Maggie Hogan’s Bright Ideas Press E-Zine Welcome to a special edition of our newsletter. I hope you find the following information useful, as you spend time teaching and enjoying your children! December 7th Pearl Harbor Day “A Date Which Will Live in Infamy...” Although I believe in teaching history in a chronological, orderly fashion, I also believe in “teachable moments.” Important dates fall into this category. Pearl Harbor Day should not pass unnoticed. Today’s column will give you ideas for making it a day to be remembered in your house. I’m working on the assumption that you will be taking this event out of context and that you probably only have a day or two to spend studying it. So... we’ll keep this simple! Warning! Do not attempt to do everything listed below in one day! Videos There are many movies made about WW2. Most are unsuitable for families. One that we thought stayed fairly close to the facts and kept gore to a minimum is an older movie called “Tora! Tora! Tora!” Probably best for junior high and up. It’s a great summary of the events surrounding Pearl Harbor. Books You only have a day or two so instead of books I recommend you visit the web sites listed below and read some of the summaries and eye-witness accounts found there. Also, make a point to read at least part of FDR’s famous speech out loud. (See web sites below.) Geography Define harbor. Find good pictures of Pearl Harbor (see web sites) and draw or trace them. Using a blank outline map of the world, fill in the following places: Japan, Hiroshima, Tokyo, Okinawa, Philippines, Bataan, Wake Island, Midway Island, Guam, Hawaii, O'ahu, Pearl Harbor. Timelines Use the information in the web sites below to fill out a large poster with the events in the order they happened. Younger students can add drawings to illustrate the important moments. Scrapbooks WW2 broke out while my dad was in college. He joined the Navy, went to Annapolis Naval Academy for Officer’s Training School, married my mom, and shipped out on the U.S.S. Princeton (which later sunk in the Pacific). My mom, a new bride during difficult times, took to keeping a scrapbook of the war. She cut out newspaper headlines and articles, photos, clippings from magazines, etc. along with letters and pasted them in her book. Ten years ago our oldest son became enamored with WW2 and read everything he could find about the subject. Imagine his delight when his grandmother was able to pull out this old scrapbook with crumbling yellowed pages and show him what it looked like from her eyes! First Person Accounts You may know someone who has kept a book like this. There may be WW2 vets in your church or family. Sadly, there are fewer and fewer vets of this era still living. Find them while you still can and talk to them - even over the phone. Scrapbooking Keep a scrapbook about the current war on terrorism. This may become a special book for your grandchildren. Keeping a scrapbook is a way for kids to help organize the many aspects of this war, to feel like they have some control, and to remind them to pray for all involved. Current events are an important part of education and these historic times we live in especially demand our attention. Working regularly in a “War Book” provides an outlet and opportunity for discussion. A 12" X 15" scrapbook would be a good size to accommodate newspaper articles. Writing Assignments/Discussion Questions Here’s an opportunity to practice logic and thinking skills. Write or discuss: What are the major similarities and major differences between “The Day of Infamy” and the events of 9/11? Or, put yourself at Pearl Harbor on Dec. 7th. Decide who you are and why you are there. Write a journal entry (in the first person) for that day. (Visit www.eyewitnesstohistory.com for real first-person accounts.) Field Trips Catch a flight to O'ahu. Okay... just kidding! But my friend Stephanie (along with her Air Force husband) is blessed to live at Hickham Air Force Base adjacent to Pearl Harbor. Here’s what she had to say about it visiting Pearl Harbor for the first time: “What struck me the most was how solemn it was. Here we were, a bunch of typical tourists (including many Japanese) filing through the memorial SILENTLY. We were reminded that this is not just an historic monument, but also a military graveyard. The wall of names listing all the dead servicemen was particularly touching. While at Pearl Harbor I could sense a feeling of what it must have been like on that day. For me, being there made history come to life.” There is a large military cemetery (Punchbowl National Memorial Cemetery) on O’ahu that is the Pacific version of Arlington National Cemetery. On December 7, the relatives of the men who were killed on Dec. 7 gather there and drop leis into the harbor in their memory ... very moving. Men who served on the Arizona are still being interred there today when they die. Divers take the ashes below the water following a memorial ceremony and lower them through the hull. Note: The USS Arizona Visitor Center is located on the Pearl Harbor Naval Base adjacent to the sunken remains of the USS A rizona, which went down in 9 minutes with 1,177 men on board. The center is operated and maintained by the National Park Service. Young children are not allowed to go out to the Arizona Memorial. Web Sites This National Park Service site also has a terrific on-line lesson plan that is easy-to-use and includes maps, graphs, and photos. It was written by a NPS Park Ranger serving at the USS Arizona Visitor Center. (Find it in the section marked “Teachers.” www.nps.gov/usar/ Large, wonderful site! Check out the multi-media map and timeline: http://plasma.nationalgeographic.com/pearlharbor/ Here’s the full text and a MP3 audio file of the famous speech by President Roosevelt, beginning with, "Yesterday, December 7, 1941 - a date which will live in infamy -- The United States was suddenly and deliberately attacked....” www.pearlharborattacked.com/ Print your own 36 page booklet about Pearl Harbor, with color photos: www.homeofheroes.com/pearlharbor/ For film footage, radio broadcasts, speeches, and popular songs: www.umkc.edu/lib/spec-col/ww2/PearlHarbor/ph.htm Great video and interactive module: www.msnbc.com/modules/pearlharbor/experience/ Lots of photos here: www.history.navy.mil/photos/events/wwii-pac/pearlhbr/pearlhbr.htm Wonderful site with first-hand accounts: www.eyewitnesstohistory.com/pearl.htm Year-by-year timeline of events surrounding WW2 with links to specific subjects: www.unverse.com/WW2.html Easy-to-read, simplified timeline: www.historyonthenet.com/WW2/WW2_timeline.htm Resources Check out our awesome new American history curriculum! All American History Vol 1 Grades 5 - 9 All American History Vol 2 Grades 5 – 9 (coming soon!) http://groups.yahoo.com/group/AllAmericanHistory/ See samples and a Table of Contents at www.BrightIdeasPress.com While you are there, check out our American History Atlas, outline maps, other atlases, and blank timelines. **************************************************************** *Cathy Duffy Top 100 Picks See the books that Cathy loves: The Mystery of History Series and The Christian Kids Explore Series at www.BrightIdeasPress.com **************************************************************** Check out our Yahoo Groups! http://groups.yahoo.com/group/AllAmericanHistory (Our awesome American History curriculum!) http://groups.yahoo.com/group/HSGifted (Homeschooling gifted children) http://groups.yahoo.com/group/MysteryofHistory1 http://groups.yahoo.com/group/MysteryofHistory2 http://groups.yahoo.com/group/MysteryofHistoryHS (Using The Mystery of History with high schoolers) http://groups.yahoo.com/group/ChristianKidsExploreBiology (For all of our science curriculum) We appreciate you, our customers. Feel free to contact us: Bright Ideas Press (Publishers of The Mystery of History series) 877.492.8081 contact@BrightIdeasPress.com www.BrightIdeasPress.com Come blog with me: www.homeschoolblogger.com/maggiehogan   Happy Trails, Maggie Hogan Maggie Hogan's Bright Ideas Press E-Zine Welcome to a special edition of our newsletter. I hope you find the following information useful, as you spend time teaching and enjoying your children! If you prefer, you may read the HTML version of this newsletter online at: http://www.brightideaspress.com/nl/BIP12.htm December 7th Pearl Harbor Day “A Date Which Will Live in Infamy...” Although I believe in teaching history in a chronological, orderly fashion, I also believe in “teachable moments.” Important dates fall into this category. Pearl Harbor Day should not pass unnoticed. Today’s column will give you ideas for making it a day to be remembered in your house. I’m working on the assumption that you will be taking this event out of context and that you probably only have a day or two to spend studying it. So... we’ll keep this simple! Warning! Do not attempt to do everything listed below in one day! Videos There are many movies made about WW2. Most are unsuitable for families. One that we thought stayed fairly close to the facts and kept gore to a minimum is an older movie called “Tora! Tora! Tora!” Probably best for junior high and up. It’s a great summary of the events surrounding Pearl Harbor. Books You only have a day or two so instead of books I recommend you visit the web sites listed below and read some of the summaries and eye-witness accounts found there. Also, make a point to read at least part of FDR’s famous speech out loud. (See web sites below.) Geography Define harbor. Find good pictures of Pearl Harbor (see web sites) and draw or trace them. Using a blank outline map of the world, fill in the following places: Japan, Hiroshima, Tokyo, Okinawa, Philippines, Bataan, Wake Island, Midway Island, Guam, Hawaii, O'ahu, Pearl Harbor. Timelines Use the information in the web sites below to fill out a large poster with the events in the order they happened. Younger students can add drawings to illustrate the important moments. Scrapbooks WW2 broke out while my dad was in college. He joined the Navy, went to Annapolis Naval Academy for Officer’s Training School, married my mom, and shipped out on the U.S.S. Princeton (which later sunk in the Pacific). My mom, a new bride during difficult times, took to keeping a scrapbook of the war. She cut out newspaper headlines and articles, photos, clippings from magazines, etc. along with letters and pasted them in her book. Ten years ago our oldest son became enamored with WW2 and read everything he could find about the subject. Imagine his delight when his grandmother was able to pull out this old scrapbook with crumbling yellowed pages and show him what it looked like from her eyes! First Person Accounts You may know someone who has kept a book like this. There may be WW2 vets in your church or family. Sadly, there are fewer and fewer vets of this era still living. Find them while you still can and talk to them - even over the phone. Scrapbooking Keep a scrapbook about the current war on terrorism. This may become a special book for your grandchildren. Keeping a scrapbook is a way for kids to help organize the many aspects of this war, to feel like they have some control, and to remind them to pray for all involved. Current events are an important part of education and these historic times we live in especially demand our attention. Working regularly in a “War Book” provides an outlet and opportunity for discussion. A 12" X 15" scrapbook would be a good size to accommodate newspaper articles. Writing Assignments/Discussion Questions Here’s an opportunity to practice logic and thinking skills. Write or discuss: What are the major similarities and major differences between “The Day of Infamy” and the events of 9/11? Or, put yourself at Pearl Harbor on Dec. 7th. Decide who you are and why you are there. Write a journal entry (in the first person) for that day. (Visit www.eyewitnesstohistory.com for real first-person accounts.) Field Trips Catch a flight to O'ahu. Okay... just kidding! But my friend Stephanie (along with her Air Force husband) is blessed to live at Hickham Air Force Base adjacent to Pearl Harbor. Here’s what she had to say about it visiting Pearl Harbor for the first time: “What struck me the most was how solemn it was. Here we were, a bunch of typical tourists (including many Japanese) filing through the memorial SILENTLY. We were reminded that this is not just an historic monument, but also a military graveyard. The wall of names listing all the dead servicemen was particularly touching. While at Pearl Harbor I could sense a feeling of what it must have been like on that day. For me, being there made history come to life.” There is a large military cemetery (Punchbowl National Memorial Cemetery) on O’ahu that is the Pacific version of Arlington National Cemetery. On December 7, the relatives of the men who were killed on Dec. 7 gather there and drop leis into the harbor in their memory ... very moving. Men who served on the Arizona are still being interred there today when they die. Divers take the ashes below the water following a memorial ceremony and lower them through the hull. Note: The USS Arizona Visitor Center is located on the Pearl Harbor Naval Base adjacent to the sunken remains of the USS A rizona, which went down in 9 minutes with 1,177 men on board. The center is operated and maintained by the National Park Service. Young children are not allowed to go out to the Arizona Memorial. Web Sites This National Park Service site also has a terrific on-line lesson plan that is easy-to-use and includes maps, graphs, and photos. It was written by a NPS Park Ranger serving at the USS Arizona Visitor Center. (Find it in the section marked “Teachers.” www.nps.gov/usar/ Large, wonderful site! Check out the multi-media map and timeline: http://plasma.nationalgeographic.com/pearlharbor/ Here’s the full text and a MP3 audio file of the famous speech by President Roosevelt, beginning with, "Yesterday, December 7, 1941 - a date which will live in infamy -- The United States was suddenly and deliberately attacked....” www.pearlharborattacked.com/ Print your own 36 page booklet about Pearl Harbor, with color photos: www.homeofheroes.com/pearlharbor/ For film footage, radio broadcasts, speeches, and popular songs: www.umkc.edu/lib/spec-col/ww2/PearlHarbor/ph.htm Great video and interactive module: www.msnbc.com/modules/pearlharbor/experience/ Lots of photos here: www.history.navy.mil/photos/events/wwii-pac/pearlhbr/pearlhbr.htm Wonderful site with first-hand accounts: www.eyewitnesstohistory.com/pearl.htm Year-by-year timeline of events surrounding WW2 with links to specific subjects: www.unverse.com/WW2.html Easy-to-read, simplified timeline: www.historyonthenet.com/WW2/WW2_timeline.htm Resources Check out our awesome new American history curriculum! All American History Vol 1 Grades 5 - 9 All American History Vol 2 Grades 5 – 9 (coming soon!) http://groups.yahoo.com/group/AllAmericanHistory/ See samples and a Table of Contents at www.BrightIdeasPress.com While you are there, check out our American History Atlas, outline maps, other atlases, and blank timelines. **************************************************************** *Cathy Duffy Top 100 Picks See the books that Cathy loves: The Mystery of History Series and The Christian Kids Explore Series at www.BrightIdeasPress.com **************************************************************** Check out our Yahoo Groups! http://groups.yahoo.com/group/AllAmericanHistory (Our awesome American History curriculum!) http://groups.yahoo.com/group/HSGifted (Homeschooling gifted children) http://groups.yahoo.com/group/MysteryofHistory1 http://groups.yahoo.com/group/MysteryofHistory2 http://groups.yahoo.com/group/MysteryofHistoryHS (Using The Mystery of History with high schoolers) http://groups.yahoo.com/group/ChristianKidsExploreBiology (For all of our science curriculum) We appreciate you, our customers. Feel free to contact us: Bright Ideas Press (Publishers of The Mystery of History series) 877.492.8081 contact@BrightIdeasPress.com www.BrightIdeasPress.com Come blog with me: www.homeschoolblogger.com/maggiehogan Happy Trails, Maggie Hogan