Girls were expected to stay at home and learn domestic duties.
Yes but they left early to do domestic work
In terms of an classroom setting...The Crimean War: tragic waste of life vs important lesson in military medicine?Women should have ruled in e.g. England [insert whichever nation you think best] vs Men make the best rulers.For fun give make the boys and girls argue for the opposite sex.The necessity of the Boston Tea Party.The Spanish conquest in the Americas: heroic vsbarbaric
In the early 1900s, the color blue was traditionally associated with boys, while pink was often linked to girls. This color association was not universally adopted and varied by region and social class. The preference for blue for boys and pink for girls became more standardized in the mid-20th century, solidifying these associations in popular culture.
elizabeth cady stanton was formally educated .......................................................................................................................................................................sorry i dont feel lyk writing anymore :)
Mary McLeod Bethune was a teacher and civil rights leader, and advisor to President Franklin D. Roosevelt who started a school for African-Americans in Daytona Beach, Florida (what is now Bethune-Cookman University).
Girls were expected to stay at home and learn domestic duties.
Girls were expected to stay at home and learn domestic duties.
They have a better education because they work harder to get more money
ThEy WeReNt EdUcAtEd and if they wErE then, it would be the same as boys
They were educated at home; not out at a school, usually in the comfort of their own courtyard.
They were educated at home; not out at a school, usually in the comfort of their own courtyard.
Women and girls were not educated in this time in history. By the age of 12 she would be considered grown and married.
Becuase people don't think that it is important to make girls educated. They think that girls are burden.
because
one of the girls was Amis from Americas Next Top Model.
Grace Cossington-Smith was educated at Abbotsleigh Girls' School in Sydney
harsh, pain and tiring.