American Idustrial Revolution: Exaplains what the revolution was, why it began, who it affected and how, leading inventors and engineers, pros & cons, problem and solution.
The prestation was followed with a class discusion and a 21 question game involving the inventors and engineers that were presented in the power point.
3. What Was The Industrial Revolution? Definition: rev-o-lu-tion(noun) forcible overthrow of a government or social order for a new system An era in which fundamental changes occurred in agriculture, textile, metal manufacturing, transportation, economic policies, and the social structure throughout the leading countries of the world American Revolution: 1820-1870
44. Melosi, M. V., & Pratt, J. A. (2007). Energy metropolis: an environmental history of Houston and the Gulf Coast. Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press. PinkMonkey.com World History Study Guide - 8.6 Consequences of the Industrial Revolution. (n.d.). PinkMonkey.com-450+ Free Book Notes, Study Guides, Chapter Summary,Online,DownloadBooknotes. Retrieved September 15, 2011, from http://pinkmonkey.com/studyguides/subjects/worldhis/chap8/w0808601.asp Soman, E. (n.d.). Cultural, Economic and Political Impacts of Industrial Revolution | Society. Society | Society on the Web. Retrieved September 20, 2011, from http://socyberty.com/history/cultural-economic-and-political-impacts-of-industrial-revolution/ Zanden, J. L. (2009). The long road to the Industrial Revolution the European economy in a global perspective, 1000-1800. Leiden: BRILL. comparing., & today, c. c. (n.d.). 81.02.06: The Industrial Revolution. Yale University. Retrieved September 16, 2011, from http://yale.edu/ynhti/curriculum/units/1981/2/81.02.06.x.html were, 1. l. (n.d.). INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION. World History International: World History Essays From Prehistory To The Present. Retrieved September 14, 2011, from http://history-world.org/Industrial%20Intro.htm