Marbury v. Madison, James Madison, War of 1812
for Google Drive
Marbury v. Madison
• William Marbury, James Madison, John Marshall, and the power of Judicial Review
Aim: Why is the Supreme Court case Marbury v. Madison significant in American history?
Digital, 1:1, interactive Social Studies learning!
Included in this product:
• Student-centered Do Now questions: - Explain the power of Judicial Review under the U.S. Constitution - What principle of the Constitution is judicial review a part of?
• Marbury v. Madison guided vocabulary fill in the blank reading passage with ten scaffolding questions
• Application/Closing/Higher Order Thinking Question
• Answer Key for Teachers
Students will analyze the close-reading passage and complete the fill in the blanks describing the historical background of the Supreme Court case Marbury v. Madison; the story, the people, the problem, and the power of Judicial Review
Adheres to Social Studies Common Core Standards - research, application, literacy, vocabulary, creating arguments with evidence
Differentiation: cooperative {students may work in pairs/groups according to teacher's discretion for questions}; questions are scaffolded; students argue their opinions and make predictions using relevant examples and details from the lesson and their knowledge of social studies
Digital Paper by Ashley Hughes
KG Fonts
© 2014 A Social Studies Life
For personal use only. Duplication for an entire school, an entire school system, or for commercial purposes is strictly forbidden. Please have other teachers purchase their own copy. If you are a school or district interested in purchasing several licenses, please contact me for a district-wide quote.
for Google Drive
Marbury v. Madison
• William Marbury, James Madison, John Marshall, and the power of Judicial Review
Aim: Why is the Supreme Court case Marbury v. Madison significant in American history?
Digital, 1:1, interactive Social Studies learning!
Included in this product:
• Student-centered Do Now questions: - Explain the power of Judicial Review under the U.S. Constitution - What principle of the Constitution is judicial review a part of?
• Marbury v. Madison guided vocabulary fill in the blank reading passage with ten scaffolding questions
• Application/Closing/Higher Order Thinking Question
• Answer Key for Teachers
Students will analyze the close-reading passage and complete the fill in the blanks describing the historical background of the Supreme Court case Marbury v. Madison; the story, the people, the problem, and the power of Judicial Review
Adheres to Social Studies Common Core Standards - research, application, literacy, vocabulary, creating arguments with evidence
Differentiation: cooperative {students may work in pairs/groups according to teacher's discretion for questions}; questions are scaffolded; students argue their opinions and make predictions using relevant examples and details from the lesson and their knowledge of social studies
Digital Paper by Ashley Hughes
KG Fonts
© 2014 A Social Studies Life
For personal use only. Duplication for an entire school, an entire school system, or for commercial purposes is strictly forbidden. Please have other teachers purchase their own copy. If you are a school or district interested in purchasing several licenses, please contact me for a district-wide quote.
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$4.10