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Current Issues Classroom Resources

Our ready-to-use, nonpartisan resources and lesson plans help teachers facilitate meaningful discussions with students about current issues.

A Comprehensive Approach to Teaching Current Issues

Close Up’s supplemental Current Event resources for students are designed to provide middle schoolers and high schoolers with multiple perspectives on debatable current issues.

  • School-Wide Use: Our resources use a central question to outline structured discussions, debates, and deliberations, and are available to all classrooms at a subscribing school.
  • Background Information: Primary sources, from decision-makers to experts across the political spectrum, help students understand each issue’s context and history.
  • Frequent Updates:We add new Current Issues and event lesson plans regularly throughout the school year to reflect the policy landscape.
  • Lesson Plans: We provide activities and structured guides to facilitate meaningful classroom conversations.

Be sure to check out our professional development trainings and our other work to help teachers, schools, and districts best utilize our Current Issues and Events resources and promote thoughtful classroom discourse!

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Civil Rights & Individual Liberties

Civil Rights & Individual Liberties

 The Right to Protest
Title IX & Transgender Students
Red Flag Gun Laws

Criminal Justice

Criminal Justice

 Police Reform
Racial Profiling
Death Penalty

Economic Issues

Economic Issues

 Homelessness
Minimum Wage
Wealth Tax

Education

Education

 Affirmative Action
College Affordability
Educational Equity

Energy & Environment

Energy & Environment

 Climate Change
Methane Emissions
Environmental Justice

Foreign Policy

Foreign Policy

 Role of the U.S. in the World
Iran Nuclear Deal
Cuba Trade Embargo

Government & Elections

Government & Elections

 Electoral College
Campaign Finance Reform
Voter ID Laws

Health Care

Health Care

 Medicare for All
School Vaccination Requirements
COVID-19 Pandemic

Immigration

Immigration

 Birthright Citizenship
DACA
Sanctuary Cities

 

 

 

FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS

What kind of courses do Close Up's resources complement?

Close Up’s resources can be used for civics, government, history, debate, social studies, and humanities courses. Most of Close Up’s lesson plans and issue discussions last one or two class periods, although teachers can extend that time to allow students to do additional research on their own to support classroom discourse and projects.

Many schools also use these materials in homeroom or advisory groups to introduce students to current issues, and help navigate challenging conversations.

Are Close Up’s resources designed for a particular grade level?

Our resources are for use in middle school and high school classes, grades 6-12. Certain Current Issue debate and deliberation materials are available in two reading levels: middle school and high school. Typically, the Background & Context resources fit best in a high school classroom, although some middle schools use these resources for in-depth civics units.

Are Close Up’s resources nonpartisan?

Yes, Close Up’s resources offer students a balanced and multipartisan look at controversial issues by using a selection of primary sources (speeches, op-eds, videos, current legislation) drawn from decision-makers and experts on all parts of the political spectrum. We encourage students to carefully consider both sides of a debate before developing their own opinion, and we aim to foster a culture of civility, respect, and understanding.

How often are Close Up’s resources updated and published?

New resources are added monthly, and include thoroughly sourced and cited information.

How do Close Up’s resources align with the C3 Framework, Common Core, and state standards?

Close Up’s resources support each dimension of the C3 Framework.

  • Developing Questions and Planning Inquiries: Our materials make connections to longstanding tensions in U.S. government, encouraging students to investigate the root causes of unresolved issues in today’s society.
  • Applying Disciplinary Tools and Concepts: Our lesson plans coach students to use democratic principles as they debate and deliberate on current issues with their peers.
  • Evaluating Sources and Using Evidence: Students develop an ability to analyze arguments and make well-founded claims about their political world.
  • Communicating Conclusions and Taking Informed Action: Close Up’s classroom materials include resources for students to actively engage with their communities and express their views to decision-makers.

Close Up’s materials fulfill several significant Common Core Standards for English Language Arts and state standards across the nation. They also align with a number of College & Career Anchor Standards:

  • Key Ideas and Details: Close Up resources ask students to examine the evidence in their readings and use it to develop their own persuasive arguments.
  • Integration and Presentation of Knowledge and Ideas: Students must analyze the reasoning on both sides of a central question to evaluate the strongest arguments.
  • Comprehension and Collaboration: Close Up resources help teachers facilitate productive classroom discussions and collaborative deliberation on diverse viewpoints.

For more information about matching to standards, please visit our methodology page.

What makes Close Up’s resources unique?

Close Up’s experiential approach to civic learning appears in our resources and moves students from passively reading and processing facts about an issue to actively deliberating, debating, and engaging with members of their community. All our materials are:

  • Based on real-world debates and draw on the opinions of political leaders, activists, journalists, and other experts.
  • Comprehensive, balanced, and always multipartisan in their approach to major issues facing policymakers.
  • Easy to use and offer variety so teachers have the flexibility to integrate lessons into their curriculum as best fits their needs.

Supplemental videos from policymakers allow students to hear different perspectives directly from the lawmakers who create key policies.

To learn more about Close Up’s unique approach to current issues and civic education, please visit our methodology page.

I’m new to Close Up’s resources – where is the best place to get started?

If you’re interested in learning more about Close Up’s resources, sign up for a free preview account! You can also contact us at classroom@closeup.org if you have questions about a specific course, grade level, or topic.

What additional resources does Close Up offer and how do I subscribe?
  • Current Issues Blog: Our free blog frames major issues in the news to spark instant classroom discussion.
  • Professional Development: Close Up offers professional development trainings for teachers on framing controversial issues, integrating classroom resources into the curriculum, media literacy, and community-engaged classrooms.
  • Deliberations for Students: We regularly host free online deliberations to give students an opportunity to engage with other young people nationwide and discuss current pressing issues.
  • Close Up Conversations: Join us for free webinars to hear from experts in U.S. history, the media’s role in political discourse, current policy, and a variety of other topics.
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