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Traci Kerns

Anatomy of the Constitution | iCivics - 1 views

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    Although I didn't use this entire lesson, there are some excellent vocabulary and 'anatomy' of the Constitution PDFs that would work well in lower grades and perhaps with ELL students.  Good overview of the structure of government and the powers and duties of the 3 branches. I feel that there is a lot to take from this lesson to use in class.
emilyhlewis

Structured Academic Controversy (SAC) | Teachinghistory.org - 2 views

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    This site gives a good overview of how to conduct a Structured Academic Controversy in a history classroom.
Michael DiLuzio

First Amendment | LII / Legal Information Institute - 1 views

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    This is a great 1st Amendment overview provided by Cornell University Law School. It explains the basics of of the amendment. However, it also goes into some of the limits and restraint within the amendment.
Allison Scully

Women of Protest: Photographs from the Records of the National Women's Party - 1 views

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    This collection of images provides a pictorial account of the Suffrage Movement, as well as an historical overview of the National Women's Party, timeline, information on selected leaders of the party, tactics and techniques of the campaign, and Gallery of Suffrage Prisoners. The photo collection is particularly great as a way to show the actions of the NWP.
Karin Kugel

Fourteenth Amendment Video - History.com - 0 views

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    The 14th Amendment granted citizenship and equal civil and legal rights to African-Americans and slaves who had been emancipated after the American Civil War. This simple overview of the 14th Amendment and Brown vs Board of Education would be appropriate for elementary students. It does have short advertisements.
Allison Scully

From ProCon.org: Death Penalty History - 2 views

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    This site offers a history of the death penalty through time, beginning with Hammurabi's Code. It provides brief overviews of each landmark moment presented, many including text excerpts from primary sources. Teachers may want to use this as a resource for information when teaching the 8th Amendment, rather than introduce students to the page itself as the information (as a result of the topic) can feel a bit overwhelming as a whole.
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    I've used this site before as a resource for debates on a variety of topics. I think it would work for that purpose with the death penalty as well. You are right, however, it is a bit overwhelming.... but fascinating, nevertheless.
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