Presidents’ Day

Presidents

Pictures and dates of all the presidents in order

Secret Service code names are chosen for all president and their families, as well as for important locations.

Activity Ideas:

–Have your student guess the ages of the youngest and oldest presidents (reminding them that 35 is the minimum age)
Youngest was John F. Kennedy (at age 43) and oldest is Joe Biden (at age 78)

–Have your student calculate which year they will be 35 – old enough to be eligible to be president or vice president. (Don’t know how valid this explanation is about people running who aren’t quite 35 at election time, but it’s interesting.)

–Draw a self-portrait or pose for a photo, similar to those seen in lists of presidents, usually from the chest or waist, up, with an American flag in the background.

–Secret Service code names are usually chosen by the presidential family from a list of recognizable, uncommonly used words that are easy to pronounce and understand.  What would you pick for a code name?  How about for your family?  Your house?  Car?

 

White House and Grounds

What’s Inside the White House?

–Floor Plan of the West Wing

–You can also view maps of the grounds, the East Wing, and the Residence.  View different floors by using the menu above.   Here are some of the furnishings and art.

–From this menu, you can view photos and history of different rooms in the White House and on its grounds.  Check out places like the bowling alley and theater and putting green.

Activity Ideas:

–Have your student guess how many rooms, bathrooms, doors, windows, etc. are in the White House.  Although the link is broken, a search for this information shows this info below from whitehouse.gov  You can also start by having your student do a scavenger hunt in your own home for how many windows, doors, bathrooms, and rooms there are.

The White House is a place where history continues to unfold. There are 132 rooms, 35 bathrooms, and 6 levels in the Residence. There are also 412 doors, 147 windows, 28 fireplaces, 8 staircases, and 3 elevators.

–Have your student address an envelope to the White House, or better yet, write and send a letter!  (Email is probably preferred, but knowing the address is important to practice too.)

The White House
1600 Pennsylvania Avenue, N.W.
Washington, DC 20500

–Which rooms would you most want to visit at the White House?  Why?

–If you could add a room, what would it be?

–If you lived at the White House, who would you invite to come stay?

–Build a paper White House

Oval Office

–Oval Office photos and More past photos

–replica of LBJ’s Oval Office and replica of Clinton’s Oval Office

Biden’s Oval Office

–Story of The Resolute Desk  and another story of the desk

–Magic House -Children’s Museum – oval office replica (Go straight through the red doors, follow the long corridor. Keep going… Once through the double doors, look left when you see Airmazement on the right.  You’ll have a virtual map tour of a mini courtroom (Judicial Branch), mini Oval Office (Executive), and a mini Legislative chamber.

Activity Ideas:

–Franklin D. Roosevelt requested a hinged panel be added to the Resolute Desk to hide his legs.  Here’s a photo of John F. Kennedy’s daughter and niece playing there and one of John F. Kennedy’s son.   If you were allowed to play here, what would you do with this hinged panel?

–Each president is able to choose colors for the rug, the drapes, the couches.  They also select which artwork they’d like to display.  If you could design the Oval Office to your liking, what would it look like?  Draw a picture, make a collage, or build a diorama to show your office.

Food at The White House

White House menus from the past

Activity Ideas:

–Design your own menu of favorites

 

First Children

Some of the children who have lived in the White House

–Only one child has been born in the White House

Activity Ideas:

–Think about what it would be like to be a kid living in the White House.  What would be some benefits?  Some disadvantages?  If you started living in the White House this year, how old would you be when your parent’s term was up?

 

Presidential Pets

White House pets

–New White House dog, Major, the first-ever rescue dog at the White House, got his own Indoguration on January 17

List of Presidents and their pets with hyperlinks for more info on each pet

Trivia questions each week about presidential pets

Activity Ideas:

–Draw or collage a picture of your pet(s) at the White House

–Look through the lists of past pets and find the most unusual, your favorite, the cutest, etc.

Other Ideas:

–Have your student calculate which year they will be 18 – old enough to vote (For those November bdays, my understanding is you can register to vote if you will be 18 on or before election day, but may not be eligible for early voting.)

–If you were President, what priorities would you tackle during your presidency?

–Watch a parent-approved movie or movie clip that features the White House or a fictional President.

(This is a short scene from the movie Dave.  The White House Chief of Staff comes in, angry, at the man he hired to pretend to be President.  He yells some words, and I can’t hear them clearly enough to tell if they’re bad words.  But, the clip does show a brief glimpse of a White House tour, an office, President’s Outer Office, and the Oval Office. (For those with a keen ear, you will hear Sally from Cars/Dolly from Toy Story as the White House guide.))

 

 

2021 Presidential Inauguration

This Inauguration Day, I wanted to find some resources to supplement our homeschooling.  And while there are many activities lists online, I found myself wanting links to very specific things.  Here’s the list I’ve started to put together of links and some of my own activity ideas, mixed with existing ones.  (I have also started a list of other links about presidents here.)

Our White House – Coverage of the Inauguration for youth, hosted by Keke Palmer.  Guests, ASL translation, and interesting facts on side bar

Video with questions from kids about Inauguration Day (Scroll down to Virtual Field Trip: I Do Solemnly Swear)

Activity Ideas

Activity Ideas for K-12

Inauguration Day Fun Facts

 

Inaugural Address

Read past Inaugural Addresses (Scroll to the bottom for a graph comparing word lengths)

Activity Ideas:
Write your own Inaugural Address

 

Inauguration Poetry Readings

Links to past poetry readings
Amanda Gorman’s poem transcript and video
–More of Ms. Gorman’s poems
A PBS interview with Amanda Gorman

Activity Ideas:
–Read through poetry and ask your student which poem they would choose for an Inauguration and why.
–Have your student write their own Inaugural Poem

 

Inauguration Day Guest Speakers/Artists

2021 Virtual Concert hosted by Tom Hanks
More about the Biden concert

Activity Ideas:
–If you could choose guest poets, musicians, and performers for your Inauguration Day, who would you choose?  What would you like for them to perform?

 

Virtual Inauguration Day parade

 

Inaugural Ball

Ideas and activities for your own Inaugural Ball
–Photos from past balls
More photos

Activity Ideas:
–Look at past invitations from Inaugural Balls and have your student design their own. (Or use this as a template–Presidential Inaugural Ball invitations with blanks)
–Dress up for your own at-home version of an Inaugural Ball.  Or, have your student design and draw their outfit instead.
–Decide on a menu for the evening and write it up
–Research past musical guests from Inaugural Balls and then have your student decide on who they would invite to perform at theirs

 

Indoguration

–New White House dog, Major, the first-ever rescue dog at the White House, got his own Indoguration on January 17.  With guest appearance by Josh Groban

 

Moving Day

An article that explains January 20th moving day 
A video about moving day

 

Bear Snores On

Bear Snores On (2002)

written by Karma Wilson
illustrated by Jane Chapman

This is one I’ve had memorized for years, because we read it so often to our first-born.  Sometimes books with rhyming texts just don’t quite work for me, and sometimes they completely click.  This one flows so well.  More and more animals gather in a big bear’s warm den while he sleeps through a blustery night.  They make snacks and chat, but the bear continues to snore on.  Of course, his slumber is eventually disturbed, and he is not a happy camper.  But all ends well with cozy treats and tales.

This is definitely one of my favorite picture books.  Great for a bedtime read or a winter read to a little one, but I think any age will enjoy the sweet story, natural rhythm, and darling pictures.

 

Composting Confessions

I’m kind of embarrassed to write this, because I really make a lot of efforts to remain eco-conscious in my life.  I know there are tons of ways to be “eco-friendly,” and, like anything, it is an ongoing journey.  It is definitely one that shouldn’t be part of the comparison game (even if that’s only happening in our own heads).  But, I’m just going to say it…I’ve never composted.

Well, not really.  I’ve tried.  I really have.  At least two different times I had a set-up that never quite worked out.  For some reason, in the past, I’ve always found the whole thing very mysterious and intimidating.  Silly, I know.  Another reason (not excuse, mind you, but a reason) is that in my 23 years since moving out of my childhood family’s home, I have moved 20 times.  That is an insane average!

But, it’s been nagging at me for years.  Reducing food waste is a huge way to help our sweet, precious, beautiful Earth.  And while I have worked on reducing food waste on the front side of things by cooking at home, buying only what we’ll use, freezing items to preserve them for future use, etc., I haven’t done much (until now) for the afterlife of unused food items.  I think there’s a mistaken belief that because it’s food it will just decompose in the trash.  But when food scraps are thrown into a plastic trash bag and grouped in a landfill, they aren’t given the conditions necessary for this very miraculous way of natural recycling back into the earth.  They take up a huge amount of landfill space and release methane, a very potent greenhouse gas, when they do break down.

So, I finally did it.  There is SO much information on composting, which is both helpful and, well, not.  It was hard to know what to choose.  And, as an over-thinker, I was weighing the plastic use of any composting container with its eventual long-term benefits.  I know there are natural compost piles and reused wood pallet containers, but since we have no backyard at the moment, and we’re living in a rental, these seemed unlikely for our situation.

Here is the idea (and a similar one) we ended up using.  I love that it uses rotating bins, since that has always been one of my biggest questions/concerns, especially with such often moves–How does the compost get a chance to break down if I’m constantly adding more scraps?  In this method, once the top bin is 3/4 full, it’s rotated to the middle where it can sit and do its magic.  And the middle bin comes up to the top for new scraps.  Eventually, the (now) middle bin gets dumped into the bottom for further composting magic, and then it goes (empty) back to the top position.  Etc.  It sounds ideal.

We’re about one week in, and I’m not kidding, I feel like a weight has been lifted.  I’ve carried this goal around for so long that it feels wonderful to be actually doing it.  I know the novelty will eventually wear off, but right now, adding to our kitchen composter (currently a large plastic container that was headed for recycling) and then dumping it in our compost bin is a serious point of pride and excitement around here.  [Update:  Now using this kitchen composter from the wonderful ZeroWasteCartel!]

I hope to post with some positive updates as this unfolds.  And hopefully, hopefully, I can help encourage some other reluctant composters out there.

 

(We just used a plastic lid we had saved (from a bin that didn’t make it) and then used a bungee cord to secure it on top.  We have it sitting in a small (somewhat) sheltered part under our porch where it has already survived some very windy days.)

Paper Fortune Cookies

I LOVE, love getting fortunes from fortune cookies!  And even though I’ve grown to dislike the restaurant ones, and I’m not always in the mood to make the homemade ones, I still crave the random messages of wisdom or hope or complete randomness to reflect on.

Enter….Paper and Fabric Fortune Cookies! I love this idea, especially because it’s a GREAT opportunity to reuse old magazines, catalogs, wrapping paper, damaged books, etc. as well as fabric scraps.  Wouldn’t it be fun to have a jar of these around either at a celebration or perhaps year-round for your family or guests to reach in for some fortune cookie wisdom every now and then?

The first time I made these, I sort of made it up as I went, and it was a bit of a struggle.  In the video above, I’ve shown a few different tips and ideas, which I hope can help.

I think a bag or box or container of these would be such a fun, simple (possibly upcycled?) gift.  If your gift recipient is going through a tough time, you could hand select quotes or messages to offer them hope or a chuckle.  If it’s a special anniversary party, you could collect messages about love or marriage.  If you’ve collected cute, little sayings your kid has said over the years, you could put those on the messages at a birthday party.  You could stick a fortune in with your child’s lunch or tuck one into a birthday card.  The creative possibilities are endless.

If you’re not up for a crafty project, but still like the idea of fortunes, why not just put out a jar of fortunes with no cookies?   Here are some fortune cookie quotations (and here and here) I put together for my shop, if you’re interested!