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Do Now • Please get out something to write with • Please turn to your Life in the Trenches chart in your notebook

Do Now Please get out something to write with Please turn to your Life in the Trenches chart in your notebook

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Page 1: Do Now Please get out something to write with Please turn to your Life in the Trenches chart in your notebook

Do Now

• Please get out something to write with• Please turn to your Life in the Trenches

chart in your notebook

Page 2: Do Now Please get out something to write with Please turn to your Life in the Trenches chart in your notebook

Life in the Trenches

• Read each placard as a group• As you read the placard, picture yourself a

soldier in the trenches and what it must have been like

• Fill out the Life in the Trenches chart accordingly

• Be detailed in your descriptions, because you will be using this information to write a letter from the trench

Page 3: Do Now Please get out something to write with Please turn to your Life in the Trenches chart in your notebook
Page 4: Do Now Please get out something to write with Please turn to your Life in the Trenches chart in your notebook
Page 5: Do Now Please get out something to write with Please turn to your Life in the Trenches chart in your notebook
Page 6: Do Now Please get out something to write with Please turn to your Life in the Trenches chart in your notebook
Page 7: Do Now Please get out something to write with Please turn to your Life in the Trenches chart in your notebook

Trench foot

Page 8: Do Now Please get out something to write with Please turn to your Life in the Trenches chart in your notebook

Shell Shock

• A psychological trauma as a result of their war experiences. Symptoms ranged from uncontrollable diarrhoea to unrelenting anxiety. Soldiers who had bayoneted men in the face developed hysterical tics of their own facial muscles. Stomach cramps seized men who knifed their foes in the abdomen. Snipers lost their sight. Terrifying nightmares of being unable to withdraw bayonets from the enemies bodies persisted long after the slaughter.

• “Dreams might occur right in the middle of an ordinary conversation when the face of a person that I have bayoneted, with its horrible gurgle and grimace, comes sharply into view,” an infantry captain complained. An inability to eat or sleep after the slaughter was common.

• https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IWHbF5jGJY0