Lesson Plans: Assembly
Teaching About the Five Freedoms
Here, you’ll find a variety of collections, single lesson plans, and other resources available on the Web to support learning and teaching about the First Amendment’s Five Freedoms.
As you explore these resources, please share with us what works well for you, what modifications you make, what student success stories emerge, what surprises you encounter, and what challenges, insights and recommendations the Five Freedoms Network community should know about.
In addition to whatever existing resources you use, consider enlisting a team of students with the job of scouting out the best resources for upcoming class units. You can also charge another team with recording and communicating your class’s learning stories on our Network space. Student voice is valuable in curricular planning, too!
Questions to consider
Any teaching resource’s ultimate value is measured by its usefulness with real students – your students. As you (or your youth-led classroom curriculum team) review new materials for use, use the following questions to identify the right materials and suggest ways to modify the materials to suit the needs of your students.
- Does the introduction to this lesson create a personal connection for your students?
- Does the lesson engage students in meaningful content? How is the content meaningful for your students? How are they engaged?
- Do your students have opportunities to actively explore and apply the content, concepts and skills involved?
- Does the lesson encourage your students to make connections to the larger community?
- Does the lesson change your learners in significant ways? (All learning brings about some sort of change, after all.) After your students have engaged in the lesson, how will their thinking change?
- How does the lesson tap different ways of knowing – affective, intuitive, visual, kinesthetic, etc.?
- Are your students asked to process the information using higher order thinking skills, such as analysis, synthesis, and/or evaluation?
- Are the resources available, up to date, and appropriate?
General Online Lesson Collections
1Voice First Amendment Lesson Plans
ASNE (American Society of Newspaper Editors) High School Journalism
Bill of Rights Institute – First Amendment in History Lesson Plans
Education for Freedom
First Amendment Schools Lesson Plans
Freedom of Assembly Lessons
America Responds to Terrorism: The Palmer “Red Raids”
Letter from Birmingham Jail
Perseverance and the First Amendment
General Curricular Resources
1Voice
Center for Civic Education
Constitutional Rights Foundation
First Amendment Center
The National Constitution Center
Justice Talking : the public radio show about law and American life