Home > Resource Library > Interpreting the Constitution

Learning Objectives

Students will be able to...

  • Analyze Supreme Court cases that have interpreted the 5th and 8th Amendments
  • Explain the role of the Supreme Court in interpreting the Bill of Rights
  • Infer that constitutional language has specialized meaning determined by the Supreme Court
  • Recognize that unique facts can determine whether a constitutional right applies to a situation

Overview

Students learn that you can't take constitutional language at face value. Those phrases we read in the Bill of Rights, such as "cruel and unusual punishment" or being a "witness" against yourself, have specialized meaning based on years of interpretation by the Supreme Court.  Students analyze real-life cases interpreting the 8th and 5th amendments to see whether they interpret the Bill of Rights the same way the Supreme Court did... and discover how tricky interpreting the Constitution really is!

Access engaging resources with an iCivics account!

Create your free iCivics account and discover standards aligned lessons and games that meet all of your instructional needs. Our nonpartisan classroom resources engage students with complex concepts in ways they can understand and relate to.

Tags

Tech Options
No Tech Required
Web browser
Integrations
Kami
Nearpod
PDF
Google Slides
State standards icon

View state standards alignment

Search State Standards

Use the Scope & Sequence to help you plan your iCivics classroom experience!

Whether you enjoy finding opportunities within a well-structured sequence of resources or prefer looking around for pieces and bits that can be jigsawed together, our Scope & Sequence documents are a perfect reference point for planning. Scope & Sequence documents are available for elementary, middle, and high school classrooms and list all of our resources in one place.

View the Scope & Sequence