Lesson Title:
We the Kids: Decoding the Preamble
By: Annie Robertson Teacher Consultant, Wasatch Range Writing Project
Burning Question: Can students make personal connections to the
Preamble to the Constitution by reading a picture book and does drawing and
writing help to solidify those connections?
Objectives:
Students will use prior
knowledge to make connections to text (text to text, text to self and
text to world).
Students will recognize and define the concepts in the Preamble.
Students will generate an illustrated Preamble.
Context:
This lesson can be used and adapted for any elementary level
class.
Materials:
We the Kids: The Preamble to
the Constitution of the United States by David Catrow
Paper, crayons, markers
Time Span: 45 min - 1 hour
Procedures:
- Read the book We the Kids: The Preamble to the Constitution of
the United States to the students. Stop on each page to define and
discuss the meaning of each phrase. An explanation of the definitions is
included at the beginning of the book to help aid the discussion.
- Have students in 4th-6th grade respond to the
prompts: Write about one idea from the book that stands out to
you? How does it relate to you?
- Let students share their writing responses.
- Divide students into 10 groups. Give each group a phrase from the
Preamble and have them design a page to describe the meaning of the
phrase. The phrases are:
- We the People of the United States
- in order to form a more perfect Union
- establish Justice
- insure domestic Tranquility
- provide for the common defense
- promote the general welfare
- and secure the Blessings of Liberty
- to ourselves and our Posterity,
- do ordain and establish this Constitution
- for the United States of America
- Tape or staple the class pages together and display them on a bulletin
board or somewhere in the room.
- Have the students discuss what they have learned about the Preamble.
Adaptations/Extensions:
- You could display pictures of a handshake, a balance scale, a dove, a
tank or soldiers, a school or hospital, and the Statue of Liberty for some
examples related to the phrases.
- For older students, give them a copy of the Preamble to work from. They
could write about their drawing using a genre of their choice (i.e. poem,
letter, memoir, song, etc)
- Because this is a summary of the Constitution, students could read the
Constitution to identify where the concepts are addressed in the
Constitution.
- Students could decide as a class if they want to model the book and
include a character that would be present in each groups’’ drawing.
- Students could write a class Preamble to precede a class Constitution.
Rationale:
Students need to be able to relate historical concepts to
something with which they are familiar with. Picture books are enjoyed
by students of all ages. Teachers have the flexibility to discuss the
concepts with their students in a way their students can understand. By
using a variety of learning strategies, students will become familiar with
the Preamble and what it says about the aspects of governance the founders
hoped the Constitution would establish.
Resources: