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Read the Directions sheets for step-by-step instructions. Parent Guide SUMMARY In this activity, children will examine two pairs of banners from the woman suffrage movement and then write a banner to match one banner that is missing its pair. WHY By examining the arguments for and against woman suffrage, children will build a better understanding of the woman suffrage movement and examine an example of nonviolent protest. After viewing this example, children may feel encouraged to examine their feelings and view opposing perspectives on issues in their own lives. TIME 15 minutes RECOMMENDED AGE GROUP This activity will work best with children in third grade and up. CHALLENGE WORDS answer: something said or done in response objection: a reason for or a feeling of disapproval GET READY Read Mama Went to Jail for the Vote. This book is a work of historical fiction about the woman suffrage movement. For tips on reading this book together, check out the Guided Reading Activity (http://americanhistory.si.edu/ourstory/pdf/ suffrage/suffrage_reading.pdf). Read the Step Back in Time sheets. YOU NEED Directions sheets (attached) Step Back in Time sheets (attached) ThinkAbout sheets (attached) More information at http://americanhistory.si.edu/ourstory/activities/suffrage/.

V oting is one of the main ways that people can direct the government and change laws. Women had voted in some colonies and early states but after 1807 no women could vote in the United States. In 1848 a group of women, and men, concerned with women s right held a convention and signed the Declaration of Sentiments. The Declaration was modeled after the Declaration of Independence and demanded rights for women, including the right to vote. Despite their efforts, women could only vote in nine states by the time the parade in this story takes place. Woman suffragists were the first group to organize pickets outside of the White House. They created banners and stood Step Back in Time, page 1 of 2 For more information, visit the National Museum of American History Web site http://americanhistory.si.edu/ourstory/activities/suffrage/. Jailed for Freedom pin The National Museum of American History owns three "Jailed for Freedom" pins that belonged to Lucille Calmes, Amelia Walker, and Alice Paul. outside the White House gates to show the signs to the President and members of the public. Although they were peaceful, some who disagreed with their protests sometimes started fights and hurt the suffragists. Mama voting at the precinct from Mama Went to Jail for the Vote Throughout the woman suffrage movement, over 150 suffragists were put in jail, mostly in Virginia and Washington, D.C. Life in the jails was tough and dirty, and the women weren t treated well. Some women wanted to show the American public how unfair it was that they were in jail, so they refused to eat while behind bars. They were

Step Back in Time, page 2 of 2 forcibly fed by their jailers. After they were let out of jail, the suffragists were given special Jailed for Freedom pins, to show proudly that they had stayed in jail to help get the right to vote for women. Alice Paul, one of the leaders in the protests, had been a part of the woman suffrage movement in England. When she came back to the United States, she reused some of the strong British tactics in the American woman suffrage movement. It took many years for the woman suffrage movement to change the minds of lawmakers and the public; but finally, in August 1920, the United States Constitution was amended to protect women s right to vote. The woman suffrage movement s nonviolent protests were sources of inspiration for Mohandas Gandhi, while he worked for independence in India, and Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., while he worked for equal rights during the civil rights movement in the United States. Mama Went to Jail for the Vote is a work of historical fiction. amended: changed the words and often the meaning of a law movement: a series of organized activities in which many people work together to do or achieve something tactics: an action or method that is planned and used to achieve a particular goal In historical fiction, make-believe stories are set against a backdrop of real events or incorporate them into the story. This means that sometimes things are changed to suit the story or make it more dramatic. Although there was a woman on a white horse in the suffrage parade it wasn t really Mama. The rider was a Washington lawyer named Inez Milholland Boissevain. When she later died while traveling to promote woman suffrage she was considered to be a martyr to the cause. Purple, white, and yellow were the colors used in the parades and by the pickets of the National Woman s Party although purple, white, and green were used in other places like New York and Connecticut.

For adults and kids to follow together. Directions, page 1 of 2 1. Read through the Step Back in Time sheets. What were people in the woman suffrage movement trying to achieve? 2. Talk about the words objection and answer. Tip These words are defined in the Challenge Words section of the Parent Guide. 3. Take a look at the two pairs of banners on page 1 of the ThinkAbout sheets. One banner in each pair is an objection to woman suffrage, and the other is an answer from the suffragists. Rewrite the main message of each banner in your own words in the cartoon bubble below each banner. Tip You might find that some words on the banner are new to your child. Look up any new words in a dictionary and talk about their meanings. Try to think of another sentence in which you could use the word. 4. On page 2 of the ThinkAbout sheets, there is a banner that does not have its pair. Think about what the missing banner might say. Tip For example, try finishing these sentences as possible objections to woman suffrage: If a woman is voting, she can t be at home. A woman s job is to, not to vote.

Directions, page 2 of 2 5. What could be good about using banners in a protest or during a meeting? Think about how the meeting would be recorded in the newspaper or how other people on the street would think about the protesters holding the banners. Tip For an activity guide with instructions on making your own protest sign, check out Protest Signs (http://americanhistory.si.edu/ourstory/pdf/ freedom/lunchcounter_signs.pdf), related to the 1960 nonviolent student protests in Greensboro, North Carolina. For more activities and information about Mama Went to Jail for the Vote and the woman suffrage movement, visit http://americanhistory.si.edu/ourstory/activities/ suffrage/. Mama Went to Jail for the Vote by Kathleen Karr. Illustrations by Malene Laugesen. Used by permission of Hyperion Books for Children.

ThinkAbout, page 1 of 2

ThinkAbout, page 2 of 2 OBJECTION

Read the Parent Guide and Directions sheets for step-by-step instructions. For Teachers, page 1 of 2 OBJECTIVES The students will be better able to: Recall one or more argument used against woman suffrage. STUDENT PERFORMANCE CRITERIA Interpretations of banner text are logical. Created banner reflects a logical argument.. STANDARDS NCHS History Standards K-4 Historical Thinking Standards 3G Consider multiple perspectives. 4B Obtain historical data. 5B Analyze the interests, values, and points of view. K-4 Historical Content Standards 4A: Demonstrate understanding of how the United States government was formed and of the nation s basic democratic principles set forth in the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution. 21st-Century Skills Learning and Innovation Skills Creativity and Innovation Critical Thinking and Problem Solving IRA/NCTE Language Arts Standards 1. Students read a wide range of print and non-print texts to build an understanding of texts, of themselves, and of the cultures of the United States and the world; to acquire new information; to respond to the needs and demands of society and the

For Teachers, page 2 of 2 workplace; and for personal fulfillment. Among these texts are fiction and nonfiction, classic and contemporary works. 12. Students use spoken, written, and visual language to accomplish their own purposes (e.g., for learning, enjoyment, persuasion, and the exchange of information).