| Junior
Achievement Programs |
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America
Works ®
JA
America Works provides students with examples
of how business and entrepreneurship affected
the economic development of the United States
during the 19th century.
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KEY
LEARNING OBJECTIVES |
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Session
One: Who Am I?
Immigrants
flocked to the United States during the
second half of the 19th century (1800s),
bringing a variety of languages, customs,
and cultural practices. Immigrants made
many contributions to their new home, especially
to its economy and workforce. Students learn
more about these contributions and about
the immigrants themselves through reviewing
biographical summaries and identifying immigrant
groups, based on clues provided in the text.
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provide examples of immigrants contributions
to the U.S. economy during the 19th century.
- identify
key information and characteristics related
to select immigrant groups.
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Session
Two: Roughing It
Students
recognize the significance agriculture played
in the economic development of the United
States through various examples provided
during this session. Working in groups,
students take the role of pioneers who moved
across the American West to participate
in the Homestead Act of 1862. Students learn
there are opportunity costs in each decision
they make.
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- give
examples of how pioneers or settlers used
their knowledge, skills, and experience
to acquire a homestead and produce food
for themselves and others.
- recognize
the significant role agriculture played
in the economic development of the United
States during the 1800s.
- identify
the risk factors as well as the costs
and benefits involved in making a decision.
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Session
Three: Strike-It-Rich
Students
learn how natural resources played a significant
role in the development of the
United
States economy. They also look at how supply
and demand, job opportunities,
entrepreneurship,
and mining played a part in the rise and
fall of boomtowns during the California
Gold Rush.
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identify examples of natural resources.
- describe
the boomtown businesses that were needed
to support the miners and mining industry.
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Session Four: In Pursuit of Progress
Students
learn about prevalent modes of transportation
used in America during the 19th century.
They also work in groups to identify the
productive resourcesnatural, human,
and capitalthat were necessary for
the expansion of transportation during that
time period. They play a game that simulates
competition between a railroad company and
a canal company to construct a transportation
route between two towns.
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list several basic modes of transportation
used in 19th-century America.
- identify
the productive resourcesnatural,
human, and capitalthat influenced
the development of transportation during
the 19th century.
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Session Five: Communication Transformation
Students
learn how different means of communication
developed in America during the 19th century.
They are introduced to the telegraph, one
prominent form of communication developed
and used during that time that helped to
expand commerce across the country. Students
learn about and then use Morse Code to decipher
messages in the same way Americans did during
the 19th century.
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- explain
how methods of communication developed
in the 1800s helped expand commerce in
the United States.
- explain
how the invention of the telegraph expanded
business opportunities across America.
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Session Six: Now What?
Students
learn how entrepreneurs bring innovative
and affordable products to market. They
learn how industrialization increases productivity.
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- describe
how improvements in technology and transportation
and the sharing of ideas have affected
the flow of information and increased
productivity.
- calculate
productivity.
- list
examples of technological developments
throughout history.
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CONCEPTS
Benefit, Boomtown, Capital resources, Communication, Competition,
Cost, Cost-benefit analysis, Demand, Emigration, Entrepreneurship,
Human resources, Immigration, Industrialization, Innovation,
Invention, Modes of transportation, Natural resources,
Opportunity cost, Productive resources, Productivity,
Pull factor, Push factor, Risk, Scarcity, Supply, Technology,
Telegraphy |
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SKILLS
Analyzing information, Critical-thinking skills, Decision-making,
Decoding messages, Encoding messages, Gathering, interpreting,
and organizing information, Math calculations, Oral and
written communication, Planning, Reading and interpreting
data, Working in groups |
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