Transcript Example

The Great Depression
Chapter 12: Utah Life Reflects the
Nation
Check under your
desk for gum. If you
find any, remove it!
Bell Activity
Your words are “bankrupt” & “depression”
(economic term, not the mental illness)
Find the word on your yellow study guide and
complete the following information for the word.
The music today is from the Great Depression.
The Depression lasted from 1929 to 1939 and was
a very difficult time for most people. Some songs
from this time express this, but most are upbeat.
Strangely, when times are sad, the music is
usually happy, hoping times will be better.
Does your work look something like
this?
Word:
bankrupt
Definition:
Draw a picture of it:
Sentence:
Synonym/
Example:
My Understanding: 4 3 2 1
Antonym/NonExample:
Does your work look something like
this?
Word:
bankrupt
Definition: a state of being unable to
Satisfy financial obligations [pay bills]
Sentence: Many people went bankrupt
during the Great Depression from losses
in the stock market or from job losses.
Synonym/
Antonym/NonExample: broke,
Example: solvent, ,
insolvent, penniless well-off, prosperous
My Understanding: 4 3 2 1
Draw a picture of it:
Does your work look something like
this?
Word:
depression
Definition:
Draw a picture of it:
Sentence:
Synonym/
Example:
My Understanding: 4 3 2 1
Antonym/NonExample:
Does your work look
something like this?
Word:
depression
Definition: a period during which
business, employment, and stock market
values remain at a low level of activity.
Sentence: The Great Depression was
partially caused by people buying stocks
on credit, which over inflated its value.
Synonym/
Antonym/NonExample: slump,
Example: recovery,
recession, downturn upturn, boom times
My Understanding: 4 3 2 1
Draw a picture of it:
Today we will learn…
 History Objective –
We will examine how
the Great Depression
affected life in Utah and
the rest of the United
States.
 Language Objective –
We will read for
information to answer
questions about the
Great Depression and
how it affected Utah.
 Behavior Objective – Collaboration: Take turns
reading with your table partners and helping
them figure out the answers to questions.
End of the Roaring ‘20s
 Read pages 242-243 with your table partners.
 Answer question 20 in your study guide with
specific lifestyle changes that occurred in the
1920s.
 Then answer questions 26-27 on your orange
paper from yesterday.
 If you have time, you can collaborate with your
table partners for any missing answers from
your Roaring Twenties or WWI video guides
after finishing the other questions.
The Great Depression
 In many ways, the Great Depression was the
opposite of the Roaring Twenties. People lost
their jobs, their homes and, sometimes, their
families.
 Utah was especially hit hard by the bad
economy. Utah’s main businesses were
farming (agriculture) and mining, both of which
lost almost all value in the Depression.
 Some Utah counties experienced more than 70%
unemployment rates.
Children in the Depression
 What was it like growing up during the Great
Depression? For many people, life was a daily
struggle. At the peak of the Depression, 25% of the
nation's workers -- one out of four -- were
unemployed. No job meant no
money to pay the mortgage or buy
food and clothes for the family.
 Times were hard whether you lived
in a city or on a farm, whether you
were an adult or a child.
Children in the Depression
 Families unable to pay the mortgage lost their homes
and farms.
 As a result, about 250,000 young people were
homeless in the early years of the Depression. Many
became nomads, traveling the
highways and railways.
 20% of America's children were
hungry and without proper
clothing.
 In some coal mining regions, the
percentage of malnourished
children reached as high as 90%.
Children in the Depression
 Children went without shoes and




warm clothes for the winter.
Thousands of schools had to close
down because they lacked the
money to stay open.
About 3 million children between 7 and 17 had to
leave school. 40% of young people from age 16 to 24
were neither in school nor working.
Read pages 244-251 about the
Great Depression in Utah.
Answer questions 21-29 in your
study guide.
Check under your
desk for gum. If you
find any, remove it!
Bell Activity
 Your words are “watershed” and
“reclamation”.
 Work on questions 21-29 or any incomplete
parts of your study guide when you are done
with the word. Remember, the test is Tuesday!
 The music today is from the Great Depression.
Although most of the music from this era is happy,
there are other songs that express Americans’
frustrations and sadness with the situation and how
hopeless they were at times. Listen for those themes.
Where should your backpack be?
Does your work look something like
this?
Word:
watershed
Definition:
Draw a picture of it:
Sentence:
Synonym/
Example:
My Understanding: 4 3 2 1
Antonym/NonExample:
Does your work look something like
this?
Word:
watershed
Definition:
Draw a picture of it:
Sentence: An area’s water cycle
includes water sheds.
Synonym/
Example: Bear
River watershed
My Understanding: 4 3 2 1
Antonym/NonExample: ocean
Does your work look something like
this?
Word:
reclamation
Definition:
Draw a picture of it:
Sentence:
Synonym/
Example:
My Understanding: 4 3 2 1
Antonym/NonExample:
Does your work look something like
this?
Word:
reclamation
Definition:
Sentence: During the early 20th century,
reclamation projects created reservoirs
and dams in the west to store water.
Synonym/
Antonym/NonExample: reservoir Example: desert;
irrigation system
deforestation
My Understanding: 4 3 2 1
Draw a picture of it:
Today we will learn…
 History Objective –
We will examine how
the Great Depression
affected life in Utah and
the rest of the United
States.
 Language Objective –
We will listen for
important details in
the video and write
them in our notes.
 Behavior Objective – Participation: Answer the
questions when called on to do so.
The Great Depression
 1) Although Black Tuesday signaled the beginning of the






Great Depression, there were more causes of it than that one
event. Describe three more causes in complete sentences.
2) What were some of the reasons Herbert Hoover lost the
support of voters?
3) What were some of the reforms FDR put through
Congress in the first 100 days of his presidency?
4) How was FDR’s approach to the Great Depression
different than Hoover’s?
5) What did Roosevelt’s critics think were the problems with
the New Deal?
6) What reforms were included in the Second New Deal?
7) How did WWII end the Great Depression?
Check under your
desk for gum. If you
find any, remove it!
Bell Activity
 Get your response paper and write
your reaction to this situation.
 Imagine your parents lost their jobs due to the
recession. What would your family do to get by
until they could find a new job? What if it were
several years before they could find a job? How
might this change your life?
Where should your backpack be?