Remembering 9/11: Building ToleranceQuick View
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Remembering 9/11: Building Tolerance

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These lessons asks students to look not just at the events of 9/11 but at the following days and years. The lessons involve students in exploring the parts of a newspaper, the functions of a news article, and the importance of a free press in a democratic society. Classroom activities prompt students to discuss the need for and role of heroes. Students learn how to identify unifying factors in a diverse society, distinguish between fact and opinion, examine different points of view, analyze legal issues that have arisen as a result of the terrorist attacks, and much more.
Rosa Parks: A Quest for Equal ProtectionQuick View
CenterForCivicEducationCenterForCivicEducation

Rosa Parks: A Quest for Equal Protection

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This lesson asks students to revisit the well-known story of a figure in the civil rights movement—Rosa Parks—through the primary source documents associated with her arrest in 1955. The arrest occurred in the shadow of the Supreme Court decision in Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka (1954) and had a powerful impact on the public policy of segregation and the application of the equal protection clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.
Historical Analysis of Constitutional AmendmentsQuick View
CenterForCivicEducationCenterForCivicEducation

Historical Analysis of Constitutional Amendments

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In this lesson, students examine one of six key amendments to the Constitution while considering their historical context. Students create timelines for each amendment that are later combined to fully evaluate and interpret how the Constitution has evolved within its historical context.
Remembering 9/11: Building ToleranceQuick View
CenterForCivicEducationCenterForCivicEducation

Remembering 9/11: Building Tolerance

(0)
These lessons asks students to look not just at the events of 9/11 but at the following days and years. The lessons involve students in exploring the parts of a newspaper, the functions of a news article, and the importance of a free press in a democratic society. Classroom activities prompt students to discuss the need for and role of heroes. Students learn how to identify unifying factors in a diverse society, distinguish between fact and opinion, examine different points of view, analyze legal issues that have arisen as a result of the terrorist attacks, and much more.
WOMEN’S HISTORY MONTH WORD CLOUDSQuick View
CenterForCivicEducationCenterForCivicEducation

WOMEN’S HISTORY MONTH WORD CLOUDS

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Students will create word clouds using excerpts of letters and speeches by famous women. Students may use the Internet and visit the free website http://www.wordle.net to evaluate text in a unique way. Afterwards, students discuss their findings. In word clouds, those words that appear most frequently are given greater prominence, allowing the reader or student to draw conclusions on dominance of themes in a document, or the tone the author intends in the writing. The prominen
The Power of Nonviolence: The Children's MarchQuick View
CenterForCivicEducationCenterForCivicEducation

The Power of Nonviolence: The Children's March

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This lesson introduces students to the Children’s March, also commonly referred to as the Children’s Crusade, which took place in Birmingham, Alabama, in May 1963. Students will understand why children were involved in the march, how children were prepared for the march, and what made it a success. The lesson asks students to imagine themselves as someone involved in the march and consider their competing responsibilities, values, and interests.
The Power of Nonviolence: What is Nonviolence?Quick View
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The Power of Nonviolence: What is Nonviolence?

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This lesson uses primary sources and stories of participants in the civil rights movement to introduce students to the concept of nonviolence. Students will analyse the characteristics, costs, and benefits of nonviolence, realizing that it is an active, intentional, and effective way to achieve goals.
Citizenship Schools and Civic EducationQuick View
CenterForCivicEducationCenterForCivicEducation

Citizenship Schools and Civic Education

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This lesson is intended to help guide students through a historical and contemporary examination of citizenship schools and civic education. During the civil rights era, citizenship schools were an integral part of the effort to educate African Americans about the rights that they had as United States citizens so that they could vigorously assert these rights in the fight against segregation. Presently, citizenship education tends to be associated with efforts to prepare noncitizens to meet the requirements for becoming naturalized U.S. citizens.
What Is the Role of the President?Quick View
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What Is the Role of the President?

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This lesson examines sources of presidential power and ways that checks and balances limit presidential power. Students explain the president's constitutional responsibilities, identify checks on the president&'s power, and defend positions involving the exercise of presidential power.
The Legacy of Ronald ReaganQuick View
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The Legacy of Ronald Reagan

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This lesson traces Ronald Reagan's ascent from obscurity to the pinnacle of political power in the United States. It also examines the constitutional, political, and civic principles associated with the public life of Ronald Reagan before and during his presidency. Ronald Reagan&'s principles and their consequences are his legacy to America.
Ronald Reagan and Executive PowerQuick View
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Ronald Reagan and Executive Power

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Ronald Reagan and Executive Power examines the use of presidential powers by Ronald Reagan, the fortieth president of the United States. It explores Article II of the Constitution, which grants the president executive powers. When you have completed this lesson, you should be able to explain and discuss how President Reagan exercised his authority under Article II of the Constitution concerning war powers, domestic policy, and foreign policy.
Women's History Wax MuseumQuick View
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Women's History Wax Museum

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This activity is a fun addition to a standard research report about men and women who played a role in the woman suffrage movement. Once students have learned a fair amount about their assigned people, they hold a presentation day in which they each dress up like their person and stand still, as if they are wax figures in a museum. When a visitor pushes a paper button, the figures come to life and present short, informative presentations in the persona of the person they researched. A student-illustrated presentation board is created ahead of time and used in the presentation.
Change Through Strategic Nonviolent ActionQuick View
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Change Through Strategic Nonviolent Action

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Nonviolence is introduced to students as a concept with a deep history that reverberates in the present. The power of nonviolence as a catalyst for change is a function of both its philosophical foundations and the strategic application of specific nonviolent tactics. Students will analyze major figures in the history of nonviolence through the intellectual framework of what constitutes philosophical nonviolence as opposed to tactical nonviolence.
What Is Authority?Quick View
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What Is Authority?

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This lesson introduces the study of authority. Students learn two very important concepts: authority and limited government. Students also learn the importance of examining and choosing people for positions of leadership.
The Equal Rights Amendment in the 1970s and TodayQuick View
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The Equal Rights Amendment in the 1970s and Today

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The proposed Equal Rights Amendment (ERA) to the U.S. Constitution has been a point of debate since it was first drafted by Alice Paul in 1923. Despite being introduced in every session of Congress, it did not reach the states for ratification until 1972. When the time limit for ratification expired after seven years, Congress extended it to 1982. Still, the amendment fell three states short of the required thirty-eight states.
Orb and Effy Learn about AuthorityQuick View
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Orb and Effy Learn about Authority

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This lesson introduces the study of authority. Children learn when people are exercising authority and when they are exercising power without authority. Children learn how and why authority is useful in society.
We the People: The Citizen & the Constitution KS3Quick View
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We the People: The Citizen & the Constitution KS3

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In this lesson, students are introduced to one of the most important parts of the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution—the equal protection clause. When your students finish this lesson, they will be able to explain the purpose of the equal protection clause. They will also be able to describe some of the steps that Congress, the executive branch, the U.S. Supreme Court, and citizens have taken to end unfair discrimination in our nation.