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Educator s Guide With Common Core State Standards correlations

Introduction Many of us learn history as disconnected happenings that occur over the course of time. Few students put the pieces together to see the past as a flow of related events. This biography of Alice Paul offers middle- and high-school classes one continuous story that encompasses the history of the women s rights movement in the United States. Alice Paul was born in 1885, several decades after Lucretia Mott and Elizabeth Cady Stanton began their fight for women s suffrage in Seneca Falls, New York. Their work heavily influenced the course Alice would take. She continued their campaigns and pushed them forward through the early twentieth century to the ratification of the Nineteenth Amendment, which guaranteed women the vote in the U.S., and then forward once again to the struggle for equal rights in the last half of the twentieth century. By reading and studying Alice Paul and the Fight for Women s Rights by Deborah Kops, your students will journey through the story of the women s rights movement and learn about the goals, tactics, opposition, disappointments, and hard-won successes from decade to decade. They will understand how the movement had to adjust strategies because of changes on the world stage from two world wars to U.S. elections and changing political power structures and how information and news was communicated in the years before radio, television, and Internet. They will learn about the importance of leadership in moving goals forward and will meet a large group of history-makers whose names they probably have never heard, realizing the power of each individual in making change. Students will learn to recognize the way one event led to another and how one leader laid the foundation for the next. With this guide, you can extend and deepen your students experience with discussions and activities to enrich their learning. We have arranged the guide by broad curriculum areas language arts, history, women s studies, political science, critical thinking, and more and included Common Core State Standards alignments. Common Core abbreviations used in this guide: RI Reading: Informational Text W Writing SL Speaking & Listening

Before Reading Introduce a few amazing facts to your class. They all describe our country in the early twentieth century. Women had no custody rights over their children. If a woman married a man who was a citizen of another country, the woman lost her U.S. citizenship. Women had no property rights after they married. Although several states allowed women to vote, there was no federal law enfranchising women. It took many women to change things. One of them who played a central role over a long period of time was Alice Paul. She dedicated herself to the cause of women s equality, and despite great personal sacrifices and against all kinds of opposition she helped to lead the fight and to shape the future, usually without acknowledgement. But there were people who recognized the importance of Alice s and her many colleagues work, including a congressman who said: Your being so annoying and persistent and troublesome, and being just like that sand that gets into your eyes when the wind blows, is what has put the suffrage amendment on the map (page 126). Now introduce Alice Paul and the Fight for Women s Rights to your students, letting them know they are about to see just how annoying and persistent and troublesome the women activists were! While Reading LANGUAGE ARTS: VOCABULARY Have your students collect words that are new to them as they read Alice Paul and the Fight for Women s Rights. They can create an index card for each word. On one side they should copy the sentence in which the new word appears in the book. On the back of the card they should define it. Below are ten words to get your students started: Suffragette Feminist Enfranchise Quakers Amendment [RI 9-10.4] Delegation Petition Sentinel Ratify Platform

LANGUAGE ARTS: READING COMPREHENSION AND RETENTION; SOCIAL STUDIES; HISTORY QUESTIONS OF FACT These questions give you an opportunity to check in on how well your students are following, understanding, and retaining the book. Tell the class they should answer these questions with specific examples and information from the text. 1. How did being a Quaker shape Alice s life? 2. What was the Women s Social and Political Union (WSPU) in England? How did their tactics differ from those of the National American Women s Suffrage Association (NAWSA) in the U.S.? How did their tactics influence Alice Paul? 3. Name three occasions when Alice Paul went to jail. Provide details about why and where she was incarcerated, how she responded, and when she was released. 4. Why did Carrie Chapman Catt verbally assail Alice Paul at the 1913 NAWSA annual convention in Washington, DC? 5. What was the Alice Paul Effect? 6. Trace the changes in what began as the National American Women s Suffrage Association as it splintered off into another organization. Describe the differences of opinions and strategies that led to the changes. For example, NAWSA wanted to work with individual states to enfranchise women state by state. Alice Paul and the Congressional Committee saw an amendment to the U.S. Constitution as the best way to achieve voting for women. 7. What was President Woodrow Wilson s position regarding national suffrage rights for women? 8. Who was the first female member of Congress? From what state did she come? 9. In many ways, we can think of Alice Paul as a woman of grand gestures. Describe several that she staged in the course of the struggle for women s suffrage and later for the passage of the Equal Rights Amendment.

10. List some of the reasons many women and women s organizations were opposed to the Equal Rights Amendment from the 1920s through the 1950s. 11. What was the Montevideo Convention? What issues did Alice Paul hope to raise there? What treaty was the result? What did it decree? 12. Who was Betty Friedan? What contribution did she make to the women s rights movement? What was NOW? [RI 9-10.1, 2, 5, 6, 8] LANGUAGE ARTS: CRITICAL THINKING, SPEAKING AND LISTENING, RESEARCH; SOCIAL STUDIES: POLITICAL SCIENCE, SOCIOLOGY, ETHICS AND VALUES, WOMEN S STUDIES; HISTORY DISCUSSION QUESTIONS 1. When Alice Paul and three of her colleagues were arrested in 1917 at the West Gate of the White House, the judge declared: You force me to take the most drastic means in my power to compel you to obey the law (page 9). At that time, Alice was the head of the National Woman s Party, but the police and the judge thought of her as the ringleader. Open a discussion about how people with very different points of view can begin to work together for the greater good. Use examples from the book and from contemporary news. 2. In a room about the size of a large closet sat the National Woman s Party s card index.... [The cards] were the heart of the party s lobbying operation in Congress.... One card was devoted to each lawmaker s mom. [Lobbyist Maud Younger said:] If we can make of her a strong advocate for suffrage, we have the best of chances of winning the son (pages 118 119). There is a line from a poem by William Ross Wallace (1819 1881) about the importance of mothers as the shapers of the current and next generations: For the hand that rocks the cradle Is the hand that rules the world. Do your students agree or disagree that the influence of mothers is powerful in the lives of their children and of future generations? How is that power expressed? Discuss the National Woman s Party s tactic of using mothers to influence congressmen and senators. Is this fair play? Then ask your students to think about the line in a modern context: the many roles

mothers play in today s world running the home and working in business, in politics, in society. Do they believe that the hand that rocks the cradle is also the hand that rules the world? 3. Historically, states in the West had suffrage amendments in their constitutions. Open a discussion about why your students think this was so. 4. While the Congressional Union was lobbying for passage of the Susan B. Anthony Amendment, they needed a tactic to keep the issue before President Wilson. How to give the president a constant reminder? Harriot Blatch proposed a new tactic: picket the White House! They would be, she said, silent sentinels of liberty (page 74). Alice Paul knew that the picketers would be arrested and sent to jail to endure harsh conditions, but she was a believer in sacrificing for the greater good. Do your students agree with this philosophy? Do they believe Alice was right in subjecting her adherents to such perils? Do they think the picketing achieved its goals? 5. The battle cry of the National Woman s Party was Absolute Equality. Were they in favor of equality for ALL women or was there a flaw in their position? Have students discuss this question. 6. The time has come to conquer or submit. For us there can be but one choice. We have made it (prologue). President Woodrow Wilson made this powerful statement when the United States entered the Great War. Later, Alice Paul co-opted it for the women s suffrage movement. Hold a class discussion about the different meanings each of the speakers built into this statement. Do your students have an opinion about who made better use of it? 7. It might be a surprise to your students, but many women were opposed to the Equal Rights Amendment. Discuss why and whether they think the outcomes that the women feared were real or imagined. 8. Do women have equal status with men now? Based on news reports, research, and interviews with adults they know, engage your students in a discussion of how things stand for women today. [RI 9-10.1, 2, 3, 6, 8; SL 9-10.1, 2, 3, 4]

After Reading HISTORY; LANGUAGE ARTS: CRITICAL THINKING, RESEARCH ACTIVITIES 1. Each student should create a double timeline, with key events in Alice Paul s life and her campaigns for women s suffrage and women s rights on the left side and world events along with important moments in literature, art, and music on the right side. The timeline can also be displayed horizontally. Students should have at least ten dates on each side. Below is a sample vertical double timeline: EVENTS OF THE WOMEN S MOVEMENT CONCURRING WORLD EVENTS February 15, 1820: Susan B. Anthony is born 1837: Victoria becomes queen of Great Britain July 1848: First women s rights convention held in Seneca Falls, New York 1857: Dickens publishes A Tale of Two Cities 1861 1865: American Civil War January 11, 1885: Alice Paul is born 1914 1918: World War I August 18, 1920: 19 th Amendment is ratified June 1923: Alice Paul proposes the Equal Rights Amendment 1929: Stock market crashes November 22, 1963: JFK is assassinated June 1966: National Organization for Women forms [RI 9-10.1, 2; W 9-10.2, 4, 9]

LANGUAGE ARTS: READING FOR DETAILS, MAKING INFERENCES; SOCIAL STUDIES: CHARACTER EDUCATION, VALUES, LEADERSHIP 1. Each student should create a chart that describes aspects of Alice Paul s character. For each quality they should include a sentence from the book that supports that trait. A sample entry could be: TRAIT serious student IDENTIFYING SENTENCE By the time Alice was a junior, she had become a serious student who often hung a busy sign on her door and studied into the night (page 18). [RI 9-10.1, 2; W 9-10.2] LANGUAGE ARTS: SPEAKING AND LISTENING, WRITING 2. When Alice was a student, she was chosen to be Swarthmore s Ivy Poet. She would have to write a poem and recite it at a special ceremony.... Alice received the news with great horror and amazement (page 18). It is clear that Alice was uncomfortable with public speaking, but despite that she developed her talents as a speaker and used them well throughout the rest of her life. Have each student write a three-minute persuasive speech advocating for a cause they believe in. Have students deliver their speeches. Allot time for a Q and A session after each speech for questions, comments, and analyses by fellow students. [W 9-10.1, 4; SL 9-10.1, 2, 4, 6] HISTORY; LANGUAGE ARTS: READING, SPEAKING AND LISTENING; COOPERATIVE LEARNING; CONTEMPORARY STUDIES; SOCIAL STUDIES: SOCIOLOGY, POLITICAL SCIENCE, WOMEN S STUDIES 3. Have the class as a whole make a list of the various tactics and strategies that Alice Paul and her organizations used to get attention and persuade those in power to support women s suffrage. Be sure to include hunger strikes in jail, parades and big events to get publicity, banners to deliver messages, and having well-known women represent the cause s demands. Divide half of your students into groups to go through Alice Paul and the Fight for Women s Rights and identify specific occasions when each of these techniques was used. Each group should report on their findings. The class should discuss which tactics were most effective, whether some methods worked better to handle specific circumstances, and why.

Then divide the other half of your students into teams to research contemporary protest tactics such as: Sit-ins Email campaigns Online petitions Boycotts Media campaigns Lobbying The teams should report their findings. All presentations should include visuals, and oral presentations should use primary source documents when available. [W 9-10.2, 4, 6, 7, 8, 9; SL 9-10.1, 2, 4, 5] LANGUAGE ARTS: WRITING, PERFORMANCE; HISTORY 4. Have your students look at the photograph on page 100 depicting Alice Paul, Dora Lewis, and other members of the National Woman s Party leaving their headquarters just prior to Alice and the other members being arrested for picketing in front of the White House. What can your students imagine was said inside the headquarters before the women stepped outside? What could they have been saying to each other as they walked to the White House? What might they have thought and felt as they were being hauled away to jail? Working in small groups, have your students recreate the events of that day. Based on what they have read in Alice Paul and the Fight for Women s Rights, they should write and perform a one-act play. They can include as many marchers as they wish as long as the dialog reflects the thinking and sentiment of Alice Paul and the fight for suffrage and women s rights. [W 9-10.3, 4; SL 9-10.1, 4, 6] LANGUAGE ARTS: SPEAKING AND LISTENING, WRITING; COOPERATIVE LEARNING 5. Paul raised the issue on March 2 at a joint convention in Washington of the Congressional Union and the National Woman s Party. The delegates voted to continue working exclusively on woman suffrage, just as Paul hoped they would (page 80). Have a debate about one of the most controversial decisions Alice Paul and the National Woman s Party made: to continue their efforts to win the vote for women at the national level despite the start of the Great War. Students should re-read carefully chapter six, especially pages ninety-five to one hundred, and search the Internet for articles and essays that support their views.

Divide your class in half with one group in favor of the women s organization s decision and the other representing the opinion that it was unpatriotic to distract people from focusing on the war effort. Each group should put together a list of ten to fifteen points supporting their views. The debate can be conducted in the presence of another class in your grade in the format of point-counterpoint. At the end of the debate the listeners should evaluate the effectiveness of the speakers. [RI 9-10.1, 2, 5, 6, 7; SL 9-10.1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6] LANGUAGE ARTS: MEDIA, WRITING; TECHNOLOGY; SOCIAL STUDIES: POLITICAL SCIENCE, SOCIOLOGY 6. Banners were more than slogans. They actually carried messages to people in power and to the public. Today we use the Internet, social media, videos, television, and radio broadcasts to communicate ideas and points of view. Have each student select one of the banners quoted in the book and rework it into a medium using today s technology. Each student should present her/his update and explain the campaign she/he would use to spread the word. [W 9-10.1, 4, 6; SL 1, 2, 5] LANGUAGE ARTS: WRITING; CRITICAL THINKING; HISTORY; SOCIAL STUDIES: SOCIOLOGY, ETHICS AND VALUES, WOMEN S STUDIES 7. Your students know how to express themselves in 140 characters on Twitter, but can they do the same in just six words? An activity from the National Writing Project demands just that: the six-word memoir. The six-word memoir teaches critical thinking and requires students to choose words precisely. The format of the memoirs is flexible: the words can make up a sentence or simply be a group of words that together express a thought or idea. To get some practice, your students should write six-word memoirs for themselves. It could be about what they are thinking now or what their hopes and aspirations are. Then they will be more comfortable writing about Alice Paul and her compatriots in Alice Paul and the Fight for Women s Rights. After reading the book, your students should write six-word memoirs for Alice Paul, Lucy Burns, Carrie Chapman Catt, Dora Lewis, and other members of the women s suffrage movement. The memoirs can be used as photo captions or superimposed on images that are reflected by the memoir. [W 9-10.3, 4] LANGUAGE ARTS: WRITING; SOCIAL STUDIES: SOCIOLOGY, POLITICAL SCIENCE; HISTORY 8. After suffrage Alice Paul focused on equal rights for women and the removal of all forms of discrimination. Not everyone in the women s movement agreed with her. Why were some of the leaders opposed to equal rights and the

proposed Equal Rights Amendment? Some thought the women s movement should go in other directions. Have your students complete the chart below with the differing views of major women s leaders about what was important for women. Have students read closely chapter nine and conduct Internet searches on each individual before completing the chart below. DIFFERING ISSUES CONFRONTING THE WOMEN S MOVEMENT AFTER SUFFRAGE PROPONENT Jane Addams and Sara Bard Field ISSUE Crystal Eastman Florence Kelly Alice Paul Eleanor Roosevelt [RI 9-10.1, 2; W 9-10, 1, 4, 7, 8] Twelve suffragist picketers line up before heading to the White House. (Photo credit: Library of Congress, Prints and Photographs Division, mnwp.160026)

and the Fight for Women s Rights By Deborah Kops 978-1-62979-323-8 Ages 11 and up Grades 6 and up $17.95 U.S. $23.50 CAN e-book 978-1-62979-795-3 Available to the Trade from Perseus Distribution. Contact your Perseus sales representative, customer service at 800-343-4499, or orderentry@perseusbooks.com. For marketing inquires, contact marketing@calkinscreek.com. For the complete Common Core State Standards, visit www.corestandards.org/ela-literacy. This guide was created by Clifford Wohl, Educational Consultant.