution. African Americans Patriots British

  8. Free African Americans fought for the Patriots from the beginning, seeing action at several key battles. Q.E • Lexington and Concord • Bunker Hill • Saratoga Some enslaved people also supported the Americans after escaping from their owners.

  9. If they fought for the British, however, enslaved people were offered something of immense value. Q.E Freedom To gain their freedom, thousands of enslaved Americans fled their owners and joined the British.

  10. At first, George Washington refused to accept African American soldiers. Q.E Washington reversed his policy, however, after so many African Americans began to join the British forces. By the end of the war, more than 7,000 African Americans had fought for the Patriots.

  11. Women, too, were affected by the war, often taking on new responsibilities. • At home, women: • planted crops • tended livestock • ran businesses Men who enlisted were away for at least one year

  12. Some women followed their husbands into battle. They provided supplies, food, and water. They cared for the wounded. Some, like Molly Pitcher, stepped in to fight when her husband fell.

  13. Soldiers and civilians alike were affected by the financial burdens of paying for the war. • Congress had no power to tax, and the states had little money. Continental Continental Value Amount printed • Congress printed continentalsto pay expenses, but the money soon lost its value. Continental Continental

  14. Those on the western frontier also felt the war’s effects. British Native Americans Most Native Americans sided with the British, fearing anAmerican victory would bring more settlers onto their lands.

  15. Many Indian groups, however, were bitterly divided about which side to support. Some split into warring factions. A deadly epidemic added to the crushing effects of war. Infighting Western raids Smallpox Native Americans

  16. George Rogers Clark pushed west to strike British forts on the frontier. Clark won key battles against the British and their Native American allies. These victories allowed settlers to remain on the frontier.

  17. Clark and other Americans were given help by the Spanish, who declared war on Britain in 1779. Spanish Patriots

  18. Bernardode Gálvez, the governor of Louisiana, played a key role in Spanish attacks that captured British forts along the Mississippi and the Gulf of Mexico. Spanish British Gálvez also gave refuge to American ships in New Orleans harbor.

  19. The Americans needed the help. Their small navy was no match for the British fleet, which dominated the seas. Thirteen colonies British ships blockaded most American ports

  20. A much-needed naval victory was won off the English coast when John Paul Jonesrefused to give up a long and difficult fight, forcing a British ship to surrender. Privateers also helped the Americans, seizing supplies and goods from British merchant ships.

  21. Section Review QuickTake Quiz Know It, Show It Quiz

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