Center for Civic Education Video Links
Center for Civic Education
201 Individual Titles- 60-Second Civics: Amendments to the Constitution: The 11th Amendment
- 60-Second Civics: Amendments to the Constitution: The 12th Amendment
- 60-Second Civics: Amendments to the Constitution: The 13th Amendment
- 60-Second Civics: Amendments to the Constitution: The 14th Amendment
- 60-Second Civics: Amendments to the Constitution: The 15th Amendment
- 60-Second Civics: Amendments to the Constitution: The 16th Amendment
- 60-Second Civics: Amendments to the Constitution: The 17th Amendment
- 60-Second Civics: Amendments to the Constitution: The 18th Amendment
- 60-Second Civics: Amendments to the Constitution: The 19th Amendment
- 60-Second Civics: Amendments to the Constitution: The 20th Amendment
- 60-Second Civics: Amendments to the Constitution: The 21st Amendment
- 60-Second Civics: Amendments to the Constitution: The 22nd Amendment
- 60-Second Civics: Amendments to the Constitution: The 23rd Amendment
- 60-Second Civics: Amendments to the Constitution: The 24th Amendment
- 60-Second Civics: Amendments to the Constitution: The 25th Amendment
- 60-Second Civics: Amendments to the Constitution: The 26th Amendment
- 60-Second Civics: Amendments to the Constitution: The 27th Amendment
- 60-Second Civics: Concerns for the Constitution: Part 1: James Madison’s Plan for Ratification
- 60-Second Civics: Concerns for the Constitution: Part 2: Ratifying the Constitution
- 60-Second Civics: Concerns for the Constitution: Part 3: Meet the Federalists
- 60-Second Civics: Concerns for the Constitution: Part 4: Meet the Anti-Federalists
- 60-Second Civics: Concerns for the Constitution: Part 5: Three Basic Disagreements over Ratification
- 60-Second Civics: Concerns for the Constitution: Part 6: Would the Constitution Maintain Republican Government?
- 60-Second Civics: Concerns for the Constitution: Part 7: Would the National Government Have Too Much Power?
- 60-Second Civics: Concerns for the Constitution: Part 8: Compromise on a Bill of Rights
- 60-Second Civics: Coverture and the Colonial Era
- 60-Second Civics: Denial of Native American Citizenship and Voting Rights
- 60-Second Civics: Digital Citizenship: Part 1: What Is Digital Citizenship?
- 60-Second Civics: Digital Citizenship: Part 2: Doing the Right Thing Online
- 60-Second Civics: Digital Citizenship: Part 3: All About the Benjamins
- 60-Second Civics: Digital Citizenship: Part 4: Full Participation and Equal Access to Technology
- 60-Second Civics: Digital Citizenship: Part 5: Responsibility
- 60-Second Civics: Digital Citizenship: Part 6: Staying Safe
- 60-Second Civics: Digital Citizenship: Part 7: Privacy
- 60-Second Civics: Digital Citizenship: Part 8: Security
- 60-Second Civics: Elizabeth Cady Stanton
- 60-Second Civics: Elizabeth Freeman
- 60-Second Civics: Fanny Wright
- 60-Second Civics: Ida B. Wells
- 60-Second Civics: Ida Tarbell
- 60-Second Civics: Indian Citizenship Act of 1924
- 60-Second Civics: Lucretia Mott
- 60-Second Civics: Margaret Todd Whetten
- 60-Second Civics: Mary Church Terrell
- 60-Second Civics: Mercy Otis Warren
- 60-Second Civics: Nanye’hi
- 60-Second Civics: Native American Activist Marie Louise Bottineau Baldwin
- 60-Second Civics: Native American Tribes in Early America
- 60-Second Civics: Native Americans During the Colonial Era
- 60-Second Civics: Ona Judge
- 60-Second Civics: Removing Obstacles to Native American Voting
- 60-Second Civics: Sarah and Angelina Grimke
- 60-Second Civics: Six Principles of Nonviolence: Love, Not Hate
- 60-Second Civics: Six Principles of Nonviolence: Nonviolence Educates and Reforms
- 60-Second Civics: Six Principles of Nonviolence: Nonviolence Requires Courage
- 60-Second Civics: Six Principles of Nonviolence: Nonviolence Seeks Reconciliation
- 60-Second Civics: Six Principles of Nonviolence: Nonviolence Seeks to Defeat Injustice
- 60-Second Civics: Six Principles of Nonviolence: The Universe Is on the Side of Justice
- 60-Second Civics: Susan B. Anthony
- 60-Second Civics: The Bill of Rights: The Eighth Amendment
- 60-Second Civics: The Bill of Rights: The Fifth Amendment
- 60-Second Civics: The Bill of Rights: The First Amendment
- 60-Second Civics: The Bill of Rights: The Fourth Amendment
- 60-Second Civics: The Bill of Rights: The Ninth Amendment
- 60-Second Civics: The Bill of Rights: The Second Amendment
- 60-Second Civics: The Bill of Rights: The Seventh Amendment
- 60-Second Civics: The Bill of Rights: The Sixth Amendment
- 60-Second Civics: The Bill of Rights: The Tenth Amendment
- 60-Second Civics: The Bill of Rights: The Third Amendment
- 60-Second Civics: The Daughters of Liberty
- 60-Second Civics: The Forten Sisters
- 60-Second Civics: The Power of Native American Women in the Colonial Era
- 60-Second Civics: The Struggle for Civil Rights: Part 1: Segregation
- 60-Second Civics: The Struggle for Civil Rights: Part 2: Brown v. Board of Education
- 60-Second Civics: The Struggle for Civil Rights: Part 3: Desegregation and Violence
- 60-Second Civics: The Struggle for Civil Rights: Part 4: The Civil Rights Movement Gains Support
- 60-Second Civics: The Struggle for Civil Rights: Part 5: The Civil Rights Act of 1964
- 60-Second Civics: The Struggle for Civil Rights: Part 6: Three Lesser-Known Civil Rights Acts
- 60-Second Civics: The Struggle for Civil Rights: Part 7: Voting Rights Act of 1965
- 60-Second Civics: The Struggle for Civil Rights: Part 8: Shelby County v. Holder
- 60-Second Civics: Tribal Recognition
- 60-Second Civics: Vacillating Policy Toward Native American Tribes
- 60-Second Civics: Women During the Revolutionary War
- 60-Second Civics: Women’s Suffrage Movement: Part 1: The Nineteenth Amendment
- 60-Second Civics: Women’s Suffrage Movement: Part 10: A Fractured Suffrage Movement
- 60-Second Civics: Women’s Suffrage Movement: Part 11: Women’s Suffrage Associations
- 60-Second Civics: Women’s Suffrage Movement: Part 12: Violence Against Women’s Suffrage
- 60-Second Civics: Women’s Suffrage Movement: Part 13: The Sentinels of Liberty
- 60-Second Civics: Women’s Suffrage Movement: Part 14: Women’s Suffrage Expands Worldwide
- 60-Second Civics: Women’s Suffrage Movement: Part 2: Suffragists
- 60-Second Civics: Women’s Suffrage Movement: Part 3: World War I Increases Demands for Women’s Suffrage
- 60-Second Civics: Women’s Suffrage Movement: Part 4: Women Gain the Right to Vote
- 60-Second Civics: Women’s Suffrage Movement: Part 5: Women’s Role in the American Economy Gradually Changes
- 60-Second Civics: Women’s Suffrage Movement: Part 6: The Emerging Role of Women
- 60-Second Civics: Women’s Suffrage Movement: Part 7: The Roots of Women’s Suffrage
- 60-Second Civics: Women’s Suffrage Movement: Part 8: The Seneca Falls Convention
- 60-Second Civics: Women’s Suffrage Movement: Part 9: The Growing Women’s Movement of the Late 1800s
- Constitution Explained, The: Abolishing Slavery
- Constitution Explained, The: Constitutional Convention
- Constitution Explained, The: Cruel and Unusual
- Constitution Explained, The: Defining Citizenship
- Constitution Explained, The: Due Process of Law
- Constitution Explained, The: Equal Protection of the Laws
- Constitution Explained, The: Expanding the Bill of Rights
- Constitution Explained, The: Faithfully Execute
- Constitution Explained, The: Foundations of the Constitution
- Constitution Explained, The: Freedom of Assembly and Petition
- Constitution Explained, The: Freedom of Expression
- Constitution Explained, The: Freedom of Religion
- Constitution Explained, The: Full Faith and Credit
- Constitution Explained, The: My Home Is My Castle
- Constitution Explained, The: No Tax on Voting
- Constitution Explained, The: Presumed Innocent
- Constitution Explained, The: Prohibition and Repeal
- Constitution Explained, The: Ratification
- Constitution Explained, The: States’ Rights
- Constitution Explained, The: The Dos and Don’ts of Congress
- Constitution Explained, The: The Income Tax
- Constitution Explained, The: The Least Dangerous Branch
- Constitution Explained, The: The People’s Branch
- Constitution Explained, The: The Presidency Changes
- Constitution Explained, The: The Right to a Fair Trial
- Constitution Explained, The: The Secret Sauce
- Constitution Explained, The: The Supreme Law of the Land
- Constitution Explained, The: To Keep and Bear Arms
- Constitution Explained, The: Unlisted Rights
- Constitution Explained, The: Votes for All Men
- Constitution Explained, The: Votes for D.C.
- Constitution Explained, The: Votes for Women
- Constitution Explained, The: Votes for Young People
- Constitution Explained, The: We the People
- Constitution Explained, The: Who Chooses the President?
- Ideas that Informed the American Founders: Anglo-Saxon Law
- Ideas that Informed the American Founders: Anglo-Saxon Society
- Ideas that Informed the American Founders: Aristotle’s Right and Corrupt Forms of Government
- Ideas that Informed the American Founders: Cato as an Example of Civic Virtue
- Ideas that Informed the American Founders: Cicero and the American Founders
- Ideas that Informed the American Founders: Cincinnatus and George Washington
- Ideas that Informed the American Founders: Civic Virtue, Moral Education, and Small, Uniform Communities
- Ideas that Informed the American Founders: Classical Republicanism
- Ideas that Informed the American Founders: Constitutional Government Is Limited Government
- Ideas that Informed the American Founders: Early English Settlements
- Ideas that Informed the American Founders: Early Settlement of North America
- Ideas that Informed the American Founders: Feudal Europe
- Ideas that Informed the American Founders: History Lessons and the Constitution
- Ideas that Informed the American Founders: Humanism Shapes the Renaissance
- Ideas that Informed the American Founders: Individual Rights and the American Colonies
- Ideas that Informed the American Founders: James Madison and the Republic
- Ideas that Informed the American Founders: John Locke’s Conception of Natural Rights
- Ideas that Informed the American Founders: King Henry III and the Rise of Parliament
- Ideas that Informed the American Founders: King John Agrees to the Magna Carta
- Ideas that Informed the American Founders: Legislative, Executive, and Judicial Functions
- Ideas that Informed the American Founders: Moral Education in the American Colonies
- Ideas that Informed the American Founders: Natural Rights Philosophy in the Declaration of Independence
- Ideas that Informed the American Founders: Origins of the House of Commons
- Ideas that Informed the American Founders: Popular Sovereignty and Higher Law
- Ideas that Informed the American Founders: Popular Sovereignty and the American Colonies
- Ideas that Informed the American Founders: Popular Sovereignty as Fundamental to Democracy
- Ideas that Informed the American Founders: Reason and Observation
- Ideas that Informed the American Founders: Small, Uniform Communities in Classical Republicanism
- Ideas that Informed the American Founders: Society in Medieval Europe
- Ideas that Informed the American Founders: Structure of Roman Republican Government
- Ideas that Informed the American Founders: The Anglo-Saxons Arrive in England
- Ideas that Informed the American Founders: The British Constitution
- Ideas that Informed the American Founders: The Charter of Liberties
- Ideas that Informed the American Founders: The Emergence of Capitalism
- Ideas that Informed the American Founders: The Enlightenment and the Founders
- Ideas that Informed the American Founders: The Jamestown Colony
- Ideas that Informed the American Founders: The Judeo-Christian Tradition
- Ideas that Informed the American Founders: The Mayflower Compact
- Ideas that Informed the American Founders: The Mixed Constitution
- Ideas that Informed the American Founders: The Norman Invasion of 1066
- Ideas that Informed the American Founders: The Peace of Westphalia
- Ideas that Informed the American Founders: The Problem with Constitutional Government
- Ideas that Informed the American Founders: The Protestant Reformation
- Ideas that Informed the American Founders: The Race to Colonize North America
- Ideas that Informed the American Founders: The Reason for a Representative Government
- Ideas that Informed the American Founders: The Reformation and the Rise of the Modern Nation-State
- Ideas that Informed the American Founders: The Renaissance and the Start of the Reformation
- Ideas that Informed the American Founders: The Rise and Fall of Roman Britain
- Ideas that Informed the American Founders: The Role of Citizens in Classical Republics
- Ideas that Informed the American Founders: The Roman Republic
- Ideas that Informed the American Founders: The Roman Republic as an Example and a Warning
- Ideas that Informed the American Founders: The Significance of the Magna Carta
- Ideas that Informed the American Founders: The Vikings’ Impact on Britain
- Ideas that Informed the American Founders: The Voyage of the Mayflower
- Ideas that Informed the American Founders: The Witan
- Ideas that Informed the American Founders: Thomas Hobbes and ’’Leviathan’’
- Ideas that Informed the American Founders: Thomas Hobbes and John Locke
- Ideas that Informed the American Founders: What Is a Constitution?
- Ideas that Informed the American Founders: What the Norman Invasion Meant
- Ideas that Informed the American Founders: Why Aristotle Wasn’t a Fan of Direct Democracy
- Ideas that Informed the American Founders: Writs and Courts of Equity
- Media Literacy: Am I Media Literate?
- Media Literacy: Can I Effectively Create and Share Information?
- Media Literacy: Can I Identify Reliable Media Sources?
- Media Literacy: Do I Have a Role in Media Literacy?
- Media Literacy: Do I Have to Cite My Sources?
- Media Literacy: Do I Play a Role in Staying Safe Online?
- Media Literacy: Does a Free Press Support Democracy?
- Media Literacy: Is All Media Biased?