| Abolitionists | | Attended school only ten weeks a year. |
| Antioch College | | The city Thoreau practiced his preaching in. |
| Henry David Thoreau | | Went to jail for letting an African American girl into her girls' school. |
| Horace Mann | | Revival of religious feeling and belief. |
| Ralph Waldo Emerson | | Schools that are paid for by taxes and managed by local government for the benefit of the general public. |
| George Ripley | | Where Horace Mann attended school. |
| Public schools | | The name of a newspaper. |
| Prudence Crandall | | A formal statement of injustices suffered by women. |
| Concord | | Became the first college to admit women as well as men. |
| Liberator | | This person started Brook Farm. |
| Oberlin College | | Central figure in a moement called transcendentalism. |
| Second Great Awakening | | Taught Sunday school at a jail. |
| Massachusetts | | Practiced what he preached in the woods. |
| Brook Farm | | Horace Mann became the first president of this college. |
| Declaration of Sentiments | | It was started by George Ripley. |
| Reformers | | People who work to correct failings or injstices. |
| Dorothea Dix | | A philosophy which taught that people should go beyond logical thinking to reach true understanding with the help of emotion and intuition. |
| Transcendentalism | | People who favored abolition, the ending of slavery. |