Settlement movement

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    Settlement House Movement

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    One important characteristic of the Settlement House Movement is that they wanted to reform existing social policy and offer services that would help the poor to “shake the bonds” of poverty and enjoy a better quality of life. Thus, settlement workers saw the need for a dramatic change in social, health and reactional services that were offered in slum areas in the large cities (Heinonen and Spearman, 2010, p. 15). Moreover, the settlement house workers believed that “problems people faced were

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    Settlement houses in Texas The movement can be traced back all the way to England in 1884, which is called the Progressive era movement and then spreading to the United States in 1886. In the early 1900’s the settlement house movement seemed to have its impact with the European immigrants living in slum dwellings. Having a basic need to improve their daily quality of life through education and health services. They were the first to benefit from the lack of welfare programs of the time. Initially

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    Jane Addams was considered the first woman to be a “public philosopher” and won worldwide recognition for her movement as a pioneer social worker in America, a feminist, and as an internationalist. Additionally, Jane Addams was born September 6, 1860 in Cedarville, Illinois; she was the eighth children of nine. Growing up, Addams was not physically healthy throughout her youth, she suffered from spinal difficulty, but was later in time it was remedied by a surgery. In addition, it can be said that

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    Efficiency, Suffrage Movements, Prohibition, and the list continues. Jane Adams being a fighter and standing up for what she believed in was described as being “bold as a lion” (20 yr) growing up and, through her adult years when initiating change in the way the government and society assist with the impoverished. Adams established the Hull House with Ellen Gates Star “on the 18th of September, 1889”(20 yr.). This started the movement that is know as the Settlement House Movement. “The purpose of the

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    California Women’s Movement built a nonpartisan broad suffrage umbrella that sought to enhance their “special interests.” Middle-class women assured their male allies that women’s enfranchisement was essential to progressivism. Furthermore, middle-and working-class women argued that suffrage would not only protect working women but women in general. Working class men and women also united to seek reform. Thus, through these heterogeneous groups, the California Women’s Movement built a unified coalition

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    History Essay 11/3/09 There were many problems faced by both farmers and immigrants in the late 1800’s. The economy was very shaky, the government was not stepping up to help, and the immigrants faced harsh times in their coming to America. Eventually many groups were formed to help with these issues. Farmers faced many issues in the 1800’s. First off, debt was a huge issue for farmers. Falling crop prices, unpaid loans, and crashing banks all led to the huge debt of farmers. Because the

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    The Rebirth of Community Schooling Today 's urban communities are all too often debilitated by poverty, violence, drug addiction and crime. The decaying community has little to offer it 's youth who are being born into overwhelming disadvantage through no fault of their own. Disadvantaged children lag behind throughout the school years, mainly due to poverty. Despite our wealth and sophistication, thirteen million children in the United States live below the poverty level (Williams-Boyd 1)

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    prevent or resolve problems in social and psychological functioning, meet basic human needs, achieve life-enhancing goals, and create a just society. Jane Addams helped build social work during her time as a founder of the U.S. Settlement House Movement to establish settlement houses in poor urban areas for volunteer middle-class social workers to alleviate the poverty of their low-income neighbors. Addams ideas continue to influence social, political, and economic reform in the United States as well

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    There is a quote, at the base of the Statue of Liberty that reads; “Give me your tired, your poor. Your huddled masses yearning to breathe free...” This quote reflects the feeling of great opportunity many immigrants felt they would receive upon coming to America. This was also the mentality many American believed all received through our constitution's promise of; life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. In Mark Twain’s novel, Huckleberry Finn, the structure of the main character’s relationship

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    known as “the mother of social work” and is responsible for the first U.S settlement house movement, in the late 1800’s. Addams believed that people of poverty and the disadvantaged were caused by society, not laziness or a lack of morals. Her approach to help the poor in an unfair society was of compassion and kindness. The opening of the first settlement house was considered the beginning of the most significant social movement, in U.S history. Addams was born in Chicago, Illinois in 1860 and was

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