 The Center on Congress at Indiana University  has a good collection of interactive, role-playing activities for  learning about how the United States' government functions. Each  activity allows students to experience the roles and functions of  different members of Congress.
The Center on Congress at Indiana University  has a good collection of interactive, role-playing activities for  learning about how the United States' government functions. Each  activity allows students to experience the roles and functions of  different members of Congress.
One of the activities that my Civics students have really enjoyed in the past is the "How a Member Decides to Vote"  activity. In "How a Member Decides to Vote" students take on the role  of a Congressman or Congresswoman for a week. During the simulated week,  students receive phone calls from constituents, read newspaper  headlines, meet with constituents, meet with lobbyists, and attend  meetings with other Congressmen and Congresswomen. The "How a Member  Decides to Vote" activity makes students account for their personal  feelings as well as the influence of constituents and lobbyists.
Applications for Education
I've used many of these activities over the last few years with my Civics students and my US History students. In  all there are eleven interactive activities through which students can  learn about the functions of Congress. All of the interactive activities  are written in a way that makes them accessible and useful for students  in grades 3 through 12. Each activity is accompanied by a set of lesson  plan options for categorized by grade level. The lesson plans  accompanying each activity provide convenient assessment tools for  teachers. Each lesson plan also suggests some "offline" activities that  teachers and students can do related to the online activity. 
Interactive Activities About US Government
Civics
civics lesson plans
Interactive Learning
Teaching With Technology
US government
US History
US History Lesson Plans
 
0 comments:
Post a Comment