United States Constitution
If you are able to continue finding resources that you want to link to the discussions on the Constitution, here are many more links to get in depth knowledge. These might help with your interactions on the output side of your interactive notebooks. There are many helpful links for young people to learn about the system we are studying now and later in the year.
http://www.annenbergclassroom.org/page/all-videos_
http://www.annenbergclassroom.org/page/all-videos_

Students in United States history class study the Constitution. While do this we consider and decide over conflicting American views on the Constitution to continue our democracy. Life-long learners need to gain knowledge of the encompassing complicated American history and society to ensure, and continue, the best government that the world has invented in response to old-world tyranny. History opens students to the past record of human experience. It reveals the accommodations, conflicts, struggles that individuals and societies have made. Students need to study the accounts of when and how people confront problems, recording the consequences that have followed the various choices of individuals and society.
In order to understand the present day students must know the past. That past may show us where we need to go next. By studying choices and decisions of the past, students can confront today’s problems and choices with a deeper awareness of the alternatives before them and the likely consequences of each, while also recognizing the uniqueness of the historical time they are living in. The United States was founded on diametric ideas. Students need to know current issues that affect them, in order to react to new political events, participate appropriately, and then confidently make decisions for change. Only if we teach students to critically think can they make good decisions. However, as society becomes seemingly evermore divided, finding common ground is easier when people understand history's consequences. Several areas of importance critical to continuing our American experiment arise through in-depth study of the Constitution, cultural origins, the tradition of loyal opposition, and mechanisms of compromise, voter participation, and struggles for liberty and sovereignty. After the Revolution, it was unclear if America would stay together with such diverse geographical, economic, and cultural differences and interests.
The law of our land is the U.S. Constitution.
"Besides the personal rights mentioned or recognized in the Government Code[s], every person has, subject to the qualifications and restrictions provided by law, the right of protection from bodily restraint or harm, from personal insult, from defamation, and from injury to his personal relations. Amended by Stats. 1953, Ch. 604."
https://www.humanitiesforwisdom.org/hs-us-history.html
This link will take you to two links that you may me interested in looking at. Remember all of this fall within the SOCIAL CONTRACT and we all have these rights and no one can take rights from others.
In order to understand the present day students must know the past. That past may show us where we need to go next. By studying choices and decisions of the past, students can confront today’s problems and choices with a deeper awareness of the alternatives before them and the likely consequences of each, while also recognizing the uniqueness of the historical time they are living in. The United States was founded on diametric ideas. Students need to know current issues that affect them, in order to react to new political events, participate appropriately, and then confidently make decisions for change. Only if we teach students to critically think can they make good decisions. However, as society becomes seemingly evermore divided, finding common ground is easier when people understand history's consequences. Several areas of importance critical to continuing our American experiment arise through in-depth study of the Constitution, cultural origins, the tradition of loyal opposition, and mechanisms of compromise, voter participation, and struggles for liberty and sovereignty. After the Revolution, it was unclear if America would stay together with such diverse geographical, economic, and cultural differences and interests.
The law of our land is the U.S. Constitution.
"Besides the personal rights mentioned or recognized in the Government Code[s], every person has, subject to the qualifications and restrictions provided by law, the right of protection from bodily restraint or harm, from personal insult, from defamation, and from injury to his personal relations. Amended by Stats. 1953, Ch. 604."
https://www.humanitiesforwisdom.org/hs-us-history.html
This link will take you to two links that you may me interested in looking at. Remember all of this fall within the SOCIAL CONTRACT and we all have these rights and no one can take rights from others.
MOre on Constitution research
Below are link to out site and other areas of the Constitution you may be interested in. Please research and place new ideas soon input pages for chapter 4.
Who We Are |
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