Explain how industry and agriculture expanded during the early twentieth… | Students learn how factories grew larger and farms became more productive in the early 1900s, and what made both possible. Think assembly lines, new machines, and railroads connecting goods to markets across the country. | SS24.5.1 |
Summarize how important entrepreneurs and inventors shaped American society | Students learn how inventors and business leaders in the early 1900s changed everyday American life, and which Alabamians played a part in those changes. | SS24.5.1a |
Describe the emergence of new forms of economic activity in Alabama at the turn… | Students learn how Alabama shifted from a farming economy to an industrial one around 1900, when iron and steel mills, textile factories, and lumber operations grew into major sources of work and wealth across the state. | SS24.5.1b |
Outline reasons for the growth of urban areas at the turn of the twentieth… | Students learn why American cities grew quickly around 1900, including why Birmingham became a major industrial city. The focus is on jobs, factories, and the pull of city life that drew people away from farms. | SS24.5.1c |
Describe Progressive Era political reforms in both the United States and… | Students learn about political changes in the early 1900s when reformers pushed to make government more honest and responsive. The lesson covers national shifts alongside specific reforms that reshaped Alabama's laws and leadership. | SS24.5.2 |
Summarize how women in Alabama participated in the suffrage movement prior to… | Women fought for the right to vote long before it became law in 1920. Students learn how Alabama women organized, petitioned, and campaigned for suffrage in the years leading up to the Nineteenth Amendment. | SS24.5.2a |
Describe how the Populist Movement influenced the creation of the 1901 Alabama… | Alabama rewrote its state constitution in 1901, partly due to pressure from the Populist Movement. The new rules, like literacy tests and poll taxes, made it harder for Black citizens and poor white farmers to vote. | SS24.5.2b |
Identify and describe examples of prison reform, including the abolition of the… | Students learn how Alabama reformers in the late 1800s worked to end the practice of leasing prisoners to private companies as cheap labor. Julia Tutwiler led much of that fight and pushed for more humane treatment inside prisons. | SS24.5.2c |
Describe Progressive Era social reforms in both the United States and Alabama | Students learn about the Progressive Era, a period in the early 1900s when reformers pushed to fix problems like unsafe workplaces, child labor, and corrupt government. They study how those efforts played out nationally and in Alabama. | SS24.5.3 |
Explain how legislation, individuals | Students learn how new laws, community leaders, and organizations worked to open up schools and expand access to education across Alabama during the early 1900s. | SS24.5.3a |
Summarize the role of labor unions and reformers in changing laws governing… | Students learn how labor unions and reformers pushed for laws that limited working hours, raised wages, and made factories safer for workers and children. | SS24.5.3b |
Summarize Helen Keller’s life and her contributions to disability rights | Students learn who Helen Keller was and what she accomplished. Despite being deaf and blind, she became a writer and activist who pushed for better treatment and greater opportunities for people with disabilities. | SS24.5.3c |
Analyze the reasons for increased immigration to | Students examine why millions of people moved to the United States or relocated within it during the early 1900s. They look at what pushed people to leave home and what pulled them toward new cities, states, and regions like Alabama. | SS24.5.4 |
Compare the experiences of immigrants who entered the United States through… | Immigrants arrived in America through different entry points, and each experience varied. Students compare what it was like to arrive through places like Ellis Island on the East Coast versus Angel Island on the West Coast, looking at how inspections, wait times, and treatment differed by location. | SS24.5.4a |
Identify the economic and social conditions that led to the start of the Great… | The Great Migration was the movement of millions of Black Americans from the rural South to Northern cities in the early 1900s. Students identify the economic hardships and racial violence that pushed people to leave, and the factory jobs and greater freedoms that pulled them north. | SS24.5.4b |
Summarize the primary causes and consequences of World War I | Students learn why World War I started, including the alliances and rivalries that pulled nations into conflict, and what changed afterward, from redrawn borders to the conditions that shaped the rest of the twentieth century. | SS24.5.5 |
Identify and explain international events that led to the United States’ entry… | Students learn why the U.S. joined World War I after years of staying out, tracing the international events that pushed the country in, from submarine attacks to alliances pulling nations into conflict. | SS24.5.5a |
Identify the countries of the Triple Entente and Central Powers during World… | Students name the countries that fought on each side of World War I and find them on a map. The Allied side included France, Britain, and Russia; the opposing Central Powers included Germany and Austria-Hungary. | SS24.5.5b |
Describe the roles and contributions of Alabamians, including the 167th… | Students learn how Alabamians served in World War I, including soldiers in the 167th Infantry Regiment. They look at what those men did overseas and how their service shaped the state's connection to the war. | SS24.5.5c |
Locate Alabama military training camps, ammunition depots | Students find Alabama's military training camps, ammunition depots, and the Port of Mobile on a map and explain how each one supported the U.S. war effort during World War I. | SS24.5.5d |