The Girls Fly! Study Guide

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The Girls Fly! Study Guide PELICAN PUBLISHING COMPANY 1000 BURMASTER ST. GRETNA, LA 70053 • 504-368-1175 FAX 504-368-1195 E-MAIL ADDRESS: [email protected] • WWW ADDRESS: http://www.pelicanpub.com Study Guide for Girls Fly! This study guide includes cross curriculum exercises in Writing, Art, Drama, Social Studies and Technology Word Search Puzzle Trivia Web site addresses for further research Reproducible worksheets Created by Pam Albers Pelican Publishing Company To the Moon and Beyond!! Space is one of the last frontiers for women and we have made significant contributions to space flight in a short period of time. Take some time and research the contributions of women to space exploration. • Learn about three space missions that women were involved in. • Read a biography about a woman in space: Shannon Lucid, Sally Ride, or Mae Jemison • Explore the space firsts of women in space. • Make your own timeline of important events in space exploration. Pretend that you are an astronaut on board a space station and write a postcard from space. Draw a picture about what you think you would see in space. Date___________________________ Dear___________________________, Cross Curriculum Learning Experiences Writing: Pick one famous woman in air and space history. Have the students assume the role of a newspaper or television reporter and write a newspaper story or radio announcement about a history-making event for the person they have chosen. Purpose: To organize their writing by importance, time, or sequence. To explain why the accomplishments of their woman in history made her an important American hero. To demonstrate understanding of the structure of a news story To demonstrate copy, editing, and revision of work skills Imagine that you are Amelia Earhart on her flight around the world. Write some entries into your imaginary flight log. What do you think she saw and experienced? Purpose: Expand creative writing skills Enhance journaling skills Art: Organize a poster display of a timeline of history during the lifetime of a chosen woman in aeronautics history. Drama: Put on a dramatic interpretation of the news story written about the student’s chosen woman in aeronautics history. Have the students write an imaginary interview dialogue between a newscaster and a woman in history for presentation to the class. Social Studies: Have students choose one location along Amelia Earhart’s route to explore. Have them research the geography, history and culture. Pick one location to do an in depth report on. Research the birthplace of a chosen woman pilot. Technology: Have the students do Internet research on the lives of Bessie Coleman and Mae Jamison, two African American women in the history of flight. Write a short comparison and contrast about the lives and influence of these two extraordinary women. Do an Internet search on employment opportunities for women today in space and flight Find the email address for a female pilot. Compose a letter and email it to her. Share any answers that you may get with your friends and classmates. Something to think about – According to NASA, each year there are more spaces available for women in the astronaut-training program than there are women applying for the program. Why do you think that is?? Connect the Dots and Color Answer WOMEN IN FLIGHT TRIVIA 1. What was the name of the first licensed woman pilot? 2. What was the name of the first African American woman pilot? 3. What was the name of the first woman of Chinese ancestry to earn a pilot’s license? 4. Which African American pilot opened the first flight school at Harlem Airport? 5. What was the name of the first woman pilot from the former Soviet Union? 6. What was the name of the first woman pilot to fly around the world? 7. Who made her first flight in a “man-lifting kite” in 1902? 8. Which famous stunt pilot soloed her first airplane at age 12? 9. Which pilot owned an airplane named Little Stinker ? 10. Which pilot is the first woman to win the U.S. National Aerobatics Competition? 11. Who was the first female pilot to be sworn in as a United States airmail pilot? 12. Who was the first woman to pilot in the US Space Shuttle program? To learn more information about these women, and other famous women in flight, visit these Web sites: www.ninety-nines.org www.uh.edu/engines/womfly www.sciencemuseumorg/flight www.ctie.monash.edu/hargrave/skelton www.aerobatic.com www.gale.com www.nasm.edu www.iwasm.org (this Web site has links to many sites about women in aviation) Answer Key 1.Harriett Quimby; 2. Bessie Coleman; 3. Katherine Cheung; 4. Willa Brown; 5. Valentina Tereshkova; 6.Geraldine Mock; 7.Leila Marie Cody; 8. Betty Skelton; 9. Betty Skelton; 10. Patty Wagstaff; 11. Helen Richey; 12. Lt. Col. Eileen Marie Collins Find the hidden words in this puzzle!! E H W E C A P S G W W B N H R C L B A R I O Y X J N I O E I P O T I G N O T L E K S I L C Q A D T H G R G W E A U T E H Betty Skelton X M T Y I A S C O L E M A N E B O Z T H L S T E B E T T Y Y A O B R Y E L T A C V G S T B L N A W I W I N I F R R K A G I E D R L B N R O N F O R N F E B A U E T D O I N K O F A O L M C S N N B D S A N E K E X O I S U A F E Y K E E A R J J D I T V Q B R D S R O C H E X E S Y D O U G S E T I K U S G C R E G A E Y V Y E P V W B F AIR MARIE BARONESS MOON BESSIE NAVY BETTY PATTY CODY RICHEY COLEMAN ROCHE EARHART SHANNON FORCE SKELTON HELEN SPACE JEANA STATION KITE STINKER LEILA STUNT LINDBERG WAGGSTAFF LITTLE YEAGER LUCID PELICAN PUBLISHING COMPANY 1000 BURMASTER ST. GRETNA, LA 70053 • 504-368-1175 FAX 504-368-1195 E-MAIL ADDRESS: [email protected] • WWW ADDRESS: http://www.pelicanpub.com GIRLS FLY! By Lynn M. Homan and Thomas Reilly Illustrated by Rosalie M. Shepherd A chance conversation between young Charlene and her two brothers about what she wants to do when she is an adult blossoms into an educational dialogue in which Charlene teaches her brothers a thing or two about women and their participation in the field of aeronautics. Beginning with her revelation that Leila Marie Cody flew in a kite years before the Wright brothers created their airplane, Charlene continues with a “who’s who” of influential female figures. Recounting history from Anne Morrow Lindbergh, who was the first American woman to earn her glider pilot’s license, to Dr. Mae Jemison, the first African-American woman astronaut, Charlene confirms that girls can be anything they want to be--and, in fact, they can fly! ABOUT THE AUTHORS Partners in Homan and Reilly Design, authors Lynn and Thomas have extensive experience in historical research, writing, and design. A licensed pilot, Reilly has served as an aviation consultant and has flown both fixed-wing aircraft and hot-air balloons. Homan earned a B.A. in history from West Virginia University and is involved in the creation of museum exhibitions, functioning as editor, curator, and designer. They are the authors of Black Knights: The Story of the Tuskegee Airmen ($23.00), The Tuskegee Airmen Story ($14.95), and Tuskegee Airmen: American Heroes ($14.95). All are published by Pelican. ABOUT THE ILLUSTRATOR Illustrator Rosalie M. Shepherd is a landscape and portrait painter who works with oil, charcoal, and watercolor and has worked extensively as a graphic designer. This is her third book with Homan and Reilly. She also illustrated the late David Collins’s last book, Clarence Thomas, Fighter with Words ($14.95). GIRLS FLY! By Lynn M. Homan and Thomas Reilly Illustrated by Rosalie M. Shepherd 32 pp. 8½ x 11 31 color illus. ISBN: 1-58980-154-7 $15.95.
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