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First Amendment Bundle
First Amendment Bundle
First Amendment Bundle
First Amendment Bundle
First Amendment Bundle
First Amendment Bundle
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Description

First Amendment Collaborative Poster

The First Amendment is an integral part of the Bill of Rights and is mentioned almost everyday in some form or fashion. It guarantees us some of our most basic freedoms and your students will have fun coloring, collaborating, and discussing their thoughts on the amendment.

When your students enter the room they are each given a piece of the poster, which they will color on and eventually piece together with the rest of their classmates. Each piece of the poster has two different writing prompts. It is up to you how you want to use them. Sometimes I use both and other times I just use one.

Anytime we do these poster in class, my students get excited. They love to color and be able to express themselves artistically and I love the writing portion of the poster. Each hour when my students walk into the room they enjoy reading what the other classes have written. It is a very engaging piece of artwork that you can keep up all year long and reference frequently!

*Final Poster is 5x5, however there are extra pieces of the poster that can be printed off and placed around the border for classes that are larger than 25.

This is a great assignment for an introduction to the First Amendment or as a culminating project. of the year. If you like this one, check out my other Collaborative Posters too, or if you have a suggestion for a poster, please feel free to contact me.

Needs:

8.5 x 11 copy paper

Colored pencils/crayons

Tape

Please email me with any questions that you have at makehistoryfun@me.com

Also, I would love to see your students finished products! Please tag me @makehistoryfun on social media!

-----------------------------------------

Constitution Articles and Amendments Puzzles

Great for your tactile learners! Your students won’t realize they are reviewing or studying while they are working on this puzzle!

This Amendment and Articles Puzzle is a fun way for your students to review as they try and put the puzzle together. This puzzle contains brief descriptions of the 7 Articles of the Constitution and the 27 Amendments. Thre are 29 puzzle pieces in this file.

I print out on card stock or laminate each one of these puzzles. To save time I will have the students cut them out and that also gives them the ability to preview the puzzle before hand.

Then throughout my lessons over these topics I will periodically pass these out and give them 5-10 minutes to try and put them together. I will have races and time the students.

Included are two puzzles: the first puzzle contains pictures that will help your students get started, the second puzzle is blank except for the descriptions of the amendments and articles.

--------------------------------

Constitution Day: Fight for the Right!

I use this each year for my activity on Constitution Day. The kids love it because there is a lot of discussion, debating, and it deals with something they can relate to. I love it for the same reason.

The lesson begins with me asking them what would happen if we had to choose just one of the freedoms from the Constitution. I hold four rounds of voting where the class determines which of the freedoms (speech, press, assembly, petition, or religion) they want to eliminate.

Between each round I have a timer I set which gives them time to discuss which liberty to eliminate while I walk around the room and listen and question their thinking. Next I have another timer that allows them to write. Throughout the entire lesson they are discussing, writing, then debating. Once we vote I then ask the students to defend their position and provide reasons for the elimination of one of the 5 freedoms. Many times I don't have to say anything except "Does anyone disagree with what was just said?"

By the end of the lesson once the students are down to two (my class almost always has speech and religion left) and they have to decide they begin to see how all of these lessons are intertwined and the loss of one impacts another.

My students have told me this is one of their favorite lessons of the year and at least one student from each class asks if we can do more stuff like this in class! There are 17 slides and I rarely get through the EXTENSION questions at the end. It could easily be used over a two day period or if you are on 90 minute schedules you could accomplish the whole thing.

*This includes a PowerPoint Presentation as well as a link to Make a Copy of the GOOGLE SLIDES presentation I use with my class.

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First Amendment Bundle

Rated 5 out of 5, based on 3 reviews
5.0 (3 ratings)
Make History Fun
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Highlights

Grades icon
Grades
5th - 9th
Pages
40

Description

First Amendment Collaborative Poster

The First Amendment is an integral part of the Bill of Rights and is mentioned almost everyday in some form or fashion. It guarantees us some of our most basic freedoms and your students will have fun coloring, collaborating, and discussing their thoughts on the amendment.

When your students enter the room they are each given a piece of the poster, which they will color on and eventually piece together with the rest of their classmates. Each piece of the poster has two different writing prompts. It is up to you how you want to use them. Sometimes I use both and other times I just use one.

Anytime we do these poster in class, my students get excited. They love to color and be able to express themselves artistically and I love the writing portion of the poster. Each hour when my students walk into the room they enjoy reading what the other classes have written. It is a very engaging piece of artwork that you can keep up all year long and reference frequently!

*Final Poster is 5x5, however there are extra pieces of the poster that can be printed off and placed around the border for classes that are larger than 25.

This is a great assignment for an introduction to the First Amendment or as a culminating project. of the year. If you like this one, check out my other Collaborative Posters too, or if you have a suggestion for a poster, please feel free to contact me.

Needs:

8.5 x 11 copy paper

Colored pencils/crayons

Tape

Please email me with any questions that you have at makehistoryfun@me.com

Also, I would love to see your students finished products! Please tag me @makehistoryfun on social media!

-----------------------------------------

Constitution Articles and Amendments Puzzles

Great for your tactile learners! Your students won’t realize they are reviewing or studying while they are working on this puzzle!

This Amendment and Articles Puzzle is a fun way for your students to review as they try and put the puzzle together. This puzzle contains brief descriptions of the 7 Articles of the Constitution and the 27 Amendments. Thre are 29 puzzle pieces in this file.

I print out on card stock or laminate each one of these puzzles. To save time I will have the students cut them out and that also gives them the ability to preview the puzzle before hand.

Then throughout my lessons over these topics I will periodically pass these out and give them 5-10 minutes to try and put them together. I will have races and time the students.

Included are two puzzles: the first puzzle contains pictures that will help your students get started, the second puzzle is blank except for the descriptions of the amendments and articles.

--------------------------------

Constitution Day: Fight for the Right!

I use this each year for my activity on Constitution Day. The kids love it because there is a lot of discussion, debating, and it deals with something they can relate to. I love it for the same reason.

The lesson begins with me asking them what would happen if we had to choose just one of the freedoms from the Constitution. I hold four rounds of voting where the class determines which of the freedoms (speech, press, assembly, petition, or religion) they want to eliminate.

Between each round I have a timer I set which gives them time to discuss which liberty to eliminate while I walk around the room and listen and question their thinking. Next I have another timer that allows them to write. Throughout the entire lesson they are discussing, writing, then debating. Once we vote I then ask the students to defend their position and provide reasons for the elimination of one of the 5 freedoms. Many times I don't have to say anything except "Does anyone disagree with what was just said?"

By the end of the lesson once the students are down to two (my class almost always has speech and religion left) and they have to decide they begin to see how all of these lessons are intertwined and the loss of one impacts another.

My students have told me this is one of their favorite lessons of the year and at least one student from each class asks if we can do more stuff like this in class! There are 17 slides and I rarely get through the EXTENSION questions at the end. It could easily be used over a two day period or if you are on 90 minute schedules you could accomplish the whole thing.

*This includes a PowerPoint Presentation as well as a link to Make a Copy of the GOOGLE SLIDES presentation I use with my class.

Report this resource to TPT
Reported resources will be reviewed by our team. Report this resource to let us know if this resource violates TPT's content guidelines.

Reviews

5.0
Rated 5 out of 5, based on 3 reviews
3
ratings
All verified TPT purchases
Rated 5 out of 5
December 5, 2022
During the "Fight for the Right!" activity, my students were highly engaged! They ALL had an opinion on which of the rights protected in the first amendment should go and which should stay. Their reasons and the ensuing discussion were fabulous. Excellent resource - thank you!
Lauren D.
11 reviews
Grades taught: 10th
Rated 5 out of 5
February 25, 2021
This resource required no preparation. It could be used with a larger unit on the constitution or (as we did) to teach students about free speech rights.
Sara S.
208 reviews
Grades taught: 6th
Rated 5 out of 5
October 28, 2019
Thanks for making this a bundle--so many great ideas!
Allison L.
453 reviews
Make History Fun
Response from
Make History Fun
(TPT Seller)
Nov 11, 2019
Im so glad you like it! @makehistoryfun

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