In a flash, the week is over and so is our first marking period. Next week we hold Parent-Teacher Conferences. Our conferences will be panel style where you will have the opportunity to sit with all of your core teachers (History, Science, Math, English, and Spanish) in a single setting. Please email Mrs. Dean with questions or to schedule a session.
We ended the marking period in a perfect position to step forward into Unit 3 - The Constitution. However, when preparing to study the Constitution, we must pause to learn of its need. Often, people learned to forget or ignore the critical years between the end of the American Revolution and the creation of the Constitution. From 1781 until 1788, the United States were not united and was not a single nation. Rather it was a loose association of independent nations (states) organized under a confederation. They agreed to be unified for common defense and welfare according to The Articles of Confederation (a.k.a. Constitution 1.0). The reason why the Constitution we know and love was created was because the first one failed...
So we spent time this week looking at that failure and the nature of 13 free sovereign and independent nations figuring things out. One question we wondered about and explored was "Could Washington have become king?" We read in a letter an offer made to Washington by many of his Army officers. It was a proposition formed from significant grievances about Congress and the "weakness of republicks". It offered Washington the title of King if he agreed to lead the army to take over Congress. Washington, of course, sternly put that idea down. His choice of words is worth asking your son or daughter about. Read more about this as the beginnings of what would later develop into the Newburgh Conspiracy.
Finally we learned today about the one successful and lasting accomplishment of the Confederation Congress under the Articles of Confederation. Do you know why Branch County is made up of townships with 36 square miles each? Do you know why county roads are generally east/west and north/south and are spaced at mile intervals? Ask your son/daughter. Because they learned about the Land Ordinance of 1785 and the Northwest Ordinance of 1787 and how these two laws created a revenue stream for Congress and territories for the addition of future states.
Big week. Lots to talk about this weekend.
Next week we focus on a near-second revolution that began with some justifiably angry farmers in Massachusetts.
See you at conferences!
Mr. Bruce
We ended the marking period in a perfect position to step forward into Unit 3 - The Constitution. However, when preparing to study the Constitution, we must pause to learn of its need. Often, people learned to forget or ignore the critical years between the end of the American Revolution and the creation of the Constitution. From 1781 until 1788, the United States were not united and was not a single nation. Rather it was a loose association of independent nations (states) organized under a confederation. They agreed to be unified for common defense and welfare according to The Articles of Confederation (a.k.a. Constitution 1.0). The reason why the Constitution we know and love was created was because the first one failed...
So we spent time this week looking at that failure and the nature of 13 free sovereign and independent nations figuring things out. One question we wondered about and explored was "Could Washington have become king?" We read in a letter an offer made to Washington by many of his Army officers. It was a proposition formed from significant grievances about Congress and the "weakness of republicks". It offered Washington the title of King if he agreed to lead the army to take over Congress. Washington, of course, sternly put that idea down. His choice of words is worth asking your son or daughter about. Read more about this as the beginnings of what would later develop into the Newburgh Conspiracy.
Finally we learned today about the one successful and lasting accomplishment of the Confederation Congress under the Articles of Confederation. Do you know why Branch County is made up of townships with 36 square miles each? Do you know why county roads are generally east/west and north/south and are spaced at mile intervals? Ask your son/daughter. Because they learned about the Land Ordinance of 1785 and the Northwest Ordinance of 1787 and how these two laws created a revenue stream for Congress and territories for the addition of future states.
Big week. Lots to talk about this weekend.
Next week we focus on a near-second revolution that began with some justifiably angry farmers in Massachusetts.
See you at conferences!
Mr. Bruce
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