Though President Obama actually took the oath of office on Jan. 20, public inaugural celebrations take place on Jan. 21, the same day that Martin Luther King will be celebrated this year.
In honor of both of these occasions, this will be our only post on Monday. Below, some resources for teaching and learning about each.
Martin Luther King Day
The slide show of historic Times photos about the Civil Rights Movement at the top of this post is a collection we first published last February. You might apply the three questions we ask weekly in our What's Going On in This Picture? series to any one of them to think more about what is depicted, why and who.
Below, more from The Learning Network about Martin Luther King, Jr. and the civil rights movement — each with links to historic Times articles, lesson plans, crosswords, Student Opinion questions and more:
Inauguration Day
If you were to write your own Inaugural Address, what would you say?
How would you draw on America's past while acknowledging the present moment? How would you unite Americans? What challenges would you note, and what would you say about the role of government?
One way to play with those questions is through The Times's interactive Build Your Own Inaugural Address. Below, more ideas for celebrating Inauguration Day:
On Inaugural Speeches and Celebrations:
On President Obama's First Term
Anda sedang membaca artikel tentang
Celebrating Inauguration Day and Martin Luther King Day - New York Times (blog)
Dengan url
http://goartikelasik.blogspot.com/2013/01/celebrating-inauguration-day-and-martin.html
Anda boleh menyebar luaskannya atau mengcopy paste-nya
Celebrating Inauguration Day and Martin Luther King Day - New York Times (blog)
namun jangan lupa untuk meletakkan link
Celebrating Inauguration Day and Martin Luther King Day - New York Times (blog)
sebagai sumbernya
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