The curated resources linked below are an initial sample of the resources coming from a collaborative and rigorous review process with the EAD Content Curation Task Force.
Students are introduced to the 9/11 attacks and learn that the nation’s response created tension between the need for security and America’s tradition of liberty. They are then introduced to the Declaration of Independence and Preamble to the U.S. Constitution and learn that these documents describe fundamental values and principles that characterize the American political culture.
The Roadmap
Center for Civic Education
Using laws and writings that influenced the development of the First Amendment, students “vote off” proposed amendments from the time period.
The Roadmap
NewseumED
This lesson asks students to investigate the connections between constitutional principles, the United States founding documents, and their relationship to one another.
The Roadmap
Bill of Rights Institute
This lesson lets students look at the Constitution from the perspective of its founding principles and make direct connections between these principles, the Founders' intentions, and the Constitution itself.
The Roadmap
iCivics, Inc.
“Federalism” is the word used to describe the Constitution’s system of dividing political power between the national government and the states.
The Roadmap
National Constitution Center
Students are introduced to key characteristics of government (authority, legitimacy, and sovereignty), consider how governments establish and maintain them, and analyze government forms to determine if and how each characteristic exists.
The Roadmap
iCivics, Inc.
This unit of lessons and tools examines how we went from thirteen British colonies to the United States of America.
The Roadmap
iCivics, Inc.
Students will be able to identify and explain aspects of the Equal Rights Amendment debate including various legal and societal considerations.
The Roadmap
C-SPAN Television Networks/C-SPAN Classroom
As a highly-structured model for conversation, Deliberations allow teachers to help students cooperatively discuss contested political issues by carefully considering multiple perspectives and searching for consensus. This Deliberation focuses on the Electoral College.
The Roadmap
Street Law Inc.
This unit of lessons and tools examines the ins and outs of our founding document and how it works in practice.
The Roadmap
iCivics, Inc.
In the summer of 1787, delegates gathered for a convention in Philadelphia, with the goal of revising the Articles of Confederation—the nation’s existing governing document, which wasn’t really working. Instead, they wrote a whole new document, which created a revolutionary form of government: the U.S. Constitution.