Senate Judiciary Committee hearings
Useful for connecting courts, nominations, rights, public safety, and congressional oversight.
Learn
A civics adventure written for readers of all ages.
Educator view
Purpose: Understanding the Structure of Federal Courts helps learners understand The federal court system is organized into three main levels: district courts, appellate courts, and the Supreme Court.
Time: 10 to 15 minutes
Best for: discussion starter, civics supplement, advisory, homeschool
Invite students to answer aloud or in writing.
Suggested format: pairs or small groups.
Use this as a quick written response or discussion close.
Story connection
Keep exploring this idea
Court Watch
Useful for connecting courts, nominations, rights, public safety, and congressional oversight.
Good for showing the daily rhythm of trial courts before issues become appeals or Supreme Court cases.
Use this as a concrete example of how public court calendars organize cases, judges, and proceeding types.
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
Continue the lesson with The Constitution Kids
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.
Run this lesson
Print or share, then guide the group through the prompts.
The Constitution Kids learning library
theconstitutionkids.com