Essential Question: Can Politics Fix Social Problems?
Essential Question: Can Politics Fix Social Problems?
Essential Question: Can Politics Fix Social Problems?
Period:
1. How did most Americans view East Coast bankers such as JP Morgan?
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2. What was the direct consequence of economic inequalities felt by farmers and workers?
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3. How was William Jennings Bryan able to give voice to the frustrations of working Americans?
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1. Progressivism was a ____________________ of different ideas and activities, not a tightly organized
political ____________________ with a specific set of goals. Rather, it was a series of responses to
3. Most agreed that ____________________ should take a more active role in solving society’s problems.
4. Science and technology had benefited people; thus, progressives believed using scientific principles
1. Among the first people to articulate progressive ideas was a group of crusading ___________________
3. By raising awareness of these problems, the muckrakers stimulated __________ for ______________.
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Reforming Government
2. They condemned the government ________________ but did not always agree on the best way to
1. Books such as Frederick W. Taylor’s The Principles of Scientific Management (1911) described how a
company could increase __________________ by managing time, breaking tasks down into smaller
__________, and using standardized tools- a scientific ________________ to business that some
“In some form or other nearly every governmental problem that involves the health, the happiness or the
prosperity of the State has arisen, because some private interest intervened or has sought for its own gain to
exploit either the resources or the politics of the State. I take it, therefore, that the first duty that is mine to
perform is to eliminate every private interest from the government, and to make the public service of the State
responsive solely to the people. The State is entitled to the highest efficiency in our public service, and the
efficiency I shall endeavor at all times to give. It is obvious that the requisite degree of efficiency can not be
attained where any public servant divides his allegiance between the public service and private interest.”
- Hiram Johnson, inauguration speech, 1911
2. Summarize Johngson’s argument in two or three sentences, and explain how this primary source
contributes to progressivism.
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divided city government into several departments, with each under an expert commissioner’s control. A
second, a _____________________ system, employed a city manager who was hired by the city
council.
Democratic Reforms
1. Another group of progressives focused on making government more ________________ and responsive
to ________________. Many believed that the key to improving government was to make
2. La Follette pressured the state legislature to pass a law requiring parties to hold a _______________
________________, in which all party members could vote for a candidate to run in the general
election.
3. The ________________ permits citizens to introduce ________________ and requires the legislature to
___________ on it.
4. A ________________ allows citizens to vote on proposed laws directly. Referendums are also used to
5. The ____________ provided voters an option to demand a special election to remove an elected
Woman Suffrage
1. At the first women’s rights convention in Seneca Falls, New York, in 1848, Elizabeth Cady Stanton
convinced the delegates that winning ________________-the right to vote- should be a priority.
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2. In what direction did support for woman suffrage generally move throughout the country before 1920?
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Early Challenges
2. The debate over these two amendments split the movement into two groups:
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Building Support
________________________________________________________________________ (_________).
2. As the Progressive movement gained momentum, however, many women realized that they need the
3. Women began organizing events, handing out ______________, and delivering ______________.
4. _______________ is when you contact a political leader personally, explain your ______________,
and try to convince them to ______________ for a legislator financially when they run for reelection.
emphasized non-violent protest to promote women’s right to participate in the ______________ process.
6. The hunger strikers were force fed in ______________, and the story gathered a lot of attention in the
press, creating a national scandal. Equally disturbing was a police attack on a group of woman
______________ that left several women with ______________ and broken _________.
7. While the NWP had focused on non-violent protest, the leader of NAWSA, Carrie Chapman Catt, had
organized the ______________ movement for one nationwide push for suffrage.
Reforming Society
1. While many progressives focused on reforming the political system, others focused on social problems,
3. Because the culture of the time generally expected ______________ and ______________ to work and
provide for their ______________, women and children who lost their husbands.
Child Labor
1. Children had always worked on family farms, but mines and factories were presented more dangerous
2. Reports like these convinced states to pass laws that set a ______________ age for employment and
established other limits on child labor, such as ______________ hours children could work. At the same
time, many states began passing compulsory ______________ laws, requiring young children to be in
3. The ______________ ______________ investigated issues like infant mortality, orphanages, and
1. When workers were injured or killed on the job,, they and their ______________ received little or no
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2. Progressives joined union leaders to pressure states for workers’ compensation laws. These laws
established ______________ funds that employers financed. Workers injured in accidents received
3. In two cases, Lochner v. New York (_______) and Muller v. Oregon (_______), the U.S. Supreme Court
4. On March 25, 1911, a tragedy occurred in ______________________________ that led to new reforms.
5. In response, New York created a Factory Investigating Commission and soon passed new laws that
6. Some progressives also favored zoning laws as a method of protecting the public. These laws divided a
town or city into ______________ for commercial, residential, or other development, thereby regulating
2. Settlement-house workers knew that ______________ were often spent on ______________ instead of
the _____________, and that ___________________ often led to physical ______________, illness,
__________________.
5. Willard convinced the WCTU to support women’s suffrage and champion many social selfcare causes,
including prison reform, __________ pay for women, protections for ______________, and the eight
hour day.
6. The Anti-Saloon League concentrated on reducing alcohol consumption. Later it pressed for
beverages.
1. Congressed passed a number of proposals to ______________ the economy under the presidential
______________. Many progressives agreed that big b business needed ______________. Some
believed that the government should break up big ______________ and restore ______________.
2. Others argued that big business was the most efficient way to organize the ______________.
3. Some activists event went so far as to advocate ______________- the idea that the government should
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