 Hey everybody, welcome to The Waldoch Way. I'm Jessica. And today's video is going to be a homeschool with us. So we are actually going to bring you guys along while we do one of The Waldoch Ways who was unit studies. And the who was unit study that we have been working on is who were the right brothers? Now the who was unit studies do not necessarily have a timeline in them. So they have taken us personally anywhere from one day up to a month depending on what else we're doing in our homeschool, what we have going on in our life and kind of how interested Emily is in the subject of the who was book. This particular unit study has taken us approximately two weeks. And so that is what you're gonna see today. Who were the right brothers? On May 25th, 1910, Milton Wright took his first airplane flight. He had lived a long and busy life working for his church, raising his family and traveling. But he had never been in an airplane. Of course, in 1910, only a handful of people had. Two people who did have flying experience were Milton's sons, Wilbur and Orville Wright who had invented the airplane in 1903. Milton had watched them grow from curious and hardworking boys into two of the most famous men in the world. The Wright brothers built and flew their airplane only after years of trial, error and hard work. From the early 20th century to the present, every single airplane ever built includes something first created by the Wright brothers. Their invention changed the world. However, on this day in May of 1910, the brothers didn't care about the world. They were just happy to share their success and joy with their father who had given them so much support. On a field not far from their family home on a date in Ohio, Orville Wright settled his 81-year-old father into the plane. Then Orville sat at the controls. The two men held on as the aircraft slowly got up to speed and then took off. They circled the field over and over staying in the air for nearly seven minutes. During the flight, Milton leaned towards his son over the roar of the engine he shouted, higher, Orville, higher. So that's where Orville took Milton. And that's where the Wright brothers took the world. All right, are you ready to play top Trump planes? Yes. Okay, and you remember how to play? Yes, ma'am. All right, highest stat wins. Okay, straighten your cards up and we will let you go first. So pick your top stat and read it out. Yes, ma'am. Flight speed, 585. Okay, my flight speed is only 75. So you get those cards. Yay. All right, so you get to pick the stat because you won that one. Okay, stat is flight speed again. I've got 90. I have 81. Red, because mine is 90. Very good. Ooh, mine was a Pegasus. Quantum. It's gonna be flight speed again. Okay. Mine is 317, it looks like. And minus 316, so you beat me by one mile an hour. Awesome. Your plane looks cool. Yeah, it was pretty cool wasn't it? Whoa, look at mine, mom. This is an awesome one. What's yours? Mine are the Pitt specials. Mine's an Aerion. Aerion? This time it's gonna be flight speed again and mine is 1066. Wow, that's a fast plane. Mine's only 181. Our stat again. Okay, how much is your flight speed? 116. And I have Air Force Two, whose flight speed is 530 miles an hour, so I win. Wow. So in the Who Was Unit study, it lists a Wright Brothers model that you can do, but we actually have the Hands on History box for World History Two, and there is a Wright Brothers flyer inside it. So that is the one we are going to do. All right, so what they're saying with the, you're gonna poke a pilot hole? You're not gonna shove this hole too big all the way through. You just want to poke a hole through the paper into the styrofoam. Just like a small hole. Just a small, not very deep hole just so you know where all the holes go. And then you put that one aside and we keep moving on to get them all done. So just barely poke it in through the paper, push, push, see, that's good. Do the next one. Okay, go to those. Okay, so dab the toothpick in the glue. Okay, now put it into that hole. Straight up and leave, all the way down. Hard. Okay, stick it to the next one and keep doing that. All right, take this and dab each of the top of the toothpicks. Okay. Good job. All right, so compare and contrast yourself and the Wright Brothers. So what I want you to do is write one thing over here that you are or have that the Wright Brothers aren't. And one thing's over here for the Wright Brothers and then one thing in the middle at least that you guys have in common. Okay, so what is something that only Emily is? Okay, but do you know that they didn't like to paint? What is one thing you know for sure that is different between you and the Wright Brothers? What are you and what are they? A boy. That's pretty different, right? Yeah. So let's write that down. Over here, Emily is a girl and over here, they are boys. This? Sure, you can use my special pen. G, very good. Now what's something that you and the Wright Brothers have in common? I love to build. Okay, and so today, so we are both builders. Okay, so this time I printed the trivia questions on two different colors. So there's someone green and someone orange. Which color do you wanna be? Green. All right, so I'll ask you the orange and then you can ask me a green. And if you get it right, you get to keep it. Whoever has the most cards in the end wins. Yes. Okay. What was the first successful business the brothers had? Printing. Yep, they did printing together. Yes. Good job. What happened after the successful test flight of the Wright Flyer? It was damaged and they had to fix it. Damaged when a gust of wind made it tumble down the beach. Good job. Gonna keep it. Yay. Okay, let's see. Why did the brothers not fly for three years after they finished their 1905 airplane? Because they were afraid that someone's gonna steal their idea. Yep. Good job. You get to keep that one. Yes. Okay, so count your cards and let's see who won. How many cards did you get the right? I got seven. I only got three right. So who won? Me. Good job. You know the Wright brothers best.