Title: The Unrest-O-Meter
1UnderstandingColonial Unrest
Colonial Unrest-O-Meter
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Proclamation of 1763 Quatering Act 1765 Stamp Act 1765 Townshend Act 1767 Boston Massacre 1770 Boston Tea Party 1773 Intolerable Acts 1774 First Continental Congress 1774 Lexington and Concord 1775
Proclamation of 1763 Quatering Act 1765 Stamp Act 1765 Townshend Act 1767 Boston Massacre 1770 Boston Tea Party 1773 Intolerable Acts 1774 First Continental Congress 1774 Lexington and Concord 1775
Proclamation of 1763 Quatering Act 1765 Stamp Act 1765 Townshend Act 1767 Boston Massacre 1770 Boston Tea Party 1773 Intolerable Acts 1774 First Continental Congress 1774 Lexington and Concord 1775
Proclamation of 1763 Quatering Act 1765 Stamp Act 1765 Townshend Act 1767 Boston Massacre 1770 Boston Tea Party 1773 Intolerable Acts 1774 First Continental Congress 1774 Lexington and Concord 1775
Proclamation of 1763 Quatering Act 1765 Stamp Act 1765 Townshend Act 1767 Boston Massacre 1770 Boston Tea Party 1773 Intolerable Acts 1774 First Continental Congress 1774 Lexington and Concord 1775
Proclamation of 1763 Quatering Act 1765 Stamp Act 1765 Townshend Act 1767 Boston Massacre 1770 Boston Tea Party 1773 Intolerable Acts 1774 First Continental Congress 1774 Lexington and Concord 1775
Proclamation of 1763 Quatering Act 1765 Stamp Act 1765 Townshend Act 1767 Boston Massacre 1770 Boston Tea Party 1773 Intolerable Acts 1774 First Continental Congress 1774 Lexington and Concord 1775
Proclamation of 1763 Quatering Act 1765 Stamp Act 1765 Townshend Act 1767 Boston Massacre 1770 Boston Tea Party 1773 Intolerable Acts 1774 First Continental Congress 1774 Lexington and Concord 1775
Proclamation of 1763 Quatering Act 1765 Stamp Act 1765 Townshend Act 1767 Boston Massacre 1770 Boston Tea Party 1773 Intolerable Acts 1774 First Continental Congress 1774 Lexington and Concord 1775
Proclamation of 1763 Quatering Act 1765 Stamp Act 1765 Townshend Act 1767 Boston Massacre 1770 Boston Tea Party 1773 Intolerable Acts 1774 First Continental Congress 1774 Lexington and Concord 1775
Proclamation of 1763 Quatering Act 1765 Stamp Act 1765 Townshend Act 1767 Boston Massacre 1770 Boston Tea Party 1773 Intolerable Acts 1774 First Continental Congress 1774 Lexington and Concord 1775
2SWBAT
- Given placards with short descriptions of
selected events and group discussion student will
be able to - Discuss events that turned proud British subjects
of 1763 into rebellious Americans by 1775. - Fill in a information capture sheet and
evaluate/rate the relative levels of unrest for
each event
3Group Work Activity
- Explain how proud British subjects of 1763 became
rebellious Americans by 1775 by discussing 9
events leading up to the American Revolution. - Rate the relative levels of unrest each event
causes. This will be done by - Learning about and analyzing nine events between
1763 and 1775. - Completing a Matrix summarizing each event.
- Rating and providing a rationale for each event
through discussion and consensus. - Finally, arriving at a class consensus in rating
each event.
4Unrest-O-Meter Process
- Divide into groups no greater than four or five.
- Placards will be passed from group to group at
Mr. Ls direction (no rushing! 5 7 minutes
ea.). - Locate the event on the matrix (the letter after
the 3.3_ ) - One group member reads the placard to the rest of
the group. The group summarizes. - Group discussion to reach consensus on that
events outcome, causes, and rating. - When directed, pass placard clockwise (from a top
looking down position). - When all nine events have been discussed, adjust
your meter to show no more than 36 blocks.
5Unrest-O-Meter Rating Criteria
- Discuss criteria to be used for ratings.
6Class Consensus
- Groups summarize events while Mr. L marks
Unrest-O-Meter. No discussion of rating, only
clarification of event. - After all nine events are placed, class consensus
to arrive at 36 rating blocks.
EXAMPLE ONLY
7Colonial Unrest-O-Meter
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Proclamation of 1763 Quatering Act 1765 Stamp Act 1765 Townshend Act 1767 Boston Massacre 1770 Boston Tea Party 1773 Intolerable Acts 1774 First Continental Congress 1774 Lexington and Concord 1775
Proclamation of 1763 Quatering Act 1765 Stamp Act 1765 Townshend Act 1767 Boston Massacre 1770 Boston Tea Party 1773 Intolerable Acts 1774 First Continental Congress 1774 Lexington and Concord 1775
Proclamation of 1763 Quatering Act 1765 Stamp Act 1765 Townshend Act 1767 Boston Massacre 1770 Boston Tea Party 1773 Intolerable Acts 1774 First Continental Congress 1774 Lexington and Concord 1775
Proclamation of 1763 Quatering Act 1765 Stamp Act 1765 Townshend Act 1767 Boston Massacre 1770 Boston Tea Party 1773 Intolerable Acts 1774 First Continental Congress 1774 Lexington and Concord 1775
Proclamation of 1763 Quatering Act 1765 Stamp Act 1765 Townshend Act 1767 Boston Massacre 1770 Boston Tea Party 1773 Intolerable Acts 1774 First Continental Congress 1774 Lexington and Concord 1775
Proclamation of 1763 Quatering Act 1765 Stamp Act 1765 Townshend Act 1767 Boston Massacre 1770 Boston Tea Party 1773 Intolerable Acts 1774 First Continental Congress 1774 Lexington and Concord 1775
Proclamation of 1763 Quatering Act 1765 Stamp Act 1765 Townshend Act 1767 Boston Massacre 1770 Boston Tea Party 1773 Intolerable Acts 1774 First Continental Congress 1774 Lexington and Concord 1775
Proclamation of 1763 Quatering Act 1765 Stamp Act 1765 Townshend Act 1767 Boston Massacre 1770 Boston Tea Party 1773 Intolerable Acts 1774 First Continental Congress 1774 Lexington and Concord 1775
Proclamation of 1763 Quatering Act 1765 Stamp Act 1765 Townshend Act 1767 Boston Massacre 1770 Boston Tea Party 1773 Intolerable Acts 1774 First Continental Congress 1774 Lexington and Concord 1775
Proclamation of 1763 Quatering Act 1765 Stamp Act 1765 Townshend Act 1767 Boston Massacre 1770 Boston Tea Party 1773 Intolerable Acts 1774 First Continental Congress 1774 Lexington and Concord 1775
Proclamation of 1763 Quatering Act 1765 Stamp Act 1765 Townshend Act 1767 Boston Massacre 1770 Boston Tea Party 1773 Intolerable Acts 1774 First Continental Congress 1774 Lexington and Concord 1775
8A) Proclamation of 1763
- The King said To prevent wars with the _______,
the land west of the _______________ would be
reserved for the Indians no colonial settlement
west of the mountains. - Why?
- The King did not want to ____________________
____________________________. - He did not want to ________________________.
- ??? He also may have felt that he was protecting
the land rights of the Native Americans, they
were now his subjects.
9B) The Quartering Act
- Colonists were required to ensure British
Soldiers were ______________________ - __________________________________________________
________________. - Colonists did not trust the presence of the
soldiers felt soldiers would be used to enforce
laws. - They did not want to pay ___________ expenses
- They did not believe it was for their own good
believed the soldiers ________ - ________________________________
- Did not want soldiers in their homes because
they did not ____________
10C) The Stamp Act 1765
- Stamp tax __________________ were to be taxed.
The Stamp was applied to show the tax was paid.
Items to be taxed newspapers, pamphlets,
marriage licenses, playing cards. - Outcome 9 colonies sent representatives to the
____________________, passing a resolution
demanding GB repeal the Stamp Act. (Virginia, New
Hampshire, North Carolina, and Georgia were not
represented.) - _____________ were put into place.
- In Boston Sam Adams organized ______
- ____________________________________
- John Adams called this the ___________
- ____________________________________.
11D) The Townshend Acts 1767
- An Indirect, hidden, tax levied on finished
products __________ into the country proposed
by British Parliament cabinet member Charles
Townshend - Taxes raised the _______ of the products.
- Acts also allowed British to ____ _____________
American ships and warehouses suspected of
___________ goods - Colonists saw through the plan and again
_________________ - ______________ British goods
12E) The Boston Massacre
- Date 05 MAR 1770
- Description ________________ fired on an
unruly __________ of Bostonians. - Result The British soldiers were put on
trial. Defended by _______________. The Incident
was used as _____________ by the Sons of Liberty. - ___________ are advertisements and letters used
to inflame or sway peoples opinions (__________
____________ printed this poster and made sure
they were posted around Boston)
13F) The Boston Tea Party
- 1773 British Parliament passed the ___________
- This gave the British East Indies company a
_________. - The irony of the boycott and party is that the
tea was actually _________ than before, but the
Bostonians would not buy it on the principle of
it being taxed without their _____________.
- Boston boycotted and then destroyed the tea.
14G) The Intolerable Acts 1774
- Also called ________________
- The acts were passed to force the colonist to pay
for the ________________. - ______________ was closed by the English Navy
- The rallying cry, If it can be done to Boston .
. . it can ____________________. - The rallying cry was used to alert the other
colonies to ____________________
15H) The First Continental Congress 1774
- The colonies finally begin to ______! (12 of
the 13, not Georgia) - The colonial representatives
endorsed resolutions to - ___________ the Intolerable acts
- Form ________ to resist the enforcement of the
acts - And called on the colonies to ____________ with GB
16I) Lexington and Concord
The shot heard round the world!
17Lexington and Concord
- Date April 19, 1775
- British intentions to capture stores of
_________ and Sons of Liberty ____________ - ______________________.
- The Lexington Militia stood their ground, a
confrontation ensued, and it sparked the days
conflagration. - Before returning to Boston . . .
- 73 British solders were dead 174 were wounded.
- 49 patriots were killed, 39 more were wounded.
18What follows?
- In the next unit we will discuss
- The forming of the Second Continental Congress
- The drafting of the Declaration of Independence
- The forming of the Continental Army under the
leadership of George Washington - And the early battles of the American Revolution
also know as the War for Independence