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Surfnetkids » Newsletters » Surfing the Net with Kids: History of the Calendar


  • Surfing the Net with Kids: History of the Calendar

    Surfing the Net with Kids: History of the Calendar

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    Surfing the Net with Kids


     





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    January 9, 2002

    Dear Reader,

    Kids love to laugh, and you’ll laugh too when you read the
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       What did the canary say when its new cage fell apart?
       Cheep, cheep!
    Submitted September 8, 2001 by Sarah, age 11 from Quebec.

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       Put it in your front yard!
    Submitted July 20, 2000 by Laura D, age 10 from Australia.

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    For those that have already ordered it, the “2001 Newsletter
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    Today’s History of the Calendar topic is accompanied by the following
    game:

    History of the Calendar Calendar Crossword

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    History of the Calendar

    https://www.surfnetkids.com/calendar.htm

    Purchase a printable handout for just $1.00

    The Gregorian calendar we use today was created in the 1580’s by Pope Gregory XIII. Start your new year here, and discover the history of the calendar’s development.


    Britannica.com: Clockworks

    http://www.britannica.com/clockworks/main.html

    *****

    What is time? Albert Einstein explained that time as we know is an invention when he said “Space and time are modes by which we think, not conditions under which we live.” Clockworks explores our notions of time, starting with a history of calendars and timekeeping. This is an excellent site for middle and high-school students, sprinkled with dozens of apt quotes from the likes of Einstein, Ben Franklin, William Shakespeare and Tennessee Williams.


    Calendars through the Ages

    http://webexhibits.org/calendars/

    *****

    My pick of the day is the beautifully illustrated Calendars through the Ages. Organized into chapters with a horizontal menu at the top, and subdivided into topics with a vertical menu on the left, Calendars through the Ages begins with an in-depth look at the astronomical basis of calendars. Significant historical calendars (such as the Roman and Mayan) and currently used international calendars (Jewish, Chinese, and Islamic) are covered in Various Calendars.


    Calendopaedia

    http://www.geocities.com/calendopaedia/

    *****

    “Since the dawn of civilization man has kept track of time by use of the sun, the moon, and the stars. Man noticed that time could be broken up into units of the day (the time taken for the earth to rotate once on its axis), the month (the time taken for the moon to orbit the earth) and the year (the time taken for the earth to orbit the sun).” But since a month is not a whole number of days, nor a year a whole number of months or day, the task is not simple. “The ways in which these problems were tackled down the centuries and across the world is the subject of this Web site.”


    A Walk Through Time

    http://physics.nist.gov/GenInt/Time/time.html

    *****

    “In the 1840’s a Greenwich standard time for all of England, Scotland, and Wales was established, replacing several ‘local time’ systems. The Royal Greenwich Observatory was the focal point for this development because it had played such a key role in marine navigation based upon accurate timekeeping. Greenwich Mean Time (GMT) subsequently evolved as the official time reference for the world and served that purpose until 1972.” This fabulous site, produced by the National Institute of Standards and Technology, presents both the history of timekeeping and a peek at its current state. If you want to coordinate your Windows-based computer clock to the NIST clock, you can download a program to do so over the Internet (look under NIST Time Calibration).


    World Book: Counting the Days

    http://www2.worldbook.com/features/features.asp?feature=calendars&page=html/calendars.htm&direct=yes

    ****

    World Book editors have created a site for elementary and middle-school students that answers basic questions about the invention of the calendar. What I found most fascinating was the brief discussion of two proposed calendars that would simplify our timekeeping. The fixed (or thirteen month) calendar inserts the month of Sol after June. Each month is exactly four weeks long and an extra day (called a year day) is added at the end of the year. The second option is the world calendar which has twelve months of thirty or thirty-one days, and also has a year day at the end.




    Surfing the Calendar

    Ben Franklin’s Birthday
    Jan 17, 1706
    U.S. Presidential Inauguration
    Jan 20, 2001
    Martin Luther King Day
    Jan 21, 2002
    California Gold Rush
    Jan 24, 1848

    More Calendar

    Related Book
    (in association with Amazon.com)

    Calendar: Humanity's Epic Struggle to Determine a True and Accurate Year

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    Copyright © 2002 Barbara J. Feldman



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