03 Ci Colonial Influences
03 Ci Colonial Influences
03 Ci Colonial Influences
Colonial Influences
Time Needed: One to two class periods Learning Objectives. Students will be able to:
Materials Needed: Student worksheets, Trace the impact of the following documents on the
overhead or computer projector, scissors, colonists views of government:
art materials for cartoon strip Magna Carta
English Bill of Rights
Copy Instructions:
Mayflower Compact
Brainstorming Worksheet (1 page)
Catos Letters
Reading and Review packet (4 pages)
Thomas Paines Common Sense
Double-sided cut-and-fold activity (2 pages)
STEP BY STEP
OPTIONAL: A PowerPoint presentation is available to walk students through the activities in this lesson.
ANTICIPATE by distributing the brainstorming sheet to the students and giving five minutes to
brainstorm the meaning of the big idea terms in the first column of the table.
ASK students to share their personal definitions and discuss. Have students copy the
class definition onto their sheets. Remind them that these ideas will come up again
and again during this lesson.
DISTRIBUTE the cut-and-fold activity and show the transparency with instructions. Walk through
each step and monitor the students to make sure they are cutting and folding in the
right areas. Explain that this will be what they take notes on as they read through
the lesson.
DISTRIBUTE the reading pages to the students. Ask if anyone is familiar with the documents
listed in the Collection of Good Ideas on the bookshelf image.
READ the first paragraph one as a class. Have students offer other types of information
sources available at this time. (newspapers, flyers, word-of-mouth, letters)
READ through the remainder of page one and two, noting the context of the document
(who wrote it and why) and the take-away ideas that each document provides.
Call on the class to share when they think a big idea is being introduced.
ALLOW for time to fill in the foldable between each paragraph. (If you need to provide
greater scaffolding with this activity, have the students collaborate in partners or
small groups, or complete each set as a class.)
REVIEW the items on the cut-and-fold activity through a student pair and share or in small
groups. Then discuss as a class.
DISTRIBUTE the activity pages and have students complete. The second page asks the students
to create a three frame cartoon describing the facts about one document. They
need to draw something in the box and describe the actions in each frame.
This lesson plan is part of the Road to the Constitution series by iCivics, Inc. a nonprofit organization dedicated to advancing civic education. For more
teaching resources, please visit www.icivics.org/teachers, where you can access the state standards aligned to this lesson plan.
2013 iCivics, Inc. You may copy, distribute, or transmit this work for noncommercial purposes if you credit iCivics. All other rights reserved.
Colonial Influences Name:
Anticipation Activity
Colonial Influences **TEACHER GUIDE**
The U.S. Constitution is based on a handful of big ideas. Brainstorm the meaning
behind each big idea in the areas provided, then see what they mean in the
American system of government.
Anticipation Transparency
Colonial Influences Cut-and-Fold Activity
Step One: Put your name on the
paper.
Before After
Reading, p1
Colonial Influences Name:
Activity, p1
Colonial Influences Name:
Colonial Comics. Comics are a great way to tell a story! Select one of the five documents that you
have learned about in this lesson, and review the facts about it. Then use the comic strip below to tell
that documents story. Each box has a job, so read the directions carefully.
_____________________________________
Activity, p2
Colonial Influences **TEACHER GUIDE**
Foldable Activity Answers.
Government Limit the power of the Limited Government English nobility wrote
Document king of England and the Magna Carta in
Rights
protect the rights of the 1215.
Agreement between
nobility Rule of Law
individuals
Due Process
Collection of
newspaper articles
Pamphlet
Pamphlet
Government Expand the power of the Limited Government The English Bill of Rights
Document English Parliament and was written by the
Rights
expand the rights of the English Parliament in
Agreement between
people, as well as further Due Process 1689.
individuals
limit the power of the king Rule of Law
Collection of
newspaper articles
Pamphlet
Pamphlet
Collection of
newspaper articles
Pamphlet
Activity, p1