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Juvenile Justice (DDA)
Posted By llad On November 5, 2011 @ 12:22 am In | Comments Disabled
By Deliberating in a Democracy in the Americas
This lesson is designed to promote the teaching and learning of democratic principles and the skills of civic deliberation. Students complete a reading (available in English, Spanish, and Audio-English) and engage in a Structured Academic Controversy.
Question for deliberation:
In our democracy, should violent juvenile offenders be punished as adults?
Objectives
At the conclusion of this lesson, students will be able to:
-Define delinquents and juvenile.
-Explain why many democracies have created separate justice systems for juvenile offenders.
-List at least three reasons to support and three reasons to oppose punishing violent juvenile
offenders as adults.
-Describe and contrast at least two reasons governments punish people who break the law.
-Explain how punishing violent juveniles as adults connects to the principles of democracy,
including identifying which principles may be in conflict in this public policy question.
-Identify areas of agreement and disagreement with other students.
-Reach a decision, individually and collectively, on the deliberation issue using evidence and
sound reasoning.
-Explain the importance of deliberating this question in a democratic society.
Go to: Juvenile Justice (DDA) [1]
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[1] Juvenile Justice (DDA): http://dda.deliberating.org/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=69%3Ajuvenile-justice&catid=36%3Ajuvenile-justice&Itemid=37&lang=en#materials
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