This PowerPoint presentation covers the fundamentals of British Romanticism, 1798 - 1832. It includes discussion of important events that shaped the period, describes the process of industrialization (which greatly affected the movement) and provides characteristics that were common to Romantic writing. It also discusses the movement as a reaction to neo-classicism. The presentation also includes critical thinking questions and activities.
This PowerPoint is 20 slides long. It is part of a .zip file because I have included a .ppt file that teachers can print off for their students (to speed up the note-taking process while still requiring that they take notes!) and a .pdf file for students. It also includes basic notes from the instructor where appropriate, offering ideas or further explanation.
As always, I try to keep my PowerPoint presentations to a price that is between 0.30 and 0.50 per slide, and I never charge over 0.50 per slide.
If you would like to request a PowerPoint over a specific subject related to History, Writing, or Literature (of any sort), please email me at rutherfordj2@k12tn.net. I cannot promise that I will be able to make the presentation for you, but if I have time or if I have something similar that I can modify for you, I will happily create it and make it available on this site for roughly the price scale I would otherwise use.

Native American Oral Tradiations (PowerPoint File) by Josh Rutherford is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 United States License.


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I am in my fifth year of teaching at Houston County High School in Erin, Tennessee. I taught Regular & Inclusion English III (Juniors) for four years; College (English 1010) & Honors English III (Juniors) for four years; College (English 1020) & Honors English IV (Seniors) for four years; and Regular & Inclusion English IV (Seniors) for one year. This year, I began teaching the Regular & Inclusion English IV, instead of Regular & Inclusion English III. I have taught English 1010 as an adjunct at Austin Peay State University for two years.
