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Ian G. Anson – Journal of Political Science Education, 2025
In the modern American politics classroom, ideological and partisan conflict have the capacity to interfere with a healthy classroom environment. This problem is increasingly apparent when students engage questions at the heart of U.S. Constitutional design. By asking students to inhabit fictional roles with preferences and attitudes that may…
Descriptors: Constitutional Law, Design, Classroom Environment, Politics
Kramnick, Isaac – William and Mary Quarterly, 1988
The "great national discussion" of 1787 involved deliberations, writings, debates, and speeches concerning the newly created U.S. Constitution. Both the framers and the critics of the Constitution utilized philosophies of: (1) republicanism; (2) Lockean liberalism; (3) work-ethic Protestantism; and (4) state-centered theories of power…
Descriptors: Constitutional History, Discourse Analysis, Discussion, Philosophy

Mills, Randy – OAH Magazine of History, 1987
Presents a lesson plan using "Decision at Richmond," a play dramatizing the debate over United States Constitutional ratification, to demonstrate to students the importance of the unique process used to make political decisions in the United States. (Author/AEM)
Descriptors: Constitutional History, Decision Making, Democracy, Lesson Plans

Cannon, Mark W. – NASSP Bulletin, 1985
Outlines the complicated constitutional system on which our country is based. Reviews the system of checks and balances, the judiciary system, and the political system and how they have worked to ensure that the government represents the will of the people. (MD)
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Government (Administrative Body), Organization, Politics
Schechter, Stephen L., Ed. – 1985
This collection of essays is intended for both the general reader and the specialist and is designed to provide the basic elements needed for an introductory survey and a reference aid to the role of New York State in the adoption of the federal Constitution. The collection is organized into five sections: theory, history, materials, people and…
Descriptors: Constitutional History, Constitutional Law, Educational Resources, Political Science
Gutierrez, Robert – Theory and Research in Social Education, 2003
The U.S.'s history has gone through significant cultural changes. None have been more profound than those related to a basic philosophical understanding of the foundation of our constitutional structure. This essay asks the reader to reconsider a central theory and organizational viewpoint of the founding generation, which adhered to a more…
Descriptors: Citizenship Education, Social Capital, United States History, Governmental Structure
Salter, Christopher L.; Hobbs, Gail L. – North Carolina Journal for the Social Studies, 1988
Examines some of the geographical elements that influenced the creation of the U.S. Constitution, such as sectionalism, the Piedmont, and the Atlantic Coastal Plain. Focusing on aspects of geography that underlie the thinking, writing, and ratification of the document, the authors explore geography as environment, image-maker, and explicit…
Descriptors: Constitutional History, Elementary Secondary Education, Geography, Human Geography

Weatherman, Donald V. – College Teaching, 1987
Courses on the Constitution must focus on the principles of government. Those principles and how the understanding of those principles shaped the document are appropriate subjects for consideration. The best sources for an examination of the Constitution are "The Records of the Federal Convention of 1787" and "The Federalist."…
Descriptors: College Curriculum, Constitutional History, Constitutional Law, Higher Education
Winkler, Karen J. – Chronicle of Higher Education, 1987
While the bicentennial of the Constitution is beginning to have public impact, it has made little impression on research in the fields of history, law, and political science. Books about the Constitution are listed and a calendar of conferences on the U.S. Constitution is provided. (MLW)
Descriptors: Conferences, Constitutional History, Higher Education, Politics
Social Studies Teacher, 1987
Provides a simulation of the United States Constitutional Convention. The simulation involves students in re-creating the conflicts between the colonies, seeking compromise, and comparing the outcome of the simulation with the actual Constitution. (JDH)
Descriptors: Government (Administrative Body), Political Issues, Political Science, Politics

Pyle, Christopher H. – College Teaching, 1987
Constitutional law is a good way to introduce students to fundamental debates over means and ends, over what means work and at what costs, and over what ends are not merely desirable, but may be legitimately achieved even through the application of collective force. It also offers an exciting way to teach logic. (MLW)
Descriptors: Constitutional History, Constitutional Law, Debate, Governmental Structure
Berns, Walter – Teaching Political Science, 1985
If students are to understand the American Constitution, they must, like the Founders, take political philosophy seriously. Books and essays that college teachers can use to teach about the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution are discussed. (RM)
Descriptors: Constitutional History, Higher Education, Instructional Materials, Political Science
Stevens, Richard G. – Teaching Political Science, 1986
Explains the relationship between politics, economics, and religion through the philosophies of Smith, Hobbes, and Locke. Maintains that the unamended Constitution is a reconciliation of politics, religion, and economics. Defends this claim by examining property rights and the Constitution's regard to means in pursuance of freedom and justice.…
Descriptors: Constitutional History, Economics, Government Role, Governmental Structure

Hebert, J. Gerald; Williams, John Bryan – Insights on Law & Society, 2001
Focuses on the issue of redistricting in the United States with the release of the 2000 census. Discusses the redistricting principles that states must follow: (1) population equality specifically for the congressional and legislative districts; (2) the Voting Rights Act with a focus on Sections 5 and 2; and (3) racial gerrymandering. (CMK)
Descriptors: Civics, Government Role, Laws, Politics
Hickok, Eugene W., Jr. – Teaching Political Science, 1985
A course on the Constitution should help students see that the Constitution is not a document that provides solutions to problems, but a document that helps individuals come to a fuller understanding of contemporary problems by exposing them to the intellectual foundations and historical dimensions of the issues. (RM)
Descriptors: Constitutional History, Constitutional Law, Higher Education, Political Science
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