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View the transcript of the story.
NOTE: If you are short on time, watch the video and complete this See, Think, Wonder activity: What did you notice? What did the story make you think about? What would you want to learn more about?
News alternative: Check out recent segments from the News Hour, and choose the story you’re most interested in watching. You can make a Google doc copy of discussion questions that work for any of the stories here.
Media literacy: In the segment, Liz McKenna shares that Thaddeus Stevens was largely forgotten by the public until he was brought back to life in Steven Spielberg's 2012 movie "Lincoln." (You can watch the full clip shown in the segment here)
Explore the Thaddeus Stevens & Lydia Hamilton Smith Center's website. Examine a brief history of Stevens, Smith and Lancaster linked here and answer the following:
Next, explore its galleries linked here, and answer the following:
The News: Then & Now section of the Daily News Lessons allows students to see connections between current and past news events. The activity provides historical context using primary sources from the Library of Congress.
See PBS News Hour Classroom's Journalism in Action website for interactive examples of how journalists covered key events in U.S. history while honing your primary source, civics and digital news literacy skills.
THEN
On May 8, 1966, Thaddeus Stevens delivered a speech introducing the Fourteenth Amendment in the U.S. House of Representatives. Stevens served on the Joint Committee on Reconstruction and chaired the powerful House Ways and Means Committee. In this speech, Stevens calls on his colleagues to support the proposed Fourteenth Amendment, while also remembering the crimes of the Confederacy.
Source: Congress.gov (The Congressional Globe)
You can read an excerpt of the speech on the Constitution Center website, as well as a summarized version of the excerpt here.
NOW
As student reporter Liz McKenna has alluded to in the segment, debate has arisen in response to theTrump administration's attempt to overturn universal birthright citizenship, guaranteed by the first section of the Fourteenth Amendment.
On March 10, the Senate Judiciary Committee on the Constitution heard testimony on birthright citizenship ahead of the Supreme Court case (for more information on the Supreme Court case itself, check out PBS New Hour Classroom's Daily News Lesson "Supreme Court hears arguments about birthright citizenship")
Written by Claudia Caruso, PBS News Hour Classroom's intern, and News Hour's Vic Pasquantonio
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