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Women of the 20th Century
[BZ-6251]
$24.95



Start each class with a story? Absolutely!

It's hard to remember historical figures, much less why each became famous.
Story telling makes each historical figure an individual and therefore memorable.

The Presidents
From George Washington to Abraham Lincoln
See the full Table of Contents below.

"The stories are fun and make the people memorable . . . I never knew history could be so intersting."
Student

"Not only does my class get started right away [but] all of my students are practicing higher level thinking skills."
9th Grade Teacher

"You'd be amazed at how good my students are at predicting this stuff!"
6th Grade Teacher

"I know I have told you this before, but I will tell you again. You guys are the best support system of any teaching resources! Thank you so much for making my job easier and better."
HS Teacher

Hannah Solomon 1900 National Council of Jewish Women
Helen Keller 1904 Graduates from Radcliffe
Ida Tarbell 1904 Muckraker
Mary Baker Eddy 1908 The Christian Science Monitor
Rose Schneiderman 1909 National Women's Trade Union League
Mary White Ovington 1909 Co-founder, NAACP
Ida B. Wells 1909 Crusader against lynching
Mary Church Terrell 1909 Crusader for women’s suffrage
Juliette Low 1912 Founder of the Girl Scouts
Mother Jones 1913 The Ludlow Massacre
Alice Paul 1913 Women’s suffrage
Carrie Chapman Catt 1915 Women’s suffrage
Margaret Sanger 1916 Planned Parenthood
Jeannette Rankin 1916 First woman in Congress
Emma Goldman 1917 Anarchist
Mary Pickford 1919 Founded United Artists
Madame C.J. Walker 1919 Millionaire businesswoman
Crystal Eastman 1921 Founder of WILPF
Willa Cather 1923 Pulitzer Prize
Aimee Semple McPherson 1926 Evangelist and media sensation
Emily Post 1928 Etiquette
Georgia O’Keeffe 1929 Artist of the Southwest desert
Martha Graham 1929 Modern dance
Abby Aldrich Rockefeller 1929 Founder, Museum of Modern Art
Ruth Wakefield 1930 Invented the chocolate chip cookie
Jane Addams 1931 Won the Nobel Peace Prize
Florence Reece 1931 Labor song writer
Amelia Earhart 1932 Flies solo across the Atlantic
“Babe” Didrikson 1932 Gold medals at the 1932 Olympics
Dorothy Day 1933 The Catholic Worker Movement
Eleanor Roosevelt 1933 Holds own press conferences
Frances Perkins 1933 Secretary of labor
Lillian Hellman 1934 Screenwriter
Dorothea Lange 1935 Photographer of the Dust Bowl
Margaret Bourke-White 1941 Photojournalist in World War II
Rosie the Riveter 1942 Women in wartime factories.
WACs & WAVEs 1942 Women in the army and navy
Chien-Shiung Wu 1944 “First Lady of Physics”
Estée Lauder 1948 Businesswoman, cosmetics
Maria Tallchief 1949 Prima ballerina, NYC Ballet
Margaret Chase Smith 1950 First Senator to challenge McCarthyism
Marion Donovan 1951 Inventor, Pampers
Patsy Sherman 1952 Inventor, Scotchguard
Ruth Benerito 1953 Inventor, Permanent-press cotton
Rosa Parks 1955 Launched the Civil Rights movement
Bette Nesmith Graham 1956 Inventor, Liquid Paper
Katharine McCormick 1957 Financier of “The Pill”
Ethel Percy Andrus 1958 Founder of AARP
Dr. Grace Murray Hopper 1959 Inventor, Computer language
Frances Oldham Kelsey 1960 FDA, stopped Thalidomide
Leontyne Price 1961 Opera singer
Rachel Carson 1962 Author, Silent Spring
Betty Friedan 1963 Author, The Feminine Mystique
Maria Goeppert Mayer 1963 Nobel Prize in Physics
Barbara Walters 1964 Television newswoman
Patsy Mink 1965 First Asian American in Congress
Bella Abzug 1966 Co-founder of NOW
Billie Jean King 1966 Won at Wimbledon
Gerda Lerner 1967 Historian of women’s history
Janis Joplin 1967 Monterrey Pop Festival
Eunice Kennedy Shriver 1968 Founder of the Special Olympics
Shirley Chisholm 1968 First black woman in Congress
Joan Baez 1968 Folk singer and activist
Joan Ganz Cooney 1968 Founder of Sesame Street
Delores Huerta 1970 Labor organizer, United Farm Workers
Angela Davis 1970 Communist activist; prison reformer
Katherine Graham 1971 Publisher of The Washington Post
Florence Wald 1971 Founder of the Hospice movement
Stephanie Kwolek 1971 Inventor, Kevlar
Barbara Jordan 1972 Congresswoman from Texas
Women of West Point 1972 Women integrated into the armed forces
Gloria Steinem 1972 Launches Ms. Magazine
Marian Wright Edelman 1973 The Children’s Defense Fund
“Jane Roe” 1973 Roe v. Wade
Eudora Welty 1973 Wins the Pulitzer Prize
The Little Leaguers 1974 Girls admitted for the first time
Judy Baca 1974 Organized murals in Los Angeles
Ella Grasso 1974 First woman governor
Gilda Radner 1975 Comedian, Saturday Night Live
Maxine Hong Kingston 1976 Author of The Woman Warrior
Liz Claiborne 1976 Businesswoman, fashion
Cathy Guisewite 1976 Cartoonist
Rosalyn Sussman Yalow 1977 Nobel Prize for Medicine
Women on the Job 1980 The EEOC prohibits sexual harassment
Maya Lin 1981 Vietnam Veterans Memorial
Sandra Day O’Connor 1981 U.S. Supreme Court
Gloria Yerkovich 1981 Founder of CHILDFIND
Alice Walker 1983 Author, The Color Purple
Sally Ride 1983 First woman astronaut
Barbara McClintock 1983 Nobel Prize Scientist
Geraldine Ferraro 1984 Runs for Vice President
Wilma Mankiller 1985 Head of the Cherokee Nation
Oprah Winfrey 1986 Syndicated TV host
Catharine MacKinnon 1986 Legal scholar
Christa McCauliffe 1986 Science teacher on the Challenger
Gertrude B. Elion 1988 Nobel Prize for Medicine (leukemia)
Vera Wang 1990 Businesswoman, fashion
Women in Congress 1992 “The Year of the Woman”
Carol Moseley Braun 1992 First black woman in the U.S. Senate
Toni Morrison 1993 Won the Nobel Prize for Literature
Martha Stewart 1993 Businesswoman
Ruth Bader Ginsburg 1993 Joins the Supreme Court
Janet Reno 1993 Attorney General
Battered Women 1994 Violence Against Women Act
Shirley Jackson 1995 Nuclear Regulatory Commission
Madeleine Albright 1997 Secretary of State
Jennifer Lopez 1997 Hollywood film star
Hillary Clinton 2000 Senator from New York
Mia Hamm 2001 Soccer star
Condoleeza Rice 2005 Secretary of State
Cindy Sheehan 2006 Opposed the War in Iraq
Nancy Pelosi 2007 Speaker of the House
Drew Gilpin Faust 2007 President of Harvard





A great way to begin class!
Have you ever herded bunnies?
Then you know how difficult it is to make students come to order at the beginning of class.
A gong works exceedingly well.
But how about a story?

71 stories!
Imagine your startled students - whether fifth graders or seniors - when you begin class with:
“Once upon a time . . .”

Storytelling
It’s hard to remember historical figures, much less why each became famous.
Storytelling can make each historical figure an individual and therefore memorable.

How it works
You tell a brief story about the person, then students predict why he or she became world famous.
Or, you tell about the problems the person faced and students predict the solutions he or she chose.

Childhood . . .
Around twelve, students begin to form their “world view.”
That is, they begin to shape their views on race and class, religion and politics.
The same is true for a boy or girl who grows up to become a famous person.
If you know about his or her childhood, you can predict what he or she will do as an adult.
Don’t take our word. Try it!

A fine summary
After hearing stories of the famous people, students will learn the historical era’s major concepts,
people and events, terms and definitions.

Great practice in Bloom’s taxonomy!
Students who practice critical thinking do exceedingly well on standardized tests.
These stories call upon students to exercise all six levels of Bloom’s taxonomy:

1. Recall The colorful stories help students recall the facts.
2. Interpret Listening to the stories, students learn how to read between the lines.
3. Apply Since the stories tell of each person’s childhood, students can easily relate.
4. Analyze Students can analyze the strengths and weaknesses of each historical figure.
5. Synthesize Students are called upon to add up the facts and predict. (This is pure synthesis.)
6. Evaluate After hearing story after story, students learn how to evaluate an historical figure.

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