This lesson contains 20 slides, with interactive quizzes, text slides and 4 videos.
Lesson duration is: 15 min
Items in this lesson
AGE 8. The Time of Citizens and Steam Engines
8.1 The Industrial Revolution
Slide 1 - Slide
One answer per group. Why was the steam engine a revolutionary invention?
Slide 2 - Open question
AGE 8: the Time of Citizens and Steam Engines
1800 - 1900
Slide 3 - Slide
AGE 8: the Time of Citizens and Steam Engines
1800 - 1900
Typical Aspects:
The Industrial Revolution
Democracy and a parliamentary system
Modern Imperialism
Liberalism, nationalism, socialism and feminism
Slide 4 - Slide
AGE 8: the Time of Citizens and Steam Engines
1800 - 1900
Typical Aspects:
The Industrial Revolution
Democracy and a parliamentary system
Modern Imperialism
Liberalism, nationalism, socialism and feminism
The Modern Age
Slide 5 - Slide
8.1: the Industrial Revolution
1750-1900
a revolution is a drastic change, affecting many people over a relatively short span of time.
The arrival of machines has changed the way people produce goods: from manual labour to machine production.
Not only the way of production is changing enormously: the arrival of steam trains is also bringing major changes in the transport of people and goods.
Slide 6 - Slide
Slide 7 - Video
Group task: make your own summary
Create a google doc. Share it with your group
Divide the text slides in your group.
Write down the lesson title + paragraph titles (see example).
Each student summarizes his / her part.
Use the information to help you.
summarize
write down the title of this paragraph
the first half of the text mentions 2 main areas that changed because of the Industrial Revolution.
What other changes are mentioned?
(Can you now see how the title covers the content?)
Slide 8 - Slide
Slide 9 - Video
Shooting coil
1733
To make clothes faster, you have to be able to weave faster.
The Englishman John Kay invented the shooting coil. With this you can weave much faster than by hand.
The shuttle was not yet a real machine: it was operated by hand.
Important inventions:
Slide 10 - Slide
Spinning Jenny
1764
If you can weave faster, you also need more thread.
James Hargreaves' Spinning Jenny allowed you to spin 8 and later 16 wires at the same time
Slide 11 - Slide
Cotton Gin
1793
Because spinning and weaving went much faster, more cotton was also needed.
To get the seeds out of cotton fluff faster, the American Eli Whitney invented the Cotton Gin ("Cotton engine").
Slavery also rose: many more slaves were needed to pick the cotton ...
Slide 12 - Slide
Steam engine
around 1764
The first working steam engine of the Industrial Revolution was that of Thomas Newcomen around 1705
Only with the improvements of James Watt could the steam engine really be used
De Engelsman James Watt voerde een aantal belangrijke veranderingen door in Newcomen's stoommachine waardoor het gebruik en de inzet makkelijker werden.
Slide 13 - Slide
What can you do with a steam engine?
Slide 14 - Open question
write down 1 advantage of the steam engine over wind / water power?
Slide 15 - Open question
write down 1 disadvantage of the steam engine
Slide 16 - Open question
Slide 17 - Video
Changes through
the steam engine
Old energy sources (wind, muscle and water power) were slowly replaced
wind: a steam engine works always, not just when it's windy
muscle; a steam engine never gets tired.
water: a steam engine can be placed anywhere, not just near a river.
Doordat de vraag naar delfstoffen (ijzer en steenkool voor de machines) sterk toenam, moest er steeds dieper worden gegraven. Met stoommachines werd het grondwater weggepompt.
Slide 18 - Slide
from small-scale manual production in the cottage industry ...
... to large-scale machine production in factories