Daily Life
RELIGION & EDUCATION
JOBS & ECONOMY
REGIONS
CHALLENGE ROUND
100

Name one common chore for colonial children.

Gathering wood, feeding animals, helping cook, sweeping

100

Where did most colonial schools meet?

 Homes or churches

100

What is bartering?

Trading goods instead of money

100

 Which region had rocky soil and cold winters?

 New England

100

 Name one cultural group that lived in the colonies.

 English, Dutch, German, African, Native groups

200

What were two responsibilities mothers and daughters usually had?

Cooking, sewing, gardening, caring for children

200

What subject was used to help children learn to read?

 The Bible

200

 Name one job done by artisans.

Blacksmith, carpenter, printer, baker

200

Which region was known as the “Breadbasket Colonies”?

Middle Colonies

200

How did diversity strengthen colonial communities?

 Shared foods, traditions, farming methods

300

What did families teach children at home besides chores?

Faith, discipline, values

300

Who was often not allowed to attend school?

Girls (sometimes), enslaved children

300

Why were apprentices important in colonial towns?

They learned skills needed in the colony

300

 Which region relied most on plantations?

Southern Colonies

300

 Which group had the most rights: gentry, middle class, indentured servants, or enslaved people?

 Gentry

400

Why were community events (barn raisings, market days) important?

They built friendship, supported each other, completed big tasks

400

 Why was Sunday church important in the colonies?

It united the community; taught values

400

What cash crops were grown in the Southern colonies?

Tobacco, rice, indigo

400

How did geography influence farming in the Southern colonies?

 Long warm seasons let them grow cash crops

400

Why was colonial society unfair for many groups?

 Enslaved people had no rights; servants had little freedom

500

 How did daily life in colonial times show cooperation and interdependence?

 Colonists depended on each other to survive; families worked as teams

500

 How did religion guide laws and community decisions in New England?

Puritan beliefs shaped laws and expectations

500

How did geography affect the jobs colonists could have?

 Geography determined crops and jobs

500

 Compare New England and Southern Colonies in ONE sentence.

 NE = rocky soil, shipbuilding; South = plantations, warm climate

500

Which colonial value still matters most today — faith, family, hard work, or cooperation — and why?

Answer vary