About landmarkcases.org
This site was developed to provide teachers with a full range of resources and activities to support the teaching of landmark Supreme Court cases, helping students explore the key issues of each case. The "Resources" section features basic building blocks such as background summaries and excerpts of opinions that can be used in multiple ways. The "Activities" section contains a range of short activities and in-depth lessons that can be completed with students. While these activities are online, many of them can be adapted for use in a one-computer classroom or a classroom with no computer.

Depending upon the amount of time you have to teach the case, you may want to use one or more of the "Resources" or "Activities" in conjunction with one or more of the general teaching strategies. These general teaching strategies include moot court activities, political cartoon analysis, continuum exercises, and Web site evaluation.

Time constraints? Click here for Teaching Recommendations Based on Your Time.

Feel free to experiment with these materials!

Resources
About landmarkcases.org
 
Teaching Recommendations
Based on Your Time

 
Background Summary
and Questions

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Reading Level
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Reading Level
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Reading Level
 
Diagram of How the Case Moved Through the Court System
 
Listen to the Oral Arguments
 
Key Excerpts from the Majority Opinion
 
Key Excerpts from the Dissenting Opinion
 
Full Text of the Majority Opinion

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Activities
    The Case
Miranda v. Arizona: A Primer
 
Miranda Warnings and the Bill of Rights
 
Miranda and the Exclusionary Rule
 
Controversy Over the Court's Decision
 
Should the Miranda Warnings Be Required Police Procedure?

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    After the Case
Beyond Miranda
 
A Real World Case Study: Homicide by David Simon
 
You Be the Judge (and the Lawyers): Should Miranda Be Overturned in Dickerson v. the United States?

Miranda Rights for Juveniles: Yarborough v. Alvarado
 

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