原版英语RAZ 教案Labor Day.pdf
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1、Visit www.readinga- for thousands of books and materials.WritingHow did the laws passed by Congress in 1938 change the lives of American workers?Write an article as a newspaper journalist from that time to inform readers about these laws.Social StudiesResearch a historical figure of the labor moveme
2、nt.Write a biography about that person,including the impact he or she had on the lives of American workers.ConnectionsLabor DayA Reading AZ Level V Leveled BookWord Count:1,281www.readinga-LEVELED BOOK VPSVWritten by Kira FreedLabor Daywww.readinga-Why is Labor Day important?Focus QuestionWritten by
3、 Kira FreedLabor DayWords to KnoweconomicfederalguaranteedIndustrial Revolutionlaborminimum wagenegotiateprivate sectorregulationsrightsstrikeswagesLabor DayLevel V Leveled Book Learning AZWritten by Kira FreedAll rights reserved.www.readinga-Cover:Meatcutters march as a group during a Labor Day par
4、ade in the early 1900s in Chicago,Illinois.Title page:A boy serves as junior fire chief by throwing candy from the roof of a car during a Labor Day parade in Catlettsburg,Kentucky.Page 3:A girl tends the spinning machines at a cotton mill in North Carolina in the early 1900s.Photo Credits:Front cove
5、r,back cover,page 12(bottom center):Chicago History Museum/Archive Photos/Getty Images;title page:Kevin Goldy/The Independent/AP Images;pages 3,12(top center),13:Bettmann/Getty Images;page 4:Tribune Content Agency LLC/Alamy Stock Photo;page 5(top):Keystone-France/Gamma-Keystone/Getty Images;pages 5(
6、bottom),7:Buyenlarge/Archive Photos/Getty Images;page 6:Glasshouse Images/Alamy Stock Photo;pages 9,11:North Wind Picture Archives/Alamy Stock Photo;page 12(top):Granger,NYC;page 12(bottom):Alan Greth/AP Images;page 14:Todd Korol/Toronto Star/Getty Images;page 15:stockvisual/iStock/ThinkstockCorrela
7、tionLEVEL VR4040Fountas&PinnellReading RecoveryDRA3Table of ContentsBack to School .4Machines and Workers.5Tough Jobs .6Child Labor .7Workers Join Together.8Honoring Workers.13A Better Future .15Glossary .16Labor Day Level V4Back to SchoolMany students in the United States go back to school right af
8、ter Labor Day,the first Monday in September.For those students,this federal holiday marks the end of summer.Its a time to enjoy one last blast of fun before the school year starts.Many businesses and all government offices close.Communities often hold parades and picnics.People may take advantage of
9、 the long weekend to throw a party or go to the beach.Many just enjoy the extra day off at home.Labor Day isnt just a day to take it easy,however.Its also a day that the U.S.government set aside to recognize the contributions and achievements of American workers,past and present.In order to understa
10、nd what Labor Day honors,its important to learn about the labor movement.This term refers to an organized effort by workers to improve their economic and social conditions by joining together.Cheer squad members march during a Labor Day parade in Newtown,Connecticut.5Machines and WorkersDuring the I
11、ndustrial Revolution(late 1700s to early 1800s),new technology allowed many jobs once done by hand to be done faster and more easily by machines.Many farmers began using machines instead of workers to plant and harvest crops.Using machines often increased profits,but doing so also put many small fam
12、ily farmers out of business.The new machines also allowed factories to produce cloth and other items at a much lower cost than small home businesses.Because of these changes,many people living in rural areas and small towns moved to cities and went to work in factories.Horses provided much of the en
13、ergy used in farming before machines became available.A farmer uses a tractor to plow a field in 1925.Labor Day Level V6Tough JobsMany employers wanted to keep expenses low so the businesses could earn higher profits.Though some employers treated their workers well,many did not.Workers needed jobs a
14、nd were often powerless in the face of poor treatment.In the 1800s,low wages,long workdays,and terrible working conditions were common in the United States.The labor movement began as a result of workers wanting more of a voice in how they were treated.Many workers in the 1800s didnt receive much ti
15、me off.At that time,the United States had no limits on the number of hours workers put in at their jobs each day or week.The average manufacturing employee worked one hundred hours a week!(Thats more than fourteen hours per day,every day.)Women work in a factory in 1870.Long hours and overcrowding w
16、ere common in factories at that time.7Child LaborThe Industrial Revolution also led to an increase in child labor.In many factories,much of the machinery could be run by children.It was less expensive for employers to hire children than adults,and they were easier to control.Also,their small size al
17、lowed them to move in tight spaces around machines.By the early 1800s,roughly two million school-aged children were working in mills or factories in the United States.Many were from families too poor to support them.Children often held jobs before the age of seven and worked six days a week for up t
18、o eighteen hours each day.They had little time for rest and no time for school or play.They also often faced dangerous working conditions.Many children became ill from the conditions and long hours at work.At the end of the 1800s,only twenty-eight states had laws against child labor.Here,three boys
19、aged ten to twelve work in a fish cannery in Eastport,Maine.Labor Day Level V8Workers Join TogetherOver time,workers started to join together to improve conditions at their jobs.They formed labor unionsorganized worker associations set up to protect and expand workers rights in the workplace.The fir
20、st labor unions,founded in the late 1800s,were for all workers,but later they split into separate ones for different jobs or trades.The goal of any union is to bargain with employers on behalf of its members.Unions negotiate for such things as better hours,wages,working conditions,and benefits.They
21、sometimes call for strikes to protest unfair situations or to give workers a stronger hand in negotiations with their employers.In 1866,an organization called the National Labor Union(NLU)urged Congress to pass a law making the eight-hour workday standard for all workers.Despite its name,the NLU was
22、 more of a political organization than a labor union.It laid some of the groundwork for the labor unions that would come later,however.Although the NLU did not succeed in getting the law passed,it did bring attention to the issue of the eight-hour workday.9In 1869,President Ulysses S.Grant announced
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