Constitution and Citizenship. Preamble, Articles and Amendments

Contributed by:
Steve
This booklet helps students to learn about the Constitution and its background, describing its composition and its purpose is to ensure the students in our country have increased knowledge and appreciation of this valuable and important document of freedom.
1. CONSTITUTION DAY
& CITIZENSHIP DAY
September 17
2. Why Recognize this
Document?
The purpose of Constitution Day and Citizenship Day is to ensure
that students in our country have an increased knowledge and
appreciation of this valuable and important document of freedom.
The Constitution is a handwritten document which is over 200 years old.
It is a living document that protects our rights and freedoms.
Why September 17?
This is the day that the original document was
adopted in 1787.
3. Background
1787 -- The 13 original colonies were united by the Articles of Confederation.
There were problems because the Articles did not provide a strong government.
Just a few of these problems were that the government had no power to collect
taxes, no power over trade or commerce and no control over money -- each state
could print its own.
On May 25, 1787 in Philadelphia, PA, delegates from 12 states
gathered to begin a convention where they planned to rewrite
the laws in the Articles of Confederation.
Philadelphia, the largest and most modern city at the
time, was picked to host the convention because it was
in the geographic middle of the states.
4. The Constitution Composition
The Constitution is comprised of the following:
5. Preamble
What does it mean?
The preamble is the introduction to the Constitution.
It outlines the general goals of the framers: to create a just government,
insure peace, provide an adequate national defense, and promote a healthy,
free nation.
With its first three words, “We the People,” the preamble emphasizes that
the nation is to be ruled by the people - not a king or dictator, not the president,
Supreme Court Justices, members of Congress or state
The Supreme Court held in 1905 (in Jacobson v.
Massachusetts) that the preamble is not a source of
federal power or individuals’ rights.
All rights and powers are set out in the articles
and amendments that follow.
6. Preamble to the
Constitution
“We the People of the United States, in Order to form a
more perfect Union, establish Justice, insure domestic
Tranquility, provide for the common defence, promote the
general Welfare, and secure the Blessings of Liberty to
ourselves and our Posterity, do ordain and establish this
Constitution for the United States of America.”
7. The Articles
Article I covers the Congress or legislative branch.
Article II covers the President or executive branch.
Article III covers judges and national courts or judicial branch.
Article IV covers how the states relate to each other and the national
Article V covers how the Constitution can be changed.
Article VI covers how the Constitution is the
supreme law of the land.
Article VII covers the ratification of the
8. Bill of Rights
The Bill of Rights was not included in the 1787
The first ten amendments (Bill of Rights) were
ratified on December 15, 1791.
9. First Amendment
Freedom of Religion, Speech and the Press;
Right of Assembly and Petition
The First Amendment allows citizens to express and to be
exposed to a wide range of opinions and views.
It was intended to ensure a free exchange of
ideas even if the ideas are unpopular.
10. Second Amendment
Right to Bear Arms
The principal debate surrounding the Second Amendment concerns
whether the right to use and buy guns belongs to individuals or only to
a militia.
Although the courts generally have held that the right
applies to individuals, they have permitted the government
to limit some rights of gun manufacturers, owners and
11. Third Amendment
Housing of Soldiers
Intended to protect citizens’ rights to the ownership and use of their
property without intrusion by the government.
The drafters of the Constitution, like many other colonists, were
resentful of laws, in place before the Revolutionary War, that allowed
British soldiers to take over private homes for their own use.
The amendment bars the government from forcing
individuals to provide lodging to soldiers in their
homes, except during war when the interest of
national security may override an individual’s
right of private property.
12. Fourth Amendment
Search and Arrest Warrants
Protects people against unreasonable searches and seizures by
government officials.
A search can mean everything from a frisking by a police officer to a blood
test to a search of an individual’s home or car.
A seizure occurs when the government takes control of
an individual or something in his or her possession.
Items that are seized often are used as evidence
when the individual is charged with a crime.
13. Fifth Amendment
Rights in Criminal Cases
Requirement that serious federal criminal charges be started by a grand
jury (a group of citizens who hear evidence from a prosecutor about
potential crimes).
This amendment is rooted in English common law.
Its basic purpose is to provide a fair method for beginning
criminal proceedings against those accused of
committing crimes.
Grand jury charges can be issued against anyone
except members of the military, who are instead
subject to courts-martial in the military justice system.
14. Sixth Amendment
Right to a Fair Trial
In a criminal case, the government prosecutes or charges a
defendant with a violation of the criminal law and begins proceedings
(bail hearings, arraignments and trials) to prove that charge beyond a
reasonable doubt.
15. Seventh Amendment
Rights in Civil Cases
Extends the right to a jury trial to federal civil cases such as car
accidents, disputes between corporations for breach of contract, or most
discrimination or employment disputes.
In civil cases, the person bringing the lawsuit (the plaintiff) seeks
money damages or a court order preventing the person
being sued (the defendant) from engaging in certain
To win, the plaintiff must prove his or her case by
“a preponderance of the evidence,” that is by
over fifty percent of the proof.
16. Eighth Amendment
Bails, Fines and Punishments
No Excessive Bail: The first portion of the Eighth Amendment concerns
bail—the money paid by a defendant in a criminal case in exchange for his
or her release from jail before trial.
Bail is returned to the defendant when he or she appears at trial
but is forfeited to the government if he or she does not
In this way, bail provides an incentive for a defendant
to remain in the area and participate in the trial.
17. Ninth Amendment
Rights Retained by the People
The Ninth Amendment is a constitutional safety net intended to make clear
that individuals have other fundamental rights, in addition to those listed in
the First through Eighth Amendments.
Some of the framers had raised concerns that because it was impossible
to list every fundamental right, it would be dangerous to list
just some of them (for example, the right to free speech,
the right to bear arms, and so forth), for fear of
suggesting that the list was complete.
18. Tenth Amendment
Powers Retained by the States and the People
The Tenth Amendment was included in the Bill of Rights to further
define the balance of power between the federal government and the
The amendment says that the federal government has only those
powers specifically granted by the Constitution.
These powers include the power to declare war,
to collect taxes, to regulate interstate business
activities and others that are listed in the articles.
19. Changes to the Constitution
An additional 17 amendments have been made to the
The most recent change was made in 1992.
20. Signed and Ratified
George Washington was the first of the delegates to sign.
Delegates signed in order from the northern states to the southern states.
Only 39 of the delegates actually signed, not all approved of the document.
After being signed, it became part of a 6 page report sent to the Congress.
Congress accepted the report and sent it to the states for their approval.
It was ratified by nine of the 13 states by June 21, 1788
-- becoming the law of the land.
After the text of the Constitution had been agreed upon,
Jacob Shallus, an assistant clerk of the Pennsylvania
State Assembly, was the penman who wrote the
document prior to signing.
21. More on the Constitution
How long did it take to frame the Constitution?
It was drafted in one hundred working days.
Who was called the “Father of the Constitution?”
James Madison of Virginia
Which state was the first to ratify the Constitution?
Delaware
How many pages long is the Constitution?
Four
Which state didn’t send any delegates to the convention?
Rhode Island
Does the Constitution give us our rights and liberties?
No, it only guarantees them.
22. Links
Notice of Implementation
Constitution Day, Inc.
National Archives and Records Administration
The United States Constitution – 1789
23. Source
Johnson, T.L. (Ed.). (2007). The U.S. Constitution and fascinating facts about it.
Naperville, IL: Oak Hill Publishing Company.