Justice Teaching - The First Amendment - 1 views
Jefferson and the Declaration of Independence - 0 views
How a Bill Becomes a Law - 2 views
"Our Broken Constitution" - 0 views
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An article is this week's New Yorker, By Jeffrey Toobin. He talks about problems with the Constitution and challenges conventional wisdom that it is a sacred document. This link just shows you the first page - must be a subscriber to read the whole thing. Might be worth checking it out in your school library or a new stand, though, the article seems like one I might use with my students.
One More Lesson Plan!-Federalist Paper No. 10 - 2 views
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This might be a stretch for elementary and middle school. But I think it's workable for 8th grade and beyond. The lesson has students learning about the distinction between a democratic republic and direct democracy using Federalist paper No. 10
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Agreed about the stretch. I would even say this is too tough for grade 8 since the vocab is dense. Would need a lot of infrastructure to get kids prepared.
Women's Suffrage - 1 views
Lesson Plan - 1 views
Cornell Law - 1 views
Home | Stanford History Education Group - 2 views
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What doesn't the Standford History Education Group have on their site? The site offers everything from lesson plans, to primary source materials, to pedagogical approaches to teaching history, to assessment materials. This site has especially great tools for getting students to think like historians!
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I love the section of "reading like A Historian".
American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) - 1 views
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The American Civil Liberties Union has a vast array of materials hosted on their site. Perhaps the materials of greatest use to teachers are the frequent "news releases" about issues pertaining to our individual freedoms that are currently in the news.
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The is a site that teachers should bookmark and read weekly because it keeps you up to date with the issues of the day.
Charters of Freedom - The Declaration of Independence, The Constitution, The Bill of Ri... - 1 views
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This is the National Archives' "Charters of Freedom" website. In addition to having full transcriptions of the DOI, Constitution, and Bill of Rights, there are links to many ancillary materials as well. Included in the site are lesson suggestions, other primary source materials, and scholarly essays about the legacy of our Founding Documents.
Children and Youth in History - 1 views
Government: Declassified Series | TED-Ed - 1 views
Thurgood Marshall's Bicentennial Speech - 1 views
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