U.S. Senate floor webcast
Good for showing how procedure, time, and voting shape what the public sees from Congress.
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A civics adventure written for readers of all ages.
My Civics Path
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Story bridge
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Court Watch
Good for showing how procedure, time, and voting shape what the public sees from Congress.
Use this to compare the House and Senate, or to ask how rules and time shape what the public sees.
Ask students what problem the committee is investigating and what evidence the witnesses or documents provide.
Blog and explainers
A living room can become a tiny civic chamber when a family tries to write down how power will work between siblings, parents, and the everyday pressures that push everyone off balance.
Helping kids spot bias is not about turning them into miniature pundits. It is about giving them a steadier relationship to authority, evidence, and the quiet power of attention.
In a time when rules feel like traps and politics feels like theater, amendments can sound like dusty footnotes. But in real places where people argue, negotiate, and try again, amendments read less like trivia and more like story beats: th
Check Your Understanding
A short check for the Constitution Kids reader module "Laws Are Built Through Process".
3 questions · 5 minutes · 2 points to pass
In the Book
This civic idea connects to The Constitution Kids story. Read the related chapter section, then use this topic to unpack the constitutional concept behind the scene.
Reader Unit 15 · pages 57-60
The lawmaking process forces ideas through debate, revision, voting, and accountability.
Why should making a law require more than one step?
Continue the lesson with The Constitution Kids
The Constitution Kids turns civic ideas into a story students can follow. After exploring this topic, continue with the book to see constitutional questions through characters, conflict, and choices.
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