Ben's Guide to the U.S. Government
Ben's Guide to the U.S. Government is a service of the Government Publishing Office (GPO). It has fun and interactive games designed to inform students, parents, and educators about the federal government.
Constitutionfacts.com and the GIC (Government Information for Children - ALA GODORT) are national sponsors of the Fourteenth Annual U.S. Constitution Day Poster Contest for students, an international contest promoted exclusively through the Internet. To compete, the contest invites K-12 entrants (including homeschoolers) to celebrate Constitution Day (Sept. 17) by designing a poster showing how they benefited from the freedoms embodied in the U.S. Constitution.
Created for Statistics in Schools by the U.S. Census Bureau users can view fun statistical information about the United States. This also includes a lesson plan for teachers.
Constitutionfacts.com and the GIC (Government Information for Children - ALA GODORT) are national sponsors of the Fourteenth Annual U.S. Constitution Day Poster Contest for students, an international contest promoted exclusively through the Internet. To compete, the contest invites K-12 entrants (including homeschoolers) to celebrate Constitution Day (Sept. 17) by designing a poster showing how they benefited from the freedoms embodied in the U.S. Constitution.
The Constitution workshop is available as an online or on-paper activity. In both versions, students will analyze primary source documents, then establish each document's constitutional relevance.
This website links to a variety of different resources about the history and symbolism of the United States flag, the Great Seal, the Liberty Bell, "The Star Spangled Banner," Uncle Sam, The Pledge of Allegiance, The Statue of Liberty, Mount Rushmore, the White House, the Capitol, the Washington Monument, symbols on U.S. money, and more.
The Government Information for Children Committee of the American Library Association's Government Documents Round Table has produced a guide to U.S. Government Information for children and teachers covering a variety of topics.
In this lesson plan provided by the Library of Congress students use primary sources to examine the forces that shaped the Declaration of Independence, Articles of Confederation and the Constitution.
This lesson plan provided by the Library of Congress focuses on the drafting of the United States Constitution during the Federal Convention of 1787 in Philadelphia.
EDSITEment, NEH's website that helps teachers bring online resources into the classroom, provides a number of lesson plans and reviewed websites that help you commemorate Constitution Day with your students.
The United States Senate has compiled a list of children's materials about campaigns and elections, Congress, the Constitution, the U.S. flag, how the federal government works, the judiciary, the presidency, and general U.S. history.
Children's Books About the U.S. Constitution Available at the CSU Stanislaus Library
The National Archives website lets you digitally sign your name to the Declaration of Independence or the Constitution. Add your name to the document and download the image!