The essential question was "How should we define democracy? How democratic was the United States in the early 1800s?" To answer this, my group created a video to try to explain the rise of democracy in the United States in the 19th century. We first analyzed the documents we were given: a painting and an article about it, two charts about the voting from the time period, voting quotes and a primary source about The Dorr War. By reading the documents and taking notes on each, we came up with the definition of democracy as: "Democracy is a form of government in which all legal citizens have the right to vote, and all votes have value." The votes may have direct or indirect impact. In the 1800's only white, male property owners were allowed to vote, not women or African Americans. Voting was not a structured process in the 19th century, as can be seen in the painting, where many of the men voting have already voted, but have sworn that they haven't already. Also, many candidates bought votes or won because certain judges liked them.
Tuesday, January 13, 2015
The Rise of Democracy
Our Video Presentation
The essential question was "How should we define democracy? How democratic was the United States in the early 1800s?" To answer this, my group created a video to try to explain the rise of democracy in the United States in the 19th century. We first analyzed the documents we were given: a painting and an article about it, two charts about the voting from the time period, voting quotes and a primary source about The Dorr War. By reading the documents and taking notes on each, we came up with the definition of democracy as: "Democracy is a form of government in which all legal citizens have the right to vote, and all votes have value." The votes may have direct or indirect impact. In the 1800's only white, male property owners were allowed to vote, not women or African Americans. Voting was not a structured process in the 19th century, as can be seen in the painting, where many of the men voting have already voted, but have sworn that they haven't already. Also, many candidates bought votes or won because certain judges liked them.
The essential question was "How should we define democracy? How democratic was the United States in the early 1800s?" To answer this, my group created a video to try to explain the rise of democracy in the United States in the 19th century. We first analyzed the documents we were given: a painting and an article about it, two charts about the voting from the time period, voting quotes and a primary source about The Dorr War. By reading the documents and taking notes on each, we came up with the definition of democracy as: "Democracy is a form of government in which all legal citizens have the right to vote, and all votes have value." The votes may have direct or indirect impact. In the 1800's only white, male property owners were allowed to vote, not women or African Americans. Voting was not a structured process in the 19th century, as can be seen in the painting, where many of the men voting have already voted, but have sworn that they haven't already. Also, many candidates bought votes or won because certain judges liked them.
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