Senate Judiciary Committee hearings
Useful for connecting courts, nominations, rights, public safety, and congressional oversight.
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A civics adventure written for readers of all ages.
Educator view
Purpose: Navigating Voting Rules When Trust in Elections Feels Fragile helps learners understand Voting rules are designed to ensure fair and secure elections, but when public trust is low, even well-intentioned rules can feel contentious or confusing.
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
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Court Watch
Useful for connecting courts, nominations, rights, public safety, and congressional oversight.
Use this to show that government power is not only speeches and votes. It also appears through notices, rules, deadlines, and public records.
Pick one open docket and ask students what problem the agency is trying to solve, who may be affected, and what a useful comment would include.
Classroom Check
Use this short assessment as an exit ticket, homework check, or discussion starter.
4 questions · 5 minutes · 3 points to pass
In the Book
Assign the reading, then use this topic as the classroom explainer or discussion guide.
Reader Unit 20 · pages 77-80
Election trust depends on clear rules, equal participation, transparent counting, and peaceful accountability.
What makes people trust a civic decision after the vote is over?
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.