πŸ’ƒ Celebrate Women's History



 ABC order. Provide students with a list of historically important American woman, such as those found at the Distinguished Women Web site. (That site's list includes Rosa Parks, Jeannette Rankin, Amelia Earhart, Elizabeth Blackwell, Susan B. Anthony, Clara Barton, and Eleanor Roosevelt.) Ask students to put the names in alphabetical order (by last name)..

Write a letter. Invite students to read about Michelle Obama to learn about our current first lady. Encourage students to write her a letter or send an e-mail. Students can tell her about an issue that concerns them. Younger students might ask a question about the role of the first lady.

Geography. Invite students to go to the Amelia Earhart Web site to learn about her life. Provide students with a map of the world and ask them to trace the path of her final flight.

History/art. Encourage students to design a U.S. postage stamp in honor of this year's Women's History Month.

Career education/art. Arrange students into groups and assign each group a career category, such as technology, medicine, or entertainment. Ask students to research as many jobs as possible within their assigned category and create a poster encouraging other students to enter that career field. Remind older students to research and include specific information on their posters, such as job descriptions, educational requirements, and salary ranges.

History. Students will:  Write the name of each first lady on a separate index card and ask the other students to pick a card. (Some students might pick more than one card.) Have students research the first lady they chose and write a brief description of that first lady on the card. (Students might use the First Ladies' Gallery as a resource.) Arrange students into teams and have teams take turns reading the descriptions and guessing the identity of each first lady. When the game is over, invite students to name the president married to each first lady.

More geography. Invite students to go to the Goals Online site featuring Karen Thorndike, the first woman to sail around the world alone. Print the map under Positions and have students plan a trip around the world that includes the places they would like to visit. Ask students to calculate how many countries they would visit, how many miles they would travel, and how long their trip would take.

Write a biography. At the Encyclopedia of Women's History, kids can read biographies of famous women and submit an original biography of a famous woman they admire. Younger students might write a biography of an important woman in their lives.

Genealogy. Have students use this tool to create their family tree. Younger students might just include their parents and grandparents.

Take a quiz. Invite students to test their Women's History I.Q. (Here is an another quiz.) print out results

History/art. Create a poster, using the style of a Famous Woman Artist and write a paragraph on the Artist and the influence they have had in the Art World. (explain your answer with 3-6 reasons why to prove your point)

Literature/drama. Read aloud a fairy tale to students and ask volunteers to act out the story. Discuss with students how the girls or women in the story behaved. Were they strong or weak, happy or sad? Ask: If you were the girl in the story, what would you have done? Encourage students to perform the story again, showing how else it might have happened.

Literature.  Write a journal as if you were Sacagawea ~ research her and what she did and create a journal in her way .


Article by Linda Starr
Education World®
Copyright © 2010 Education World

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This Is How March Became Women’s History Month
Julia Zorthian @jzorth  Feb. 29, 2016    
Jimmy Carter ~ Barry Thumma—AP
President Jimmy Carter signs document at the White House in Washington on Feb. 28, 1980, proclaiming March 2-8 "National Women's History Week."
"Women’s history is women’s right"

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Many things have come to womankind surprisingly recently: The right to vote. The right to own property. And, perhaps less surprisingly, the existence of Women’s History Month.


Before women had the whole month, the U.S. recognized Women’s History Week; before that, a single International Women’s Day. Dedicating the whole month of March in honor of women’s achievements may seem irrelevant today. But at the time of the conception of Women’s History Week, activists saw the designation as a way to revise a written and social American history that had largely ignored women’s contributions.

The celebratory month has its roots in the socialist and labor movements — the first Women’s Day took place on Feb. 28, 1909, in New York City, as a national observance organized by the Socialist Party. It honored the one-year anniversary of the garment worker’s strikes in New York that had taken place a year earlier, when thousands of women marched for economic rights through lower Manhattan to Union Square. (That strike in turn honored an earlier 1857 march, when garment workers rallied for equal rights and a 10-hour day.) Within two years, Women’s Day had grown into an international observance that spread through Europe on the heels of socialism.

Meanwhile, in the U.S., feminist activists took issue with how the history books largely left out the story or contributions of women in America. In light of that imbalance, one group during the 1970s set about revising the school curriculum in Sonoma County, Calif., according to the National Women’s History Project. Their idea was to create a “Women’s History Week” in 1978, timed around International Women’s Day, which the U.N. had begun officially marking in 1975.

The observance spread to schools around the county, and grew into a cause for celebration. Organizers held an annual “Real Women” essay contest, hundreds of women took part by giving presentations to students in their classrooms and the whole week culminated in a Santa Rosa, Calif. parade.

In 1979, Molly Murphy MacGregor, one of the week’s organizers, traveled to Sarah Lawrence College in New York for a conference with the Women’s History Institute. The participants heard about the week in Sonoma County, and the celebration soon spread across the country.

Gerda Lerner chaired the Institute at the time of the conference, and backed the movement to garner national recognition. As the week picked up steam, organizers lobbied Congress and President Jimmy Carter proclaimed the first national Women’s History Week for March 2-8, 1980.

“Women’s history is women’s right—an essential, indispensable heritage from which we can draw pride, comfort, courage, and long range vision,” Lerner was quoted saying in Carter’s proclamation.

President Ronald Reagan passed further proclamations announcing Women’s History Weeks, but by then some areas had already extended their celebrations for a month. The Women’s National History Project lobbied for a longer observation, and Congress passed a proclamation in 1987 establishing Women’s History Month.


Now, Presidents pass annual proclamations announcing Women’s History Month, and the National Women’s History Project declares a theme each year. The 2016 theme is “Working to Form a More Perfect Union: Honoring Women in Public Service and Government.”



Women’s History Month – History

Local Celebrations
As recently as the 1970’s, women’s history was virtually an unknown topic in the K-12 curriculum or in general public consciousness. To address this situation, the Education Task Force of the Sonoma County (California) Commission on the Status of Women initiated a “Women’s History Week” celebration for 1978.
The week March 8th, International Women’s Day, was chosen as the focal point of the observance. The local Women’s History Week activities met with enthusiastic response, and dozens of schools planned special programs for Women’s History Week. Over one-hundred community women participated by doing special presentations in classrooms throughout the country and an annual “Real Woman” Essay Contest drew hundreds of entries. The finale for the week was a celebratory parade and program held in the center of downtown Santa Rosa, California.
Mobilizing a Movement
In 1979, Molly Murphy MacGregor, a member of our group, was invited to participate in The Women’s History Institute at Sarah Lawrence College, which was chaired by noted historian, Gerda Lerner and attended by the national leaders of organizations for women and girls. When the participants learned about the success of the Sonoma County’s Women’s History Week celebration, they decided to initiate similar celebrations within their own organizations, communities, and school districts. They also agreed to support an effort to secure a “National Women’s History Week.”


Presidential and Congressional Support
The first steps toward success came in February 1980 when President Carter issued the first Presidential Proclamation declaring the Week of March 8th 1980 as National Women’s History Week. In the same year, Representative Barbara Mikulski, who at the time was in the House of Representatives, and Senator Orrin Hatch co-sponsored a Congressional Resolution for National Women’s History Week 1981. This co-sponsorship demonstrated the wide-ranging political support for recognizing, honoring, and celebrating the achievements of American women.





A National Lobbying Effort
As word spread rapidly across the nation, state departments of education encouraged celebrations of National Women’s History Week as an effective means to achieving equity goals within classrooms. Maryland, Pennsylvania, New York, Oregon, Alaska, and other states developed and distributed curriculum materials for all of their public schools. Organizations sponsored essay contests and other special programs in their local areas. Within a few years, thousands of schools and communities were celebrating National Women’s History Week, supported and encouraged by resolutions from governors, city councils, school boards, and the U.S. Congress.
Each year, the dates of National Women’s History Week, (the week of March 8th) changed and every year a new lobbying effort was needed. Yearly, a national effort that included thousands of individuals and hundreds of educational and women’s organizations was spearheaded by the National Women’s History Project.




National Women’s History Month
By 1986, 14 states had already declared March as Women’s History Month. This momentum and state-by-state action was used as the rational to lobby Congress to declare the entire month of March 1987 as National Women’s History Month. In 1987, Congress declared March as National Women’s History Month in perpetuity. A special Presidential Proclamation is issued every year which honors the extraordinary achievements of American women.
Presidential Message 1980
President Jimmy Carter’s Message to the nation designating March 2-8, 1980 as National Women’s History Week.
From the first settlers who came to our shores, from the first American Indian families who befriended them, men and women have worked together to build this nation. Too often the women were unsung and sometimes their contributions went unnoticed. But the achievements, leadership, courage, strength and love of the women who built America was as vital as that of the men whose names we know so well.
As Dr. Gerda Lerner has noted, “Women’s History is Women’s Right.” – It is an essential and indispensable heritage from which we can draw pride, comfort, courage, and long-range vision.”
I ask my fellow Americans to recognize this heritage with appropriate activities during National Women’s History Week, March 2-8, 1980.
I urge libraries, schools, and community organizations to focus their observances on the leaders who struggled for equality – – Susan B. Anthony, Sojourner Truth, Lucy
Stone, Lucretia Mott, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Harriet Tubman, and Alice Paul.
Understanding the true history of our country will help us to comprehend the need for full equality under the law for all our people.
This goal can be achieved by ratifying the 27th Amendment to the United States Constitution, which states that “Equality of Rights under the Law shall not be denied or abridged by the United States or by any state on account of sex.”
By Molly Murphy MacGregor, Executive Director and Co-founder of the National Women’s History Project



Growing out of a small-town school event in California, Women’s History Month is a celebration of women’s contributions to history, culture and society. The United States has observed it annually throughout the month of March since 1987. The 2012 theme, “Women’s Education—Women’s Empowerment,” honors pioneering teachers and advocates who helped women and other groups gain access to advanced learning.
·       CONTENTS
o   The Origins of Women’s History Month
o   International Women’s Day

THE ORIGINS OF WOMEN’S HISTORY MONTH

Women’s History Month in the United States grew out of a weeklong celebration of women’s contributions to culture, history and society organized by the school district of Sonoma, California, in 1978. Presentations were given at dozens of schools, hundreds of students participated in a “Real Woman” essay contest and a parade was held in downtown Santa Rosa.

DID YOU KNOW?

To coincide with Women's History Month 2011, the White House issued a 50-year progress report on the status of women in the United States. It found that younger women are now more likely than their male counterparts to hold a college degree and that the number of men and women in the labor force has nearly equalized.
A few years later, the idea had caught on within communities, school districts and organizations across the country. In 1980, President Jimmy Carter issued the first presidential proclamation declaring the week of March 8 as National Women’s History Week. The U.S. Congress followed suit the next year, passing a resolution establishing a national celebration. Six years later, the National Women’s History Project successfully petitioned Congress to expand the event to the entire month of March.

INTERNATIONAL WOMEN’S DAY

International Women’s Day, a global celebration of the economic, political and social achievements of women, took place for the first time on March 8, 1911. Many countries around the world celebrate the holiday with demonstrations, educational initiatives and customs such as presenting women with gifts and flowers. The United Nations has sponsored International Women’s Day since 1975. When adopting its resolution on the observance of International Women’s Day, the United Nations General Assembly cited the following reasons: “To recognize the fact that securing peace and social progress and the full enjoyment of human rights and fundamental freedoms require the active participation, equality and development of women; and to acknowledge the contribution of women to the strengthening of international peace and security.”
Article Details:

Women’s History Month

·       Author

History.com Staff

·       Website Name

History.com

·       Year Published

2009

·       Title

Women’s History Month

·       URL

http://www.history.com/topics/holidays/womens-history-month

·       Access Date

March 01, 2016

Publisher

A+E Networks
This copy is for your personal, non-commercial use only.
© 2016, A&E Television Networks, LLC. All Rights Reserved.






Women’s
 ~ Follow Your Dreams

Beads for Education helps girls in Kenya go to school and create brighter futures
FEB 08, 2013 | By Elizabeth Winchester

Lisa Stevens (left) and Debby Rooney talk to girls at a school in Kenya.
When Florence Nasoore was 12 and living in rural Kenya, in Africa, she wanted nothing more than to continue her education. But for many Kenyan girls, school is not an option. School costs money. Families are more likely to spend it on educating boys. Many girls are forced to marry.
But Florence was able to pursue her dream thanks to Beads for Education. Americans Debby Rooney and Lisa Stevens started Beads. The group matches girls with sponsors who pay for school. Florence was the first of 320 Kenyan girls in third grade through college whom Beads sponsored.
In January of 2013, Beads opened a high school. "It's the realization of a dream to provide our girls with the best education possible and prepare them for college and beyond," Stevens told TFK. Rooney was there to dedicate the school.
Bead by Bead
On a 1991 visit to Kenya, Rooney heard about women who were making and selling beaded bracelets, baskets and necklaces, and using the money they earned to send their daughters to school. Two years later, Rooney started Beads by selling the Kenyan crafts in the U.S. Stevens joined the project soon after.
In 1998, Beads began matching girls with sponsors. Since then, the group has helped build three libraries and an elementary school (see "What Money Can Buy"). Beads also helps train teachers.
The new high school is named Tembea, which means "to walk," in Swahili. Florence is walking toward a bright future. She graduated from college in 2010 and is now a teacher. "Florence is the first in her family to finish high school and college," says Stevens. "She is an example of the potential for all girls in Kenya."

Celebrating Women's History

The U.S. celebrates Women’s History Month every March
MARCH 01, 2013  By TIME For Kids Staff
Every March, the country celebrates the accomplishments of women in American history. Even though these accomplishments go back a long way, most schools didn't start focusing on women pioneers and their achievements until recently. Today, most colleges offer classes in women's history and most schools teach kids about the many contributions women have made to our country. How did this shift come about?
NATIONAL ARCHIVES

International Women's Day Is Born

On March 19, 1911, a German woman named Clara Zetkin organized the very first International Women's Day. Inspired by American working women, the annual event took on the causes of peace (in an effort to end World War I) as well as women's rights. Over the years, interest in International Women's Day dwindled. It gained momentum again in the 1960s, when the women's movement caused women to wonder why they weren't included in the history books.
National Women's History Week Is Celebrated

By the 1970s, more female historians began to look back at the contributions of women in history. In 1978, a California school district started Women's History Week to promote the teaching of women's history. School officials picked the week of March 8 to include International Women's Day. It was so popular that, in 1981, Congress passed a resolution making the week a celebration for the entire country. The concept of studying women's history continued to grow in popularity. In 1987, a group of women (supported by people working in museums, schools and libraries) asked Congress to expand the celebration. That same year, Congress declared the entire month of March National Women's History Month.
National Women's History Museum
Today, schools and communities across the country celebrate the month with special lessons and activities designed to teach the ways women have helped shape the U.S. The women who have worked hard to make Women's History Month a reality would like to see women's history studied all year, not just every March. In 1996, the National Women’s History Museum was founded. It is a non-profit organization dedicated to preserving and celebrating the various historic contributions of women. The organization is working with Congress to open a permanent museum site in Washington, D.C.


Women’s History Milestones

Travel through our timeline and meet some amazing women who helped shape our country's history.
MAR 01, 2011 | By TFK Staff
1851
Sojourner Truth delivers her famous "Ain't I a Woman" speech at a women's rights convention in Akron, Ohio. The former slave spent 40 years of her life preaching a message of equality for all people.
LIBRARY OF CONGRESS
Susan B. Anthony stands beside her longtime friend Elizabeth Cady Stanton.
1869
Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susan B. Anthony organize the National Woman Suffrage Association to fight for women's rights, especially the right to vote. More than a century later, Anthony was honored when the U.S. Mint created a coin using her image.
1920
After 72 years of struggle, women win the right to vote with the 19th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. Shortly afterwards, the League of Women Voters is formed to push for more reforms.
1942
About 350,000 women serve in the armed forces during World War II. Many more provide support services. About 100,000 of those women serve in the U.S. Navy as WAVES (Women Accepted for Volunteer Emergency Service).
1968
Shirley Chisholm becomes the first African American woman elected to Congress. Four years later, the New Yorker became the first black person to run for President in the Democratic primaries.
1972
Congress passes the Equal Rights Amendment (ERA), 49 years after it was first introduced! ERA calls for equal rights for both men and women. However, a constitutional amendment requires both Congress' and the states' approval, and the measure later failed when too few states approved it.
A federal law known as Title IX ensures equal funding for both male and female sports in schools. As a result, women and girls have more opportunities to participate in sports. In fact, many female Olympic athletes say Title IX gave them the opportunity to attend college, participate in sports, and receive athletic scholarships.
1981
Sandra Day O'Connor becomes the first woman appointed to the U.S. Supreme Court. At the time, just six percent of all federal judges were women.
1983
Sally Ride becomes America's first female astronaut when she spends six days in space. Today, about 25 percent of NASA's astronauts are women.
2002-2005
Young women make their mark in the music industry. Singer, songwriter and piano whiz Alicia Keys took home five Grammy Awards in 2002, and four more in 2005. Piano-playing singer and songwriter Norah Jones and her album Come Away with Me snagged eight Grammys in 2003. Jones won three more of music's biggest awards in 2005.
2005
Hillary Clinton becomes the first First Lady to be elected to public office. She joins Congress as a U.S. Senator from New York.
2009
President Barack Obama nominates Sonia Sotomayor as the 111th U.S. Supreme Court Justice. Sotomayor becomes the first Hispanic American and only the third woman to serve on the nation's top court.
Hillary Clinton becomes Secretary of State on January 21, 2009. As the President's top advisor on foreign policy, Clinton is the most powerful woman in President Barack Obama's Cabinet. She is the third woman in U.S. history to hold the important position. After four years on the job, she stepped down at the start of 2013. 
2012
Taylor Swift releases her fourth album, Red. In just one week, the album sold 1.2 million copies. Her previous album, Speak Now, also sold more than one million copies in the first week. Swift becomes the first female artist in musical history to have two opening weeks with more than one million album sales.
2013
Angela Merkel becomes first female German Chancellor. Merkel is also the first former citizen of the German Democratic Republic to lead the reunited Germany and the first woman to lead Germany since it became a modern nation-state in 1871.
The Equal Pay Act celebrates its 50th anniversary. President John F. Kennedy signed the act into law in 1963 to help combat wage discrimination based on gender. Since that time, the gender gap in wages has improved, particularly since the late 1970s.
2014
On August 15, 2014, Mo'Ne Davis becomes the first girl in Little League World Series history to pitch a winning game and the first girl to pitch a shutout in Little League postseason history.



The Day Women Went on Strike

The Day Women Went on Strike

Today marks the 45th anniversary of the Women's Strike for Equality March
AUGUST 26, 2015
By Stephanie Kraus with reporting by TIME’s Sascha Cohen


The Women's Strike for Equality March took place in New York City on August 26, 1970.

Today is Women's Equality Day in the United States. The occasion was introduced in 1971 by Representative Bella Abzug. Why August 26? The date commemorates the passage of the 19th Amendment, which gave women the right to vote in 1920. It also celebrates the Women’s Strike for Equality March, which took place on August 26, 1970. A full 50 years after the passage of the 19th Amendment, women were still calling for equality. More than 50,000 feminists marched down New York City’s Fifth Avenue. They stood arm-in-arm, blocking traffic during rush hour.
A Historic March
The National Organization for Women (NOW) organized the march, which was lead by American writer and feminist Betty Friedan. Friedan wanted to show the American media the power of the new feminist movement.
Friedan’s original idea for August 26 was a national work stoppage. She wanted women to stop cooking and cleaning to send a message about unequal roles in the home and workplace. It isn’t clear how many women truly took part, but the march served as a powerful symbol. Participants held signs with slogans like “Don’t Iron While the Strike is Hot.” Feminism took center stage in America.
The number of marchers exceeded Friedan’s “wildest dreams.” TIME described the event as “easily the largest women’s rights rally since the suffrage protests.” “We marched throughout the ‘60s,” said historian Joyce Antler, who participated in the equality march. “We had faith that this mattered.”
Spreading the Message
The Women’s Strike for Equality reached beyond New York City, as thousands of feminists across the country organized similar events. Activists went to “all male” restaurants, held teach-ins and sit-ins, picketed and rallied in major cities. One thousand women marched on the nation’s capital, holding a banner that read “We Demand Equality.”
The event organizers agreed on specific goals, including equal opportunity in employment and education and the establishment of full-time childcare centers. Over the next several years, activists tried to turn these goals into realities.
Where We Stand
Today The women’s movement was most successful in pushing for gender equality in workplaces and universities. The passage of Title IX in 1972 banned sex discrimination in any educational program that received funding from the federal government. The amendment helped level the playing field in girl’s athletics. Women’s participation in college, graduate school, and the workplace has increased over the past several decades, although a gender wage gap still exists.
Perhaps the least amount of progress has been made in the area of childcare. While President Obama has spoken about creating more affordable childcare, there are no current plans to offer government-funded, round-the-clock care in the U.S. As of 2014, the national average cost to enroll an infant in a daycare center ranged between $15,000 and $22,500 per year.
The long-term results of the Strike for Equality March have been mixed. But in the short-term, the event accomplished a major goal: it helped make the feminist movement more visible.




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