Inaugural Words: A Snapshot of History

The New York Times this week­end posted a fas­ci­nat­ing inter­ac­tive fea­ture at their web site: Inau­gural Words — 1789 to the Present. (Thanks, by the way, to Angela Maiers for point­ing me to this, via Larry Ferlazo’s blog.) The site gives a word cloud based on the inau­gu­ra­tion speeches of each president.

Here are a few ideas about how you could use this with your gifted students:

  • Select one of the speeches and have the stu­dents infer what­ever they can about the his­tor­i­cal con­text in which it was given.
  • Research the his­tor­i­cal period and compare/​contrast what was men­tioned in the speech with things that were left out.
  • Com­pare how vocab­u­lary has changed over time. Fig­ure out a way to illus­trate these changes (per­haps with a graph or timeline).
  • Com­bine the text from sev­eral speeches (per­haps all the speeches over a 50-​​year span, or all the speeches from the top-​​ranked Pres­i­dents) and cre­ate a Wor­dle to look for broader pat­terns of words.
  • Cre­ate a Wor­dle from Pres­i­dent Obama’s speech and com­pare it to those from other Pres­i­dents. (Thanks to Lee Kol­bert for this idea.)
  • Imag­ine you’re elected Pres­i­dent. Which other Pres­i­dents would you emu­late? Use words from their speeches to begin build­ing your own.
  • Research which Pres­i­dents wrote their own speeches and which used speech­writ­ers. Is there any dif­fer­ence in the vocabulary?

This is admit­tedly a very rough list of ideas, and none of these are fully fleshed-​​out lessons. What other thoughts do you have?

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One Response to “Inaugural Words: A Snapshot of History”

  1. Lee | January 19, 2009 at 7:36 pm #

    I really do love this site and plan to share with our teach­ers tomor­row when we return to school. I think the activ­i­ties can con­tinue well beyond the inau­gu­ra­tion. Thank you also for the “shout-​​out.”

    ~Lee

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