CBC Digital Archives

Lesson Plan: A Classroom Constitution

Type:
Assignment
Subjects:
Social Studies, Political Science
Duration:
1 to 2 lessons
Purpose:
To understand and apply the process of framing a constitution
Summary:
Students will explore the elements of a constitution and develop a constitution for their class.

Lesson Plan

Before Exploring

Have students look up the word "constitution" in a good dictionary and then define it in their own words. Ask:

 

Why do you think a group of people living together would need a constitution?

What kinds of problems can a constitution prevent so that a group of people can live together harmoniously?

Why do you think countries such as Canada need a constitution?

What specific issues should a constitution cover?

Outline the Opportunity

Explain to students that they will be creating a constitution to govern the class. They will use the information they find on the topic Canada's Constitutional Debate: What Makes a Nation? on the CBC Digital Archives website to outline proposals for various parts of their constitution.

Divide the class into 10 groups and have each group explore the Web site. Students should pay particular attention to how a constitution outlines a country's laws, decision-making processes, and the structure and functioning of the government.

Assign one of the following parts of a constitution to each of the 10 groups:

basic rules for the conduct of class members

how rules are decided

how rules are changed

how leaders are chosen

powers and responsibilities of leaders

basic rights and responsibilities of class members

how rights and responsibilities are protected/enforced

protection of the rights of minorities in the class

procedures for removing leaders who do not live up to their responsibilities

decision-making with the teacher


Using the information found on the Web site, each group will develop a list of proposals to deal with its assigned issue for the class constitution. Students should included reasons why each proposal is important to a class constitution. Groups should choose one member to present their ideas in a constitutional convention.

Revisit and Reflect

Before each group presents its proposals, decide as a class how to approve or reject each proposal (simple majority vote, two-thirds majority, unanimous consent, and so on). After each presentation, the class will vote on the proposals, select one for each issue, and record the terms of the class constitution.

As a class, review the class constitution and discuss to what degree students think the constitution will regulate the actions of students and teachers.

Extension

Have students write a letter to a country just developing a constitution after many years without one. Students can outline the benefits of a constitution for the citizens of the country. They can warn the framers of the constitution about potential pitfalls and how to avoid them.

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