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How Does the Constitution Change? The Amendment Process Explained
Explore the formal steps required to amend the United States Constitution, from congressional proposals to state ratification, and understand why the process is designed to be challenging.
What You'll Learn
Article V establishes two methods for proposing constitutional amendments formally.
Three-fourths of states must ratify any proposed constitutional amendment successfully.
All twenty-seven amendments used the congressional proposal method historically.
Key terms include ratification, supermajority, formal amendment, and ratifying conventions.
What You'll Practice
1
Students identify fraction thresholds required for proposal and ratification steps.
2
Learners distinguish between state legislature and ratifying convention approval methods.
3
Practice questions test vocabulary including supermajority, ratification, and amendment deadlines.
Why This Matters
Understanding the constitutional amendment process empowers students to recognize how democratic societies formally change their fundamental laws while protecting against hasty or unrepresentative alterations.
This Unit Includes
Practice exercises
Learning resources
Skills
Ratification
Supermajority
Article V
Formal Amendment
Constitutional Convention

GA Curriculum Aligned