Veterans day for kids videos: History Of Veterans Day – Bing Videos

Опубликовано: March 9, 2023 в 10:23 am

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Veterans Day Books for Kids

Explore this collection of the best Veterans Day Books for Kids. Learn about ways to honor and thank our veterans for their patriotism, love of country, and willingness to serve and sacrifice for the common good.

Take time this Veterans Day with your child to learn more about our soldiers as we celebrate them.

Disclosure: This post contains Amazon Affiliate links.

Veterans Day Books for Kids

Veterans Day is observed on November 11 each year. There are some simple ways to teach kids about Veteran’s Day and help them learn about its importance. You can use these Veterans Day books to go along with this collection of Veterans Day Activities for your child or classroom.

Celebrating this holiday with kids can help focus attention on the important purpose of Veterans Day. “A celebration to honor America’s veterans for their patriotism, love of country, and willingness to serve and sacrifice for the common good. ” – US Department of Veterans Affairs

This collection of Veterans Day Books for kids shares about the ways we honor our veterans for Veterans Day and in our every day lives. It also shares children’s books about parents serving in the military.

I’ve included books that teach children about the various five branches of the U.S. Military.

In addition, you’ll see a few books about important events in U.S. History where our veterans were called to serve and protect our freedom.

Here are several books suggestions for your child to learn about Veterans Day.

Children’s Books About Veterans

*You can click on the book cover image or Title link to learn more and read the reviews of each book.

Don’t Forget, God Bless Our Troops by Dr Jill Biden (Listen to Read Aloud)

H is for Honor: A Military Family Alphabet by Devin Scillian (Listen to Read Aloud)

Veterans: Heroes in Our Neighborhood by Valerie Pfundstein (Listen to Read Aloud)

What Is Veterans Day? by Elaine Landau (Listen to Read Aloud)

Veterans Day by Jacqueline S. Cotton (Listen to Read Aloud)

Veterans Day by Meredith Dash (Listen to Read Aloud)

Why Do We Celebrate Veterans Day? (Celebrating U.S. Holidays) by Grace Houser

Veterans Day (Bullfrog Books: Holidays) by Rebecca Pettiford

American Dream Team: A Kid’s Guide to Patriotism by Courtney Petruzzelli

Otto’s Tales: Today is Veterans Day! by PragerU (Listen to Read Aloud)

What Does It Mean to Be American? by Rana DiOrio (Listen to Read Aloud)

Tuesday Tucks Me In: The Loyal Bond Between a Soldier and His Service Dog by Luis Carlos Montalván (Listen to Read Aloud)

Books About Veteran Memorials in Honor of Fallen Soldiers

Twenty-One Steps: Guarding the Tomb of the Unknown by Jeff Gottesfeld (Listen to Read Aloud)

The Poppy Lady: Moina Belle Michael and Her Tribute to Veterans by Barbara E. Walsh (Listen to Read Aloud)

The Wall (Reading Rainbow Books) by Eve Bunting (Listen to Read Aloud)

America’s White Table by Margot Theis Raven (Listen to Read Aloud)

Arlington: The Story of Our Nation’s Cemetery by Chris Demarest

Books About Deployment for Kids

Hero Dad by Melinda Hardin (Listen to Read Aloud)

I’ll Lend You My Daddy: A Deployment Book for Kids by Becky King (Listen to Read Aloud)

Hero Mom by Melinda Hardin (Listen to Read Aloud)

Love, Lizzie: Letters to a Military Mom by Lisa Tucker McElroy

Daddy’s Boots by Sandra Miller Linhart

my daddy is a sailor by Tahna Desmond Fox

My Mom’s Boots by Elizabeth Gordon

Lily Hates Goodbyes by Jerilyn Marler (Listen to Read Aloud)

Night Catch by Brenda Ehrmantraut (Listen to Read Aloud)

I Love You Near and Far by Marjorie Blain Parker (Listen to Read Aloud)

When You Are Away by Dominique James Ed. D.

The Navy’s Night Before Christmas by Christine Ford and Trish Holland

Do you have a favorite book about Veterans Day? SHARE in the comments

Non-Fiction U.S. Military Books for Kids

Lil’ Army Soldier (Mini Military) Board book by RP Kids

Lil’ Marine (Mini Military) Board book by RP Kids

Lil’ Navy Sailor (Mini Military) Board book by RP Kids

Lil’ Air Force Pilot (Mini Military) Board book by RP Kids

Buddy the Soldier Bear by Marie Joy (Listen to Read Aloud)

Deployment: One of Our Pieces is Missing by Julia Cook

U.S. ARMY Alphabet Book by Sammie Garnett and Jerry Pallotta

US Marines Alphabet Book by Jerry Pallotta and Sammie Garnett

U.S. Navy Alphabet Book by Jerry Pallotta and Sammie Garnett

Learn more about our Veterans Memorials and U.S. Military Forces by going on Washington DC Virtual Field Trips.

Books About Wars in U.S. History

What Was the Vietnam War? by Jim O’Connor

What Was D-Day? by Patricia Brennan Demu

What Was Pearl Harbor? by Patricia Brennan Demuth

What Was World War I? by Nico Medina

What Was the Bombing of Hiroshima? by Jess Brallier

What Was the Holocaust? by Gail Herman

World War I (Eyewitness) by DK

World War II for Kids: A History with 21 Activities by Richard Panchyk

The Ultimate World War I and World War II Book for Kids by Lion Divine

Book List for Veterans Day

We hope this book list about veterans helps you select the best books to read with your child as you celebrate Veterans Day. There are so many ways they impact our lives.

If I’ve missed your favorite title, please let me know in the comments below as I hope this Veterans Day Book List will continue to grow.

Veterans Day Activities for Kids

Use of of the Veterans Day books to make a Veterans day project with your child. These activities share was to honor and show thanks to our veterans.

Videos About Veterans Day

  • Veteran’s Day | PBS KIDS
  • Veterans Day – How it started and why we honor it | KID HISTORY
  • Learn Fun Facts about Veterans Day | Educational Videos for Students
  • Veterans Day Facts for Kids | Homeschool POP Video
  • Why Do We Celebrate Veterans Day | Veterans Day Facts for Kids | Hey! Guess what

You may also enjoy these activity ideas for kids…

Lesson plan: Veterans Day and the meaning of sacrifice

November 11, 2022

 

John Grillo, 94, World War II, U. S. Navy veteran, Levittown, New York, Nov. 8, 2021. Courtesy: Madeline Louis

This lesson was updated on November 11, 2022. It was originally published in 2014.

Use this PBS NewsHour lesson plan to help students understand the significance of Veterans Day and the meaning of sacrifice. Students will identify important veterans in their lives, examine an interactive timeline of military history and study issues facing veterans today. For a google doc version of this lesson, click here.

Subjects 

World history, government and civics, U.S. history, geography

Estimated time

One 50-minute class

Grade level

Middle and high school

Warning: Due to the large number of students who either have friends or family that serve in the armed forces please take care and be sensitive when discussing Veterans Day.

Warm-up activity

1. Start class by asking students what they know about Veterans Day and give them the AARP Quiz and then go over the answers with them.

2. Watch “Bet You Didn’t Know — Veterans Day” from the History Channel (below) as a class.

3. Watch Student Reporting Labs’ Veterans Day video featuring students from military families living here in the U.S. and around the world.

Background on U.S. Wars

Share this interactive timeline with students and watch videos associated with U.S. wars. You may choose the wars your class knows the least about or play what you have time for. Click on the timeline to scroll through to each event, and click on the images above the timeline to watch short videos on the war.

Main activity — special issues for today’s veterans

  1. As a class, brainstorm the risks and benefits of being a soldier today and write answers on the board. Let the class know that they are going to take a closer look at some of the issues that veterans face today and how these challenges are being treated.
  2. Read to students: With new medical and life-saving technology more troops are surviving traumatic injuries that would have sealed their fate just decades ago. The effects of the increase in soldiers dealing with severe injuries such as losing limbs, traumatic brain injuries and Post Traumatic Stress Disorder has taxed the Veterans Administration (V.A.) at unprecedented levels leaving response time to disability claims anywhere from months to years. Further, both an increase in an aging veteran population as well as female veterans brings new challenges to the V. A. Let’s look more in depth at the issues facing today’s veterans.

Part 1 – Waiting for benefits

  1. Watch the above video clip, “Veterans’ Disability Delayed.”
  2. Read the Center for Investigative Reporting article “For Disabled Veterans Awaiting Benefits Decisions, Location Matters” by Aaron Glantz.

Part 2 — How phantom limbs are successfully being treated today

Watch the TED Talk “3 clues to understanding your brain” by VS Ramachandran (in particular, highlight the excerpt from 9:15-17:45).

Part 3 — Unique challenges that women veterans face

Watch the PBS NewsHour report “Women Veterans Face Unique Obstacles, Needs.”

Part 4 – Veterans and Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD)

  1. What is PTSD? How does it manifest in veterans? Read the story of one veteran.
  2. How is PTSD diagnosed? Look at the Diagnostic Statistical Manual V Criteria for PTSD or Self-Report Questionnaire for PTSD.
  3. How is it treated? Hear about treatment options from the Veterans Association.


Writing prompts

  1. Write a Veterans Day thank you note. Use this lesson plan to help your students identify and understand important veterans in their life.
  2. Write an argument to either support or reject claims that veterans today face challenges that veterans in the past did not using valid reasoning and relevant and sufficient evidence.
  3. Choose one of the wars that was featured on the interactive timeline and write three short narrative-snap shots including one day in the life of that veteran before, during, and after the war using effective technique, well-chosen details and well-structured event sequences.

By Katie Gould, former NewsHour teacher resource producer. (A special thanks to my grandfather, Joe Sidor, pictured in the writing prompts section, for his many years of service as a Marine during World War II, his work in China after World War II and the Korean War.)

An additional thank you to Susan Dickson for contributing photographs for the story.


Standards (CCSS)

  • CCSS. ELA-Literacy.W.7.1 Write arguments to support claims with clear reasons and relevant evidence.
  • CCSS.ELA-Literacy.W.8.1 Write arguments to support claims with clear reasons and relevant evidence.
  • CCSS.ELA-Literacy.W.9-10.1 Write arguments to support claims in an analysis of substantive topics or texts, using valid reasoning and relevant and sufficient evidence.
  • CCSS.ELA-Literacy.W.11-12.1 Write arguments to support claims in an analysis of substantive topics or texts, using valid reasoning and relevant and sufficient evidence.
  • CCSS.ELA-Literacy.W.7.3 Write narratives to develop real or imagined experiences or events using effective technique, relevant descriptive details, and well-structured event sequences.
  • CCSS.ELA-Literacy.W.8.3 Write narratives to develop real or imagined experiences or events using effective technique, relevant descriptive details, and well-structured event sequences.
  • CCSS. ELA-Literacy.W.9-10.3 Write narratives to develop real or imagined experiences or events using effective technique, well-chosen details, and well-structured event sequences.
  • CCSS.ELA-Literacy.W.11-12.3 Write narratives to develop real or imagined experiences or events using effective technique, well-chosen details, and well-structured event sequences.
  • CCSS.ELA-Literacy.RI.7.7 Compare and contrast a text to an audio, video, or multimedia version of the text, analyzing each medium’s portrayal of the subject (e.g., how the delivery of a speech affects the impact of the words).
  • CCSS.ELA-Literacy.RI.8.7 Evaluate the advantages and disadvantages of using different mediums (e.g., print or digital text, video, multimedia) to present a particular topic or idea.
  • CCSS.ELA-Literacy.RI.9-10.2 Determine a central idea of a text and analyze its development over the course of the text, including how it emerges and is shaped and refined by specific details; provide an objective summary of the text.
  • CCSS.ELA-Literacy.RI.11-12.2 Determine two or more central ideas of a text and analyze their development over the course of the text, including how they interact and build on one another to provide a complex analysis; provide an objective summary of the text.

what date, history and traditions of the holiday

This is a holiday of all those who fought for Russia and defended the geopolitical interests of the motherland with weapons in their hands. In modern history, our country has taken part in many armed conflicts. One can argue about their expediency for a long time from the point of view of politics and humanism, but this date is still about something else. Komsomolskaya Pravda tells everything about the holiday Veterans Day in 2023.

Combat Veterans Day

The celebration has a fixed date every year, regardless of the day of the week. In Russia, Combat Veterans Day is celebrated on July 1, . Veteran organizations will also celebrate the memorable date in 2023.

History of the holiday

It must be said that such a date is not mentioned in official documents. Non-governmental organizations decided to create the Day of Combat Veterans in Russia. The main lobbyists for the idea were the All-Russian Society “Combat Brotherhood”. Later, “Officers of Russia” joined them. They sent requests to official structures, but so far the position of the authorities is as follows: the holiday will not be fixed. After all, there is a Day of Remembrance on the calendar for Russians who performed their official duty outside the Fatherland. He was given February 15th.

The history of Veterans Day in Russia began recently. For the first time, the establishment of the date was discussed at the end of 2008. And a few months later, already in 2009, public figures across the country united and decided to organize a gathering of veterans in their cities. The date chosen was July 1st.

Several hundred people came to the first meeting. But every year the number of participants of the action grew. Activists collected signatures and sent them to the government with a request to fix the celebration on the calendar. But as we wrote above, so far the attempts have not been successful.

In 2023, the public does not intend to give up. Letters continue to be sent to various authorities and seek support from prominent political figures. The organizers of the holiday are sure that the existing dates do not cover all categories of veterans. On the one hand, there is May 9, when the participants of the Great Patriotic War are honored. There is February 15, on which internationalist warriors gather – primarily those who fought in Afghanistan. Activists believe that those involved in other conflicts, who were many, are not remembered. Therefore, they want to enter a common date.

Traditions of the Combat Veterans Day in Russia

Poklonnaya Hill in Moscow becomes the center of the celebration. First of all, those gathered lay flowers at the monument to the soldiers of the internationalists in Victory Park. Moreover, if July 1 falls on weekdays, sometimes those who could not come gather on the next weekend.

After that, the activists try to hold a concert and a small feast. Those who do not want to participate in mass events can simply limit themselves to socializing in the park.

In other cities where the celebration is supported, they choose their meeting place. Most often, this is some kind of memorial or park dedicated to the memory of military events. Or the Eternal Flame, which is in many settlements. For example, in Rostov Azov people gather on Victory Square near the monument to fallen internationalist soldiers. In Saratov, they go to Victory Park. In Chelyabinsk – at the monument to the “Valiant Sons of the Fatherland” or at the sculpture of Alexander Rosenbaum on the pedestrian street Kirovka.

This is interesting: what you can read about in the law “On Veterans”

Since 1995, the federal law “On Veterans” has been adopted in Russia. It is designed to protect the interests of participants in the Great Patriotic War, veterans of military operations and labor. It lists all kinds of social support measures. But many are more interested in the appendix to the document. It lists all military conflicts in which Russian military personnel have officially participated.

The Civil War list opens. Although historians believe that the October Revolution laid the foundation for it, a different date is indicated in the law – February 23, 1918 years old. Next come the now forgotten conflicts, which are only briefly mentioned in the history books. For example, the Soviet-Polish war in 1920 or a whole series of armed clashes with China.

The section on conflicts in the second half of the 20th century contains references to hostilities in Egypt, Yemen, Algeria, Angola, Mozambique, Cambodia and Laos. The document ends with a mention of two Chechen campaigns, clashes in Ossetia in 2008 and “performance of special tasks on the territory of the Syrian Arab Republic since September 30, 2015.”

90,000 volunteers will write down on video Veterans Memoirs

Allian.ru

News

Society

Society

Aloud

April 2, 2010, 06:33

Regional stage of the All -Russian Program “Our Victory” launched in the Tyumen region 1 April. It is planned to create a unique archive of memories of participants in the Great Patriotic War. To do this, volunteers all over the country with video cameras and questionnaires compiled by historians of the Moscow State University for the Humanities. Sholokhov and approved by the Association of World War II Historians, will meet with veterans to record their stories. All veterans’ interviews will be posted on the Our Victory website. The data of this archive can later be used for historical research, processing video files into full-fledged films and commercials. But, most importantly, the resource will be an indisputable argument in discussions about the Great Patriotic War, which is especially important in the light of the increasing attempts to falsify our history. The archive will also allow descendants to touch the living history of our state. In the Tyumen Region, the Our Victory program is being implemented by the Resource Center for supporting the activities of children’s and youth public associations in the Tyumen Region. “Anyone can become a volunteer,” says project coordinator, head of the center Oksana Sidorova, “to do this, you need to contact the regional headquarters of the campaign, where they will advise you, issue the necessary documentation, and help arrange an interview. Our contacts can be found on the website of the Regional Center for Additional Education for Children and Youth.” The all-Russian campaign will last until May 15, according to the Department for Sports and Youth Policy of the Tyumen Region. On this day, the project participants will gather in Moscow, where they will meet with veterans and receive a souvenir sleeve with the inscription “Remember the war, take care of the Motherland!”

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