This document provides the content and plan for Day 2 of a unit on the US Constitution. The focus is on the three branches of government defined in Articles 1-3. Students will reread the articles in groups and create Frayer models to describe each branch. The teacher will work separately with ESOL/ESE students, scaffolding the language and providing sentence frames. By the end of the lesson, students should be able to describe the powers granted to each branch based on the Constitution. Student understanding will be formally assessed through review of the completed Frayer models.
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Day 2
This document provides the content and plan for Day 2 of a unit on the US Constitution. The focus is on the three branches of government defined in Articles 1-3. Students will reread the articles in groups and create Frayer models to describe each branch. The teacher will work separately with ESOL/ESE students, scaffolding the language and providing sentence frames. By the end of the lesson, students should be able to describe the powers granted to each branch based on the Constitution. Student understanding will be formally assessed through review of the completed Frayer models.
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Day 2
Content for Study
The Constitution and amendments NCSS Theme Power, Authority, and Governance Rationale Students need to be able to understand and interpret the document that governs our country as well as how and why it has been changed throughout the span of its existence. Unit Goals Students will describe what the Constitution is, the amending process, and what some of the amendments are that have been made already. Pre-assessment Students will use Quizlet live. Students are broken into teams where they must compete to answer questions on quizlet.com about constitution and what freedoms it protects. Post-assessment Students will create a Bio-project related to a key founding father. Options are George Washington, James Madison, Benjamin Franklin, Alexander Hamilton, George Mason, and Elbridge Gerry. Students will sign up for their person the 1st day of the Unit. Students will read a biography of their person and do the following tasks: Create a Bio-cube of their founding father Create a Bio-poem Create a Bottle person In addition, students will choose two of the following to also include Create a timeline of important event that occurred in your person’s life time. Create a diary or Journal for your person with a minimum of 4 entries. Each entry should be at least four paragraphs long. Create an obituary, birth certificate, and death certificate for your person. On the last day, students will share their Bio-projects in groups. (The groups will be made so that no one at a group should have the same person) Learning Standards SS.5.C.1.2: Define a constitution, and discuss its purposes. SS.5.A.5.10: Examine the significance of the Constitution including its key political concepts, origins of those concepts, and their role in American democracy SS.5.C.3.1: Describe the organizational structure (legislative, executive, judicial branches) and powers of the federal government as defined in Articles I, II, and III of the U.S. Constitution. SS.5.A.1.1: Use primary and secondary sources to understand history. SS.5.C.3.6: Examine the foundations of the United States legal system by recognizing the role of the courts in interpreting law and settling conflicts. LAFS.5.RI.2.4: Determine the meaning of general academic and domain-specific words and phrases in a text relevant to a grade 5 topic or subject area. LAFS.5.RI.3.7: Draw on information from multiple print or digital sources, demonstrating the ability to locate an answer to a question quickly or to solve a problem efficiently. Objectives Students will be able to describe the three branches of government and what powers are granted to them, based on the Constitution. Materials Frayer Model worksheets Constitution Translated for Kids by Cathy Davis (also in Spanish) https://www.usa.gov/branches-of-government (also in Spanish) Procedures Students will reread Articles 1, 2, and 3 in their groups and create Frayer models for each branch of the government in the Social Studies Notebook. Students will also read and use information from the branches of government article The teacher will pull ESE/ESOL students to a separate group and work with them. The teacher will scaffold the language of Articles 1-3 for ESOL students and give sentence frames for completing the Frayer model. ESOL and ESE students will be able to use notes created on Day one that explains each article. Formal Assessment The teacher will look over the Frayer models to insure students have filled them out correctly and address any common mistakes the next day. Resources Branches of Government. (n.d.). Retrieved from https://www.usa.gov/branches-of-government