This PDF files outlines a variety of engaging teaching activities pertaining to the upcoming Inauguration. This guide was created by the MCPS Social Studies Department.
Inauguration Day PDF: This file outlines a variety of lesson ideas pertaining to Inauguration Day for Grades K through 5
Essential Questions: What evidence is there to show that inauguration day is a celebration? How could inauguration day unite people?
Talk about how the inauguration is a celebration of democracy. Essential Question: Why is the inaugural address a public event?
Listen to portions of the inaugural address. Have students write letters to the new president. Essential Question: Why is the inaugural address a public event?
Essential Question: What role do media play in how people feel about the inauguration/the president?
Have students watch the local and national news broadcasts of the inauguration and create a chart to compare the two types of broadcasts. Essential Question: What role do the media play in public opinion about the inauguration?
Compare elements of inauguration speeches to identify common goals and features. Essential Question: What are commonalities among inaugural addresses? How is historical context evident in an inaugural address?
Discuss the duties of the president which follow the inauguration. Essential Question: How do the day to day duties of the President support the agenda established during the inaugural speech?
Investigate how the Constitution outlines the basis for the presidential inauguration. Essential Question: How does the Constitution outline the basis for the inauguration?
Write poems suitable for the occasion, or make a list of published poems that might be incorporated into such a ceremony. Essential Question: How does the president set the agenda for his presidency in the inauguration?
Analyze the use of martial rhetoric in FDR's first inaugural address. Discuss the changing and expanding role of the President under FDR's tenure and methods the President uses to forward legislative goals.
This lesson could be useful in conjunction with the lesson on FDR's first inaugural address; perhaps with a focus on how FDR planned to fulfill the goals he laid out and continue to manage the mood of the country.
Have students watch the local and national news broadcasts of the inauguration. Have them create a chart that compares the two types of broadcasts. Students take notes to list the differences in how the local and national news handled the inauguration coverage.
Have students keep a scrapbook on the Obama inauguration for a week leading up to and/or a week following the inauguration. Allow students to comment on how effective and how accurate their news sources are, or how these sources might change the delivery of news.
An index of lessons focusing on presidential inaugurations including "Andrew Jackson: King Mob or Champion of American Democracy?," "Thomas Jefferson: The Revolution of 1800," and "The Inaugural Speech: Setting the Tone for the Administration of a President"
This activity provides a job description for the presidency, so students understand what kinds of skills and competencies are necessary in that office. Provide students with the opportunity to role play the president for a day. Discuss the duties of the president which follow the inauguration.
Pose the question: If you were elected president, what kind of message would be important to deliver during your inaugural ceremony? Write poems suitable for the occasion, or make a list of published poems might be incorporated into such a ceremony.
After viewing and discussing the inauguration, have students write editorials on the Obama presidency. Have students send their letters to the editor of the local newspaper or post their efforts to their school Web site.
Investigate how the Constitution outlines the basis for the presidential inauguration.
A database of all of the inaugural addresses from George Washington to George Bush.
Library of Congress online exhibit on Presidential Inaugurations. Includes thousands of primary sources pertaining to presidential inaugurations from George Washington's in 1789 to George W. Bush's in 2001.
The Senate's official site tracking the lead-up to the inauguration; includes a history section including a play-by-play of the day's events through history with a lot of good images.
A website from the Smithsonian that examines the life of the President of the U.S. including a small section on the inauguration in the section, "The Campaign Trail."
Includes a transcript and images of George Washington's first inaugural address.