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Amendment Process Explained

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Constitution basicsMar 1, 2026
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A civics adventure written for readers of all ages.

Educator view

Purpose: Amendment Process Explained helps learners understand The Constitution can be changed through a formal amendment process that requires approval by both Congress and the states.

Time: 10 to 15 minutes

Best for: discussion starter, civics supplement, advisory, homeschool

1 Read the hook2 Discuss the questions3 Do the activity and close with the assessment check

Opening question

How does the United States Constitution change to meet new challenges and ideas?

Teacher brief

The Constitution can be changed through a formal amendment process that requires approval by both Congress and the states. This ensures changes are carefully considered and widely supported.

Background for discussion

The amendment process allows the Constitution to adapt over time while maintaining stability. An amendment can be proposed either by two thirds of both houses of Congress or by a national convention called by two thirds of state legislatures. To become part of the Constitution, the amendment must then be ratified by three fourths of the state legislatures or state conventions. This two-step process balances the need for change with broad agreement, preventing frequent or hasty alterations.

Real-world example

For example, the 19th Amendment, which granted women the right to vote, was proposed by Congress in 1919 and ratified by enough states in 1920, demonstrating the amendment process in action.

Discussion prompts

Invite students to answer aloud or in writing.

  • Why do you think the Constitution requires such a high level of approval to amend it?
  • How might the amendment process protect both change and stability in government?
  • Can you think of any issues today that might be addressed through a constitutional amendment?

Quick activity

Suggested format: pairs or small groups.

Imagine you could propose one amendment to the Constitution. Write down your idea and then think about how you would convince both Congress and the states to approve it. What arguments would you use?

Exit ticket

Use this as a quick written response or discussion close.

What are the two main steps required to amend the United States Constitution?

Story connection

Story connection

Imagine traveling back in time to witness the debates and decisions that shaped the Constitution. You see how leaders carefully weigh the need to change the rules while keeping the country united. This adventure helps you understand why the amendment process is designed to be deliberate and inclusive.

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Classroom Check

Amendments Let the Story Continue: Quick Check

Use this short assessment as an exit ticket, homework check, or discussion starter.

3 questions · 5 minutes · 2 points to pass

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In the Book

This civic idea connects to the story

Assign the reading, then use this topic as the classroom explainer or discussion guide.

Explore story modules

Reader Unit 21 · pages 81-84

Amendments Let the Story Continue

The amendment process lets the Constitution change through broad, deliberate consent.

Why should changing a constitution be possible but difficult?

Continue the lesson with The Constitution Kids

Teach the concept, then continue with the story

Use this topic as a classroom explainer or warm-up, then pair it with The Constitution Kids as supplemental reading, a discussion text, or a civic book club selection.

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Run this lesson

Print or share, then guide the group through the prompts.

The Constitution Kids learning library

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