In December of 2001, Congress passed a joint resolution permitting the President to declare September 11 of each year as Patriot Day, in commemoration of the 2001 terrorist attacks on the United States. It is customary to fly the flag at half mast, and to
Created in 2002, Families and Work features four 9/11 lesson plans for K-12 students.
In August, 2002, Hoover Library-Museum (in Washington D.
This Library of Congress 9/11 commemorative exhibit includes "an abundance of original material including prints, photographs, drawings, poems, eye-witness accounts and personal reactions, headlines, books, magazines, songs, maps, videotapes and films.
The September 11 Digital Archive is another amazing retrospective, this one organized by City University of New York and George Mason University.
For high school students and adults, the Washington Post takes a look at the events of September 11 from today's vantage point.
As we approach the first anniversary of the September 11th attack on America, it is a time to reflect on the tragedy and our response to it. The following Web sites present various views of that day of terror and the year that followed.
Kids Newsroom is a weekly news site with archives dating back to 1999.
From the PBS NewsHour with Jim Lehrer, Extra for Students takes on the World Trade Center and Pentagon attacks (click on "September 11 Background" in the circular menu) and life afterwards.
"America Responds is a snapshot of PBS's coverage of the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks.
The five Dalton School elementary students who authored this ThinkQuest site visited New York's PS 89, just a block from ground zero.