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Teaching The cover STory
The 2010 Winter olympicsStandard physical education: students should understand that physical activity provides opportunities for enjoyment, challenge, self-expression, and social interaction.
SummaryThe 2010 Winter Olympic
Games will take place February 12 to 28 in Vancouver, Canada. Scholastic News explores the history of the Olympics and provides a roundup of some top U.S. Olympic hopefuls.
Pre-reading DiscussionWhat are the Olympic Games?
What are the names of some famous Olympians?
Background
The first Winter Olympic Games were held in 1924, in Chamonix. France. Athletes from 16 countries competed in 16 medal events. Of the 258 athletes who took part, only 11 were women. The first Winter Olympics gold medal went to U.S. speed skater Charles Jewtraw.
During the 2010 Winter Olympic Games, about 5,500 athletes and officials will participate in 15 sports and more than 86 separate
medal events. More than 250 U.S. athletes will compete.
Since 1924, the U.S. has won 217 Winter Olympic medals, 78 of them gold.
Speed skater Bonnie Blair holds the American record for most Winter Olympic medals, with six.
Post-reading DiscussionWhom will you be rooting
for in the 2010 Winter Olympic Games? What sports do you plan to watch?
Mini Lesson PlanHave students visit www
.nbcolympics.com/teamusa/meet-the-team/index.html and choose a U.S. athlete who will be competing in the 2010 Winter Olympics. Have students write a short biography of their chosen athlete, including key information such as age, hometown, sport, and competitive history. You can have students follow their athlete during the Olympics and update the class on his or her progress.
resources• Stay up-to-date on the 2010
Olympic Winter Games at www .vancouver2010.com.
• Learn more about the Olympics in general at www.olympic.org.
ISSUEDATES
Feb. 22
Sept. 28
Sept. 7
Sept. 14
Oct.5
Oct. 19
Oct. 26
Nov. 9
Nov. 16
Nov. 30
Dec. 7
Jan. 4
Jan. 11
Jan. 25
Feb. 1
Feb.15 & 22
Mar.1
Mar.15
Mar.22
Apr.5
Apr.12
Apr.26
May10 & 17
A supplement to scholAstic news
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Teaching TiPof The Week
January 11, 2010 Vol. 78 No. 12 ISSN 1554-2440
Teacher’S eDiTion
America’s Leading News Source For Kids
America’s Leading News Source For Kids
America’s Leading News Source For Kids
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Edition 4
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SCHOLASTIC NEWS • EdITION 5/6 • JANUARY 11, 2010 T1
Using This issueget ready to cheer! this week’s cover story is devoted to next month’s winter Games in Vancouver, canada. Visit www.vancouver2010 .com to get acquainted with the athletes and their fascinating stories of perseverance and dedication. have students locate Vancouver on a map. Discuss the geography of the united states’ neighbor to the north. remember a king. As martin luther King Jr. Day nears, our page 6 story is about Dr. King’s youngest daughter, the Rev. Bernice King, and her recent move to follow in her father’s footsteps as head of the southern christian leadership conference. enjoy!
—Dara Sharif, editor [email protected]
Carrying on King’s Legacy...p. 6Standard SOCIAL STUDIES: Students should understand the struggle for racial and gender equality and the extension of civil liberties.
SummaryScholastic News marks Martin
Luther King Jr. Day (January 18) with a story about Bernice King, Dr. King’s youngest daughter. She has become the first female president of an organization that Dr. King helped to found—the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC). The SCLC uses Dr. King’s nonviolent methods to fight for equality for all people.
Pre-Reading DiscussionWho was Dr. Martin Luther King
Jr.? What are some of the biggest contributions he made to the civil rights movement in the United States?
BackgroundBernice King is the youngest of
four children born to Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and his wife, Coretta Scott King.
Bernice’s older brother Martin Luther King III served as president of the SCLC from 1997 to 2004.
In 1986, President Ronald Reagan declared the third Monday in January a federal public holiday in honor of Dr. King’s birth. The holiday is now referred to as “A Day On, Not A Day Off.” With schools and many workplaces closed, many people celebrate the day by participating in service activities to honor Dr. King’s legacy.
Post-Reading DiscussionHave you ever stood up for
something you believe in? What did you stand up for, and what strategy did you use?
Mini Lesson Plan Have students research Dr.
Martin Luther King Jr.’s most famous actions and achievements. Have them then create a timeline and place on it five to eight of the most important events in his life.
Resources• Learn more about Dr. Martin
Luther King Jr.’s life and legacy at www.thekingcenter.org.
• Visit the Web site of the SCLC at www.sclcnational.org.
• Free at Last: The Story of Martin Luther King, Jr. by Angela Bull. (DK Children, 2009)
AnSweR Key
T2 SCHOLASTIC NEWS • Edition 5/6 • JANUARY 11, 2010
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SCHOLASTIC NEWS • Edition 5/6 • EDITORIAL: Editor: Dara Sharif • Senior Editor: Jennifer Marino Walters• Associate Editor: F. Romall Smalls • Editorial Intern: Kelsey Kloza • Copy Editors: Veronica Majerol, Ingrid Accardi; ART: Design Director: Doreen Walsh • Art Director: Abbie Kulhowvick • Associate Art Director: Winnifred Whipple • Senior Cartographer: Jim McMahon • Photo Editor: Jessica Moon; • PRoDuCTion, iMAGinG AnD SySTeMS: Assistant Production Director: Clarence E. Miles • Digital Imaging Group: Marc Stern, Bonnie Ardita, Bianca Beeman • Technical Coordinator: Elliott Hill; • SChoLASTiC newS onLine: Associate Editor: Laura Leigh Davidson • CLASSROOM MAGAZINES: President, Scholastic Classroom & Library Publishing: Greg Worrell • Senior VP/Publisher, Scholastic Classroom & Library Publishing: Patrick Daley • VP, Editor in Chief: Rebecca Bondor• Creative Director: Judith Christ-Lafond • Executive Production Director: Barbara Schwartz • Executive Editorial Director, Copy Desk: Craig Moskowitz • Publishing Systems Director: David Hendrickson• Executive Director of Photography: Steven Diamond • Reference Librarian: Karen Van Rossem; • CIRCULATION & MARKETING: VP Marketing: Jocelyn Forman • Senior Marketing Manager: Christine Rochford • Director, Manufacturing & Distribution: Mimi Esguerra • Manufacturing Coordinator: Georgiana Deen • CORPORATE: President, Chief Exec. Officer, and Chairman of the Board of Scholastic Inc.: Richard Robinson.
The answer keyis available
in theprint version
of thisTeacher’s Edition.
America’s Leading News Source For Kids
America’s Leading News Source For Kids
Edition 5/6
Edition 4
Edition 3
America’s Leading News Source For Kids
RepRoducible SkillS page
SCHOLASTIC NEWS • EdITION 5/6 • JANUARY 11, 2010 T3
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The world’s top amateur and professional athletes are preparing to compete in the 2010 Winter Olympics. Winners receive a gold medal for first place, silver for second, and bronze for third. This multiple-bar graph shows the number and type of medals won by the five countries that took home the most gold, silver, or bronze medals in the last Winter Olympics, in 2006.
bar None!
1. Which country won the most medals in total at the 2006 Winter Olympics?
_________________________________
2. How many more silver medals did Canada win in 2006 than did Austria? _________
3. Complete the sentence: Germany won ________ times as many silver medals in 2006 than did Russia.
4. Expressed as a fraction of the countries on the graph, how many of them won fewer than eight gold medals at the 2006 Winter Olympics? _________
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America’s Leading News Source For Kids
America’s Leading News Source For Kids
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America’s Leading News Source For Kids
RepRoducible SkillS pageName: ______________________________________
Map Skill
Historic NeighborhoodThe Sweet Auburn area of Atlanta, Georgia, is the birthplace of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Learn more about the historic neighborhood where Dr. King grew up. Read the street map and answer the questions that follow.
1. If you leave Dr. King’s birthplace on Auburn Ave. NE and walk west, at what cross street will you arrive first?
___________________________________________
2. Which street borders the Martin Luther King Jr. Center to the east, and which street borders the Center to the south?
___________________________________________
___________________________________________
3. If you are at the intersection of Irwin St. NE and Jackson St. NE, about how many feet is it to Ebenezer Baptist Church (new building)?
___________________________________________
4. If you are at the intersection of Irwin St. NE and Hogue St. NE, in what direction is Martin Luther King Jr. Park?
___________________________________________
NNENW
SW SE
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200 ft0Scale:
Jackson
St. NE
Bo
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Ho
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Brad
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Old Wheat St. NE
Auburn Ave. NE
Edgewood Ave. SE
Jackson Place NE
Old Wheat St. NE
Irwin St. NE
EbenezerBaptist Church(new building)
Martin LutherKing Jr. Park
Martin LutherKing Jr. Center
EbenezerBaptist Church(old building)
501 Auburn Ave. NEis the birthplace of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.
Martin LutherKing Jr. NationalHistoric Site
Dr. King’s Neighborhood in Atlanta, Georgia
T4 SCHOLASTIC NEWS • Edition 5/6 • JANUARY 11, 2010
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