This Constitution Day: Give Students the Tools to Defend the Freedom to Learn
Free Constitution Day lessons and resources from the Zinn Education Project. Teach truth, rights, and the fight for the freedom to learn.
Share
September 10, 2025
Free Constitution Day lessons and resources from the Zinn Education Project. Teach truth, rights, and the fight for the freedom to learn.
Share
Studying the Constitution is essential—especially now, as constitutional rights are increasingly under attack, including the freedom to read. In fact, on Constitution Day in 2020, the White House under President Trump launched the 1776 Commission. The language of that executive order set the tone for many of the anti-critical race theory laws and book bans that began to spread in spring 2021.
Each September, schools nationwide celebrate Constitution Day—students create posters praising the document, watch patriotic videos, or recite the preamble—rather than engage in critical inquiry. These rituals present the Constitution as a sacred text, not a document created and amended through struggle.
The extent to which the preamble’s lofty “we the people” now includes anyone beyond white, propertied men is due to more than two centuries of struggle across race, gender and class lines to expand the meaning of that phrase. Any expansion in rights and freedoms since 1787—from the abolition of slavery, to the Reconstruction amendments, to women’s suffrage—has been hard-fought and won from the bottom up, not benevolently granted from the top down.
And yet, each year Constitution Day is projected as a unifying civic ritual—one steeped in praise of “what the Framers intended.”
Today, those in power wield the Constitution—and undermine it—in ways that intensify profound harms across the country. It is essential that students know their rights: not just to pass a test, but to protect themselves.
Throughout U.S. history, people have fought to claim the rights the Constitution promises, and to demand the rights it omits. Constitution Day should not be a celebration of myth, but an invitation to think critically and to give students the tools we all need to meet this moment.
As part of our Teach Truth campaign, we encourage educators to Teach Truth on Constitution Day. We offer free resources to do one or all of the following:
Community members can play a critical role in defending the freedom to learn. For example, they can propose that their school district adopt a Freedom to Learn resolution or host a gallery walk on 10 Ways to Rethink the Constitution in a public space.
The Zinn Education Project offers a map on the campaign page to indicate where people are participating—demonstrating the commitment of teachers, librarians and community members across the country to teach truthfully about the Constitution and to defend the freedom to learn.
To learn more, find free resources, and sign up to participate, visit Teach Truth on Constitution Day.
This article is republished with permission from American Library Association Unite Against Book Bans.
The Share My Lesson team has selected a variety of free lesson plans, educational resources and classroom materials to support you while celebrating Constitution Day with your students.