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Monday, December 15, 2014

You, too, Can Teach High School Science!

Many parents are afraid to teach high school Science.  I understand that feeling.  I actually felt that way with Junior High Science!  However, since I had worked with my children so thoroughly in elementary, it just became continued learning!  Wait! Let me step back and tell you that when I taught First Grade Science, I learned a TON!  I finally figured out why tomatoes are classified as a fruit, when we learned to classify edible plants!  Second, Third, and Fourth grade were no different!  The only difference was that I had an adult view on the subject and it all made sense!  And since I was so excited to be learning all of these things, I passed that excitement on to my kids and they became excited.  (Plus, we were doing “camp”, so of course it was fun and exciting!) But, yes, high school was intimidating, especially since I had only had two Science classes in high school, and here I had students that I KNEW were going to want Chemistry and Physics!  
The first thing you need to do to prepare for High School Science is to build up your supply cabinet.  I ordered the glass beakers in elementary.  I ordered glass thermometers.  I order the microscope in 4th grade, and I ordered a NICE microscope that is actually still working.  I have taken it to be recalibrated once, but it was totally worth the $250 I spent on it in 1995.  But typically, each elementary year I would spend between $50 and $100 a year to get what I would need.  My big years were the years I purchased the microscope and then the year I purchased a balance.  By the time we got to high school, it wasn’t any different.  I’d pick up the few things we needed and there we were doing Physical Science.  But now I was integrating my Algebra into the Physical Science.  Wow!  Was this liberal arts mom really doing that?  On a side note, Biology has a lot of “consumables” that makes Biology about $250, and Chemistry has a lot of “hazardous shipping” costs that makes Chemistry about $300.  I remember purchasing $75 worth of chemicals and paying $200 to have it shipped!

I totally felt inadequate when I got to Chemistry.  I had managed to go to school for 17 years and never had to learn about the periodic table, let alone chemical bonding and reactions.  And here I was with my Science minded guy.  I tackled it the way I did everything else.  I figured I could learn it.  Sometimes labs felt miserable.  We would try it.  We would fail.  We would look it up on Youtube.  We would fail.  We would tweak things.  We would fail.  Sometimes our labs lasted 2 to 3 hours trying to get one experiment to work right.  I felt like a failure.  All along, my Science son is critically thinking, learning how to tweak formulas and equipment, with a huge sense of accomplishment when the experiment did finally work!  We got through Chemistry.  I felt like we limped through Chemistry, but we finished it with a full understanding, and that includes me!  Physics went a lot easier.  We’d be reading the book and I’d say, “Oh, that’s how my toaster works!  Oh, that’s how my blow dryer works!”  And each time he’d roll his eyes and laugh, “Mom’s learning stuff from our books again!”

Monday, December 8, 2014

Do Science Fair Projects

Science Fair Projects  - I started doing Science Fair projects with my children as soon as I could.  Fortunately we had an outlet, our school group sponsored a Science Fair, and a deadline, always a good thing, so we got them done!  We always started simple!  For my Kindergartner, I always started with their taste buds.  We’d study the tongue, we’d take a picture of their tongue, and then we’d map it.  Where are all of the taste buds?  Then we got to making cookies.  We’d make salt cookies, sour cookies, made with lots of lemon juice, bitter cookies, made with dry mustard, and finally sugar cookies.  I’d have them guess where they would taste it on their tongues.  They would rub the salty cookie all over the sweet, bitter and sour tastebuds and they couldn’t taste it.  But when they got to the salty areas, they could taste it.  What a GREAT way to figure out how our body was designed, even as a tongue!  Of course, we’d finish with the sugar cookies and everyone was happy!  Then I’d have them make their chart of their discoveries and wah-lah, you have a Science Fair project!  I’ve always tried to take things that they are interested in.  They don’t have to be original or super deep.  There is value to figuring out how their Thomas the Tank engine will pull their train car one way and repel it the other way!  And for them to learn the terminology:  hypothesis, method, data, just puts them ahead in the learning curve.
One year, I had my Senior, who was studying Physics, do a Science Fair project with his 1st grade

brother who was learning about gravity.  Together, they built a crude ramp, and used Matchbox cars and books.  They’d pile the books higher under one end of the ramp, the little guy would let the Matchbox car go and the big guy would do the measurement on the stack of books, time the speed per second of the little car, as if he were designing a mountain road.  Of course, they both had tons of fun working together, and my older son got a ton of praise from all sorts of people that he was willing to work with his little brother.
As an encouragement, I let them do whatever they wanted. Much of the time they just wanted to build something fun, and I would let them, but they had to work within the Scientific Method framework.  For instance, one year, my 7th grader and his buddy, Garrison, come to me and say, “We want to build a wind tunnel for the Science Fair.”  I turn to Garrison’s mom, and she said, “Well, I told them ‘no’, but if it was okay with you, it is okay with me.”  I ask them, “What question are you asking?  And ‘Can we build a wind tunnel?’ doesn’t count. It needs to have a question, a hypothesis, something that you can repeatedly test and then find the results.”  I’m thinking “limited resources, limited size, and how?”, but I didn’t say “no”. A week goes by, and we meet for Life Science lab.  They say, “We came up with our question.  We want to know which paper airplane design flies the best.”  And, that becomes the wind tunnel Science Fair Experiment.  Not only did they learn a LOT about drag, design, pitch and yaw, but they learned much more about regulating air flow.  
Where are they now?  Garrison is working on his PhD at Notre Dame in Chemical Engineering, after receiving his Chemical Engineering degree from USC; and Stephen, after receiving his Electrical and Computer Engineering degree from Norwich University, a Senior Military college, is serving in the Army, hoping to be placed in the Signal Corp next February.
What else have we done?  We’ve figured out how glowsticks work and what causes the different colors.  We’ve asked the question about the best way to freeze ice cream.  
And found out that liquid nitrogen is the quickest.  We’ve asked about the best recipe for slime.
What recipe makes the best bubbles?  What is the best way to clean our hands?
What parts of our garbage do worms like the best?  
When my eldest got to college, he mentioned to me that many of the students in his Science classes didn’t know the Scientific Method.  He said after 13 years, he knew it inside and out, and it gave him a huge advantage while taking his Science classes.
So, maybe you didn’t get to start in the elementary years!  It is not too late!  Start participating in 
Science Fairs!  Start getting involved in high school Science!



Monday, December 1, 2014

Preparing for Your Own Science Camp

Start Science Camp when they are young!  I started with Elementary Science Camp - As a homeschool mom, remembering my earliest experiences with Science, I wanted Science to be different.  I had bigger plans.  I pulled out my Bob Jones Science Curriculum and I saw that there were experiments EVERY lesson.  Woo Hoo!  At this point, I had 3 little children, and my husband was starting his own law practice.  I opted to help him get his files set up and organized over preparing for Science.  So, what happened?  I read the first Science lesson with my son and we read about the experiment, while the little ones were napping.  He yawned and asked if we could do the experiment, and I told him “no” that I needed to get to work helping daddy and then get dinner going.  There was no way I could pull out that mess, do it and then clean it up, and get everything else done, during their nap time.  This pattern continued the entire month of September, and by December we just stopped reading the lessons in the textbook. 
I was wracked with guilt.  Here I had this curious little boy who really wanted to do Science and I had squelched him.  But, I just couldn’t see it getting done when I already had my plate full.  Making and cleaning up one more mess just didn’t seem like something I could add. I continued to let it bug me, all year long.
Finally, we finished our school year.  I could mark that we completed each book, except for Science.  I NEEDED to come up with a solution.  And one day I did.  It was June.  I looked at the book and listed what I would need for each Science Experiment and then I looked at the Teacher’s Manual and listed all of the additional items I needed for experiments to reinforce the Scientific principles. There were 12 chapters in the book.  Those elementary Science books aren’t very thick and I marked my calendar for 3 weeks in July where we would start Science Camp.  I announced to the kids that we were going to do Science Camp for 3 weeks.  They were pretty excited.  We had baseball camp, tennis camp, Vacation Bible School and now mom was going to be doing Science Camp.  Sounded great to them!
I spent the next couple of weeks gathering all of the supplies I needed, and I put them in paper bags.  The bags were labeled Chapter 1, Chapter 2, Chapter 3 and so forth.  I stapled a list of what was needed for each Chapter and as I conducted a large scavenger hunt, I’d cross things off.  Of course, I needed to wait to get carnations and cabbage and those kinds of things until the week of, but I could put magnifying glasses, thread, needles, empty milk cartons, toilet paper rolls and those kinds of goods right into the appropriate bags.  Another thing, as I contemplated whether or not I wanted to buy the plastic beaker versus the glass beaker (First grade science needed 3), I ended up buying the plastic, because I was working with little kids.  Rookie mistake.  By second grade Science Camp, I purchased glass beakers or glass graduated cylinders because I realized that I was working towards a bigger goal than just Science Camps and plastic beakers would not hold up over a Bunsen burner.
On the Sunday night before Science Camp started, I told my children that we were going to start Science Camp at 9 am and that we would finish at Noon.  It was my experience that the kids in the neighborhood, during summer break, slept in, watched cartoons all morning and didn’t knock on the door until after lunch.  I figured that if we couldn’t finished a chapter in 3 hours, we’d just finish it the next day.  This was the time that my children first questioned whether or not this was a “camp” or a “school day”.
Monday morning comes, and I start with an experiment that is recommended in the Teacher’s Manual.  Next we reread that Lesson that we had started the previous September.  Only this time we DO the experiment.  The kids are hooked!  They fill out their notebook, complete their drawings and observations and we easily finish the 3 to 4 lessons that are in each Chapter, within the 3 hours.  I clean up the mess, and get lunch started.  We do this the first week.  Come Saturday morning, they are asking if they can do another Chapter.  I tell them “no”.  

We stick to the 12 work days, and we are done with the curriculum!  Day 13 comes, and everyone is ready for Science Camp.  I tell them no more Science Camp until next summer.  They are disappointed and I feel like I have just pulled off the biggest coup!

Tuesday, November 25, 2014

Why STEM Education?

Now you may ask, “why should I worry about teaching Science to my students?”  OK, let’s talk about Why STEM Education. First of all, what is STEM education? STEM stands for Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics. In 1899 the commissioner of the United States Patent Office is reported to have said “Everything that can be invented has been invented.” in a recommendation that the patent office be closed. Thank goodness he was wrong! It would have been much harder for everyone to be here if cars were still unaffordable and planes didn’t exist! Both airplanes and cheaper cars were invented by some engineer who was just better at problem solving than the guy before him. And PERSONALLY, this would have been a bad thing, as my husband, is a Patent lawyer, protecting inventors as they create and design new items.
Encouraging you to put more time and resources into your children’s education in Science, Technology, Engineering, and Math is important to me. We need more engineers and other kinds of scientists! Having a STEM degree is extremely advantageous to your students.  Having a STEM education allows your children to grow into successful adults who can think and perform in the real world.
To start with, the American Association of Colleges of Nursing, writes in April of this year:  The U.S. is projected to experience a shortage of Registered Nurses (RNs) that is expected to intensify as Baby Boomers age and the need for health care grows. Forbes Magazine wrote in December of 2011,  “As any technological executive in Silicon Valley could tell you, hiring engineers is one of their toughest tasks these days…. People with engineering degrees are more sought after for jobs.  But even in non-technical fields, people with engineering degrees are more sought after than liberal arts majors with the same years of work experience.”  Why is that?  Just knowing the finer nuances of working with Excel spreadsheets makes a clerical worker a better candidate in today’s technological workforce.  And if the U.S.  can’t provide the engineers? Well, companies go elsewhere!  Also, Forbes asks, “Which tech companies most rely on foreign-educated engineers? Some of the biggest names in technology. Microsoft, Google, IBM, Accenture and Cisco, have the most foreign educated engineers, according to data compiled on employment and education.  Even companies like Facebook, which are relatively young, have a sizable number of engineers educated abroad.” What’s behind the high demand for engineers? There’s an increasing demand both from tech companies and non-tech companies for highly-skilled engineers to create, build and maintain high quality systems at various levels from manufacturing to product design. But the growth in United States engineering grads has not kept pace. Many tech companies hire engineers who have been educated overseas. The U.S. H1-B Visa program was designed to bring talented “speciality occupations” such as engineers into the U.S.  On Monday, March 3, 2014 CNBC reported that, “Applications for H-1B visas allowing foreign nationals to work in the U.S. are expected to keep rising in 2014, according to one analyst. At least 160,000 applications are expected for the 85,000 available visas when the filing season opens on April 1, said Marc Klein, an immigration attorney with Thompson & Knight.” "It just shows the U.S. still lags behind other countries when it comes to an emphasis on educating American-born students in computer science, math and other areas," said Klein, who handles visa requests. "So many get advanced degrees at American universities that natural-born citizens don't receive, and (which) are needed for the hard-to-fill jobs," he said. "They go home, and yet so many of them make up the number of applications to work here."  So, basically, STEM majors are higher paid and have higher employment.  In comparing 3 different reports on the success of STEM majors, Think Advisor, which advises the investment community, notes that 29 of the 30 most employable majors are Science, Technology, Engineering and Math majors, while Forbes lists 14 of the top 15 majors as STEM majors.  Forbes notes, “ “According to PayScale's massive compensation database and job growth projections through 2020 from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, these 15 college majors are the most valuable in terms of salary and career prospects. They are ranked by median starting pay, median mid-career pay (at least 10 years experience), percentage growth in pay and projected growth of job opportunities.”  The last comparison list I saw was from USA Today, where they ranked the top 10 college majors, with 9 of them being STEM majors.  So you ask huh?  14 out of 15?  29 out of 30? 9 out of 10?  What is that other great major?  It is called “Construction Management”.  Not typically a STEM major, but I can imagine that when you are working with structural engineers and architects, some background will be needed!

Monday, November 24, 2014

Start Early in Teaching Creationism

My suggestion is to start defending against evolution early.  Not by taking a defensive posture, but by teaching them the terms early and thoroughly, equipping them with arguments without them knowing it.  1 Peter 3:15 says:  but sanctify Christ as Lord in your hearts, always being ready to make a defense to everyone who asks you to give an account for the hope that is in you, yet with gentleness and reverence;
It was called to my attention about 10 years ago that Darwin’s Origin of the Species is perhaps the most influential piece of literature ever written.  I’m not including the Bible in this, I’m emphasizing “literature”. Think about that.  Origin of the Species is the most influential piece of literature ever written. Well, I agree. Think of any other piece of literature that has turned the world upside down and changed the world view of so many educated people.  From early on, I tried to teach my own students a Creation world view, without pounding the fact that it would refute Darwinism.  First of all, I always taught that Science is empirical.  This means that true Scientists use observations, experiments and calculations to develop theories.  And then they test their theories with more experiments and calculations to come up with reliable data to prove their theory.  In the early years I never brought up evolution, I just told them that Science is observation and recording data.  It was something that we all could do.  Science is not a theory.  Science is what is observed.
I also taught about adaptation.  They are always giving stories about animals that change colors or grow more hair.  Adaptation is God’s way of allowing us to adapt to our environment for survival, not evolution.  We can move from Southern California to Maine and after a couple of years 45 degrees would be considered “sweater weather”.  Did we evolve?  No, we just adapted.  Because if after 10 years we move back to Southern California, our sweater weather would move back to 65 degrees after a couple of years.  It is all about adaptation!  

I found it helpful to comb through all of the Creation Research Institute’s books so that I could naturally refute the theory of Evolution all the way through their education.  Plus, since I didn’t have the background, it was helpful for me to learn more about my God, the Creator.  It wasn’t until my students were in high school, when I felt confident in their personal relationships with Christ before I actually introduce them to the theory of evolution, but by that time, they could almost refute it themselves.  If they know what is true, and they know what the other side believes, they are less likely to be influenced.  And I always had available no less than 5 sources that could show them the proper arguments, if they needed them.  They know where to find truth, when it isn’t on the tip of their tongue.

Sunday, November 23, 2014

Science Education - is it important? No one seemed to care about mine!

My earliest Science memories come from elementary school.  And basically 4th, 5th and 6th grade.  I remember coming in after PE, about 2:00 in the afternoon, for our last subject of the day.  We’d each pull out our Science Textbook and the teacher would have us read round robin, up and down the aisles of the class room of about 30 students.  Some students it was just painful to hear them read and sound out each word.  Some students would read it as quickly as they could, unintelligeably.  With my maiden name starting with "M", I was always seated smack dab in the middle of the room, always waiting for my turn.  I would struggle to stay awake, while my lunch digested, and my body went into resting mode after P.E.  We never did experiments, it was always about reading and retention of what we read.  Fortunately, I got put into the “Gifted” program, and I got pulled out of class after lunch 2 days a week for “special” classes.  In my case, one day was for advanced literature, and one day was for Science.
I remember the literature portion from those 3 years a little better than the Science portion, but mostly because I had to have my parents sign permission slips for me to read adult level books, not necessarily at writing level, but in content.  And for the 3 years in Science, it was all about Evolution.  I learned of the Anatomical Changes from Bipedalism, moving on two feet; to Encephalization, growing bigger brains than the animals; to Sexual Dimorphism, which meant men were bigger than women, canine teeth and brows being smaller, and developing opposable thumbs.  I also remember our teacher telling us that the next phase of our evolution is that we will likely lose our wisdom teeth, since we no longer have a need for them.  And our appendix. How do I remember this?  We drew, we sculpted, and we followed a chart.  Doesn’t that sound like art and not Science?  And I barely remember some botany and classifying plants.  THAT is about all I learned from elementary Science.

Unfortunately, my Science education was extremely sparse.  In Junior High, I only had to take one year, because I was in Student Government and Girls’ Glee.  In High School, I only had to take 2 years of Science, one year of Physical Science and one year of Biology.  In Physical Science, we didn’t even meet in a lab, just in a classroom.  And, unfortunately for me, class met during 6 period, so I continued to struggle with my body’s natural rhythm of wanting to nap while my lunch was digesting!  Some how, magically, they put me in the Honors Biology class.  They had me on the honors track for English, so they might as well put me on the Honors track for Biology.  Woo Hoo! Was I was really going to learn Science this year?  We even met in one of the laboratory classrooms and I remember being excited about that!  That year, in our lab group of 6, one person volunteered to have their blood typed while we all watched, one person volunteered to dissect the frog while we all watched, and one person volunteered to dissect the rat while we all watched.  I do remember many of the lessons on evolution, survival of the fittest, adaptation, and so forth, but since I had just become a Christian, I didn’t know how that all fit.   My college education, as a liberal arts major, included 3 Science classes:  Human Biology, Human Anatomy and Oceanography.
All in all, my Science Education wasn't that important!

Friday, February 7, 2014

President's Day Unit Study

We LOVE studying our Presidents.  Wait.  Let me rephrase that.  I LOVE teaching about our Presidents.  How do I instill that love to my children?  Sometimes I think I over did it.  Sometimes I think I didn't make it fun enough.  Sometimes I think I want a do over!

Over the years, I have amassed enough material to teach about our Presidents ALL year long.  To make it more palatable to those of you who only want to study Presidents for one week, here are some suggestions.

And if you do want more, I have more book suggestions at the end.  And please know that this list isn't exhaustive, it's just a sampling.  A quick search on the Internet, and you too, can have as many books as me!

One year we did a George Washington unit study field trip while we were visiting back east.  We started at Valley Forge and moved on down to Mount Vernon.  I don't remember how old the five of them were.  I just remember the two eldest asking the docents at Mount Vernon about other aspects of George Washington's life, and the docents only knew about his life at Mount Vernon.  They were pretty disappointed that they didn't get their questions answered, but I had the sense of pride knowing that they probably knew more about George Washington's life than the docents did!

Anyway, here is a sampler for teaching 5 hours worth of Presidents.  And the reason I picked these Presidents is because 4 of them were born in February and John F. Kennedy because he is on so much of our money.  He is one that our elementary age children can see repeatedly.  As I tried to upload it, a lot of my formatting didn't come out.  If you want my "worksheets", just leave your email address.

President’s Day Unit Study
1 hour study for 5 days + Family Movie Night ideas
Additional resources for the month

Day 1 – Monday – George Washington
Go to the website:  http://www.whitehouse.gov/about/presidents/georgewashington - read about George Washington
Read 10 Rules from George Washington’s Rules of Civility & Decent Behavior in Company and Conversation
Read:  George Washington, Ingri & Edgar Parin D’Aulaire
Write facts about George Washington using the quarter page
Practice this phrase about George Washington – “First in war, first in peace, and first in the hearts of his countrymen…”
For dinner have pancakes (hoe cakes)
Family time movie:  George Washington’s Home Town, by Miss Betty’s American History Tours – 50 minutes

Day 2 – Tuesday - William Henry Harrison
Go to the website:  http://www.whitehouse.gov/about/presidents/williamhenryharrison - read about William Henry Harrison
Read William Henry Harrison:  Young Tippecanoe
Craft:  How to Draw the Life and Times of William Henry Harrison
Learn this quote:  “I contend that the strongest of all governments is that which is most free.”
Count out M&M’s – one for everyday he was President

Day 3 – Wednesday – Abraham Lincoln
Go to the website:  http://www.whitehouse.gov/about/presidents/abrahamlincoln - read about Abraham Lincoln
Read  Abraham Lincoln, Ingri & Edgar Parin D’Aulaire
Copy the Gettysburg Address on the penny page.  Put a piece of paper with lines behind the penny page, to allow your student to draw on the line.  Only have them copy what they are able to read.  The first sentence is enough.
                Four score and seven years ago our fathers brought forth on this continent, a new nation, conceived in Liberty, and dedicated to the proposition that all men are created equal.
                Now we are engaged in a great civil war, testing whether that nation, or any nation so conceived and so dedicated, can long endure. We are met on a great battle-field of that war. We have come to dedicate a portion of that field, as a final resting place for those who here gave their lives that that nation might live. It is altogether fitting and proper that we should do this.
                But, in a larger sense, we cannot dedicate -- we cannot consecrate -- we cannot hallow -- this ground. The brave men, living and dead, who struggled here, have consecrated it, far above our poor power to add or detract. The world will little note, nor long remember what we say here, but it can never forget what they did here. It is for us the living, rather, to be dedicated here to the unfinished work which they who fought here have thus far so nobly advanced. It is rather for us to be here dedicated to the great task remaining before us -- that from these honored dead we take increased devotion to that cause for which they gave the last full measure of devotion -- that we here highly resolve that these dead shall not have died in vain -- that this nation, under God, shall have a new birth of freedom -- and that government of the people, by the people, for the people, shall not perish from the earth.

Abraham Lincoln
November 19, 1863
For snack, make a log cabin out of pretzels, using Cheese Whiz as mortar.
For movie night watch:  You’re Not Elected, Charlie Brown, by Charles Schulze – 30 minutes


Day 4 – Thursday – John F. Kennedy
Go to the website:  http://www.whitehouse.gov/about/presidents/johnfkennedy - read about John F. Kennedy
Read A Picture Book of John F. Kennedy
Learn this quote:  “And so, my fellow Americans: ask not what your country can do for you — ask what you can do for your country.”
Write facts about John F. Kennedy using the quarter page

Day 5 – Friday – Ronald Reagan

Go to the website: http://www.whitehouse.gov/about/presidents/ronaldreagan - read about Ronald Reagan
Read  The Remarkable Ronald Reagan:  Cowboy and Commander in Chief
Watch this Youtube video:  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PSu5TTKGcJw
Write some of these favorite quotes:
1.   A people free to choose will always choose peace.
2.   Above all, we must realize that no arsenal, or no weapon in the arsenals of the world, is so formidable as the will and moral courage of free men and women. It is a weapon our adversaries in today’s world do not have.
3.   Democracy is worth dying for, because it’s the most deeply honorable form of government ever devised by man.
4.   Freedom is never more than one generation away from extinction. We didn’t pass it to our children in the bloodstream. It must be fought for, protected, and handed on for them to do the same.

Family movie night:  pick a Ronald Reagan flick!  Some of my favorites:  Knute Rockne All American, Bedtime for Bonzo, The Santa Fe Trail
Eat Jelly Bellys for dessert!

For more in depth study, try some of these other resources (*required for this unit study):
Books:
George Washington’s World, by Genevieve Foster
Abraham Lincoln’s World, by Genevieve Foster
First in their Hearts, A biography of George Washington, by Thomas Fleming
*George Washington, Ingri & Edgar Parin D’Aulaire
*Abraham Lincoln, Ingri & Edgar Parin D’Aulaire
*Rules of Civility & Decent Behavior in Company and Conversation, by George Washington
Ronald Reagan:  How an Ordinary Man Became an Extraordinary Leader, by Dinesh D’Souza
When Character Was King:  A Story of Ronald Reagan, by Peggy Noonan
*The Remarkable Ronald Reagan:  Cowboy and Commander in Chief, by Susan Allen
*How to Draw the Life and Times of William Henry Harrison, by Hilary Barton Billman
*William Henry Harrison:  Young Tippecanoe, by Howard S. Peckham
*A Picture Book of John F. Kennedy, by David A. Adler

Movies (appropriate for elementary age)
*You’re Not Elected, Charlie Brown, by Charles Schulze – 30 minutes
*George Washington’s Home Town, by Miss Betty’s American History Tours – 50 minutes
George Washington:  American Revolutionary, documentary – 50 minutes
* Knute Rockne All American, Bedtime for Bonzo, The Santa Fe Trail – all over an hour long
  
Links:
http://www.MountVernon.org – George Washington
*http://www.whitehouse.gov/about/presidents