Learn

How a bill becomes a law (kid version)

← Back to How government works topics← Back to Learn
How government worksFeb 8, 2025
View as

A civics adventure written for readers of all ages.

Start with a question

From idea to law, who says yes along the way?

In brief

A proposal is introduced, debated, and voted on in both chambers of Congress, then sent to the president to sign or veto.

Why this matters

Committees study bills, amendments change wording, and votes happen in the House and Senate. Conference committees reconcile differences. The president can sign or veto; Congress can override with two-thirds. Agencies then write rules to implement the law.

A simple example

Track a simple school rule proposal through steps: proposal, committee, full vote, principal sign-off, and rulebook update.

Questions to think about

  • Why do so many steps exist before a law takes effect?
  • Where can the public give input during the process?
  • How does compromise shape a final law?

Try this

Create a flowchart of the process and mark where a bill can stall.

One thing to take away

Name one step where a bill can be changed.

Story bridge

Story bridge

The kids’ travel plan needed approvals. How is that like a bill’s path?

Keep exploring

See how readers feel or grab your copy next.

For educators and group orders visit /educators.

Admin access