Published: Sept. 12, 2014

In recognition of national Constitution Day, nearly 100 students, faculty and alumni of the University of Colorado Boulder Law School will teach a lesson on the First Amendment and online bullying in high school classrooms throughout Colorado Sept. 15-26.

Constitution Day is the annual commemoration of the Sept. 17, 1787, signing of the United States Constitution, and the CU-Boulder Byron R. White Center for the Study of American Constitutional Law sponsors the lessons as part of its Constitution Day Project.

The volunteer students, faculty and alumni will visit classrooms in Aurora, Buena Vista, Colorado Springs, Denver, Fort Collins, Glenwood Springs, Greeley, Kremmling, Thornton and other locations. They will present an interactive lesson focused on the structure of the Constitution, the details of the First Amendment and Supreme Court cases concerning the First Amendment and online bullying. After reviewing the law, high school students will be guided through a debate about a hypothetical case involving the First Amendment and online bullying.

The lesson plan was created by law students with the guidance of several high school civics teachers and law Professor Melissa Hart, director of the Byron R. White Center.

“It has been wonderful to watch this program grow, both expanding to new parts of Colorado and adding wonderful new student and attorney presenters every year,” Hart said. “This year’s First Amendment lesson creates a concrete opportunity to think about how the Constitution applies to the very real and serious problem of bullying through social media.”

Congress recognized Sept. 17 as a day of national observance beginning in 2004 and requires all schools receiving federal funding to provide educational programming pertaining to the Constitution.

Since the Constitution Day Project was launched at CU-Boulder in 2011, the Byron R. White Center has sent more than 250 law students, alumni and local attorneys to more than 300 state high school classrooms. The project is supported, in part, by a CU-Boulder Outreach Award.

The following Constitution Day Project school visits have been confirmed to date:

Monday, Sept. 15

AM/PM, York International School, Thornton

Tuesday, Sept. 16+

AM, DSST Stapleton and DSST Green Valley Ranch, Denver

Wednesday, Sept. 17

AM, Abraham Lincoln High School, Denver

AM, Academy High School, Thornton

Thursday, Sept. 18

AM, Cherry Creek High School, Denver

AM/PM, Rangeview High School, Aurora

AM/PM, Longmont High School, Longmont

AM, West Grand High School, Kremmling

Friday, Sept. 19

AM, Glenwood Springs High School, Glenwood Springs

AM/PM Greeley Central High School, Greeley

AM/PM, Peak to Peak Charter School, Lafayette

AM/PM, Fort Collins High School, Fort Collins

AM, Palmer High School, Colorado Springs

Thursday, Sept. 25

AM, East High School, Denver

Friday, Sept. 26

AM/PM, Rocky Mountain High School, Fort Collins

PM, Buena Vista High School, Buena Vista

For more information visit http://www.colorado.edu/law/whitecenter.

Contact:
Melissa Hart, CU Law School, 303-229-5323
melissa.hart@colorado.edu or whitecenter@colorado.edu
Keri Ungemah, CU Law School communications, 720-984-0457
keri.ungemah@colorado.edu
Hannah Fletcher, CU-Boulder outreach and engagement, 303-492-3949
hannah.fletcher@colorado.edu

“It has been wonderful to watch this program grow, both expanding to new parts of Colorado and adding wonderful new student and attorney presenters every year,” said law Professor Melissa Hart, director of the Byron R. White Center for the Study of American Constitutional Law. “This year’s First Amendment lesson creates a concrete opportunity to think about how the Constitution applies to the very real and serious problem of bullying through social media.”