Celebrate Civic Learning Week, March 10–14, with iCivics!
Civic Learning Week highlights civic education’s important role in sustaining and strengthening constitutional democracy in the United States. As America nears its 250th anniversary, the need to make civic education a nationwide priority is more crucial than ever.
Join teachers around the country by teaching civics topics and engaging your students in civics activities.
Raise your hand!
Join us in celebrating by sharing the one thing, big or small, that you plan to do with your students during Civic Learning Week to engage your students in democracy and civics. Need ideas? Check out our 5-, 15- and 45-minute suggestions!
Do your students know who represents them in the federal, state, and local government? This WebQuest will help students find the people who represent them in government.
Photos can be a powerful political resource. In this lesson, students learn how evaluating photos on social media can help them conserve their attention.
This week-long planning calendar, developed by our Educator Network, outlines easy-to-execute and meaningful lesson ideas to pull from throughout the week.
On Tuesdays We Vote was developed and organized by two high school educators, Michael Martirone from New Jersey and Shari Conditt from Washington State.