6-8 The Constitution Text Set

advertisement
Words We Live By: Building Knowledge about the Constitution
6-8 Grade Band Text Set
Line of Inquiry: This text set focuses on the inception, specific language, and effects of the United States
Constitution. The anchor text, an excerpt from Linda A. Monk’s Words We Live By: Your Annotated Guide
to the Constitution, guides students through a close reading of the Constitution’s first three words, “We
the people.” Although a relatively short document, Monk makes very clear the complicated nature of
the Constitution’s language. The accompanying texts in this set provide an opportunity for students to
build subsequent knowledge about the Constitution. Some of the texts lay a foundation for a close
reading of the anchor text by providing background knowledge on the Constitution and how it was
created. Other texts look at specific individuals who have been closely tied to the Constitution. And still
other texts look at what happened after the Constitution was ratified.
Anchor Text
1110L Excerpt from Words We Live By: Your Annotated Guide to the Constitution
By: Linda A. Monk
Genre: Informational
830L
5 Things to Know About the Constitution
By: Scholastic News
Source: SIRS Discoverer
Genre: Nonfiction
"5 Things to Know About the Constitution." Scholastic News 5/6. 17 Sep 2012: 4+. SIRS
Discoverer. Web. 07 Jan 2013.
Introductory in nature - provides 5 important ideas you should know about the constitution
before you “go any further” (1. Creating it was a long, difficult process, 2. Many of our nation’s
founding fathers helped craft it, 3. Split power among 3 branches, 4. Important Parts were added
later, 5. It’s alive!); introduces the vocabulary words “delegates” and “ratified.”
900L
Thurgood Marshall and the Supreme Court
By: Deborah Kent
Source: Scholastic Book Wizard
Genre: Nonfiction
“...provides a chronological narrative history of the legal struggle, led by Thurgood Marshall and
the NAACP Defense Fund, that preceded the political battles for civil rights...tells the dramatic
story of how the NAACP Defense Fund let the Court to use the Constitution as an instrument of
liberty and justice for all African-Americans.” (Amazon)
1030L The Great Little Madison
By: Jean Fritz
Source: Scholastic Book Wizard
Genre: Nonfiction
“Fritz creates a vivid picture of the man and the problems that our forefathers faced while
America was a new and vulnerable nation. This historically accurate, sometimes humorous
biography illuminates Madison’s passion for keeping a young country intact through the turmoil
of two wars, and Fritz is able to squeeze in a great deal of governmental history within a
fascinating context.” (Scholastic)
1080L Hamilton and the Constitution
By: PBS
Source: PBS.org
Genre: Nonfiction
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/amex/duel/sfeature/hamiltonusconstituion.html
Outlines Hamilton’s involvement in the Constitution--including the notion that he thought the
new government should be modeled after the British system, which he deemed, the “best in the
world”; talks about his series of essays, written in conjunction with John Jay and James Madison,
known as “The Federalist”.
1140L The Making of the Constitution
By: David White
Source: SIRS Discoverer
Genre: Nonfiction
White, David. "The Making of the Constitution." Social Studies for Kids. Aug. 4 2004: n.p. SIRS
Discoverer. Web. 03 Jan 2013.
Introductory in nature - but more specific and academic than the article, “5 Things to Know
About the Constitution”- gives an account of the general events leading up to the Constitutional
Convention and describes the different “plans” that certain delegates came up with.
1150L Building a New Nation: The Federalist Era 1789-1803
By: Christopher Collier
Source: Scholastic Book Wizard
Genre: Nonfiction
“...chronicles the development of the new government following the signing of the Constitution.
It explores the political views of the young nation’s leaders as they struggled to form a strong
nation, despite the foreign and domestic dilemmas...” (Scholastic)
1220L Amending the Constitution
By: Timothy K. Dyhouse
Source: SIRS Discoverer
Genre: Nonfiction
Dyhouse, Timothy K. "Amending the Constitution." VFW Magazine. April 1996: 19+. SIRS
Discoverer. Web. 07 Jan 2013.
This provides a more in-depth look at the amendment process. It describes the two processes for
amending the constitution, as well as the vague wording of Article V (which allows for
amendments); lists the 27 amendments including the time it took to ratify and the year it was
ratified. I would pair this one with Deborah Kent’s Thurgood Marshall and the Supreme Court.
Possible Graphic
1130L Road to the Constitution (Timeline of events 1774 - 1800)
By: Mark Clemens
Genre: Nonfiction
Source: SIRS
Clemens, Mark. "Road to a Constitution." Cobblestone (Vol. 28, No. 9). Dec. 2007: 7. SIRS
Discoverer. Web. 07 Jan 2013.
Download