President-elect Clinton Takes the Oath of Office
Contemporary United States (1968 to the present)
A National Archives Foundation educational resource using primary sources from the National Archives
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This activity can be used during a civics or government course, or prior to a Presidential election, to understand the Electoral College. For grades 8-12, or as an introductory college/university-level activity. Approximate time needed is 30 minutes.
Students can complete the activity individually or in a full-class setting with the teacher or instructor walking students through the process and the historical documents.
Ask students to begin the activity by reading the introduction, which explains that the Electoral College is a process, not a place. Students will read the basic steps of the Electoral College process.
Students should then click on the “Open in New Window” icon for each document to see it more closely and figure out which step in the process it represents. They can click “Show Hints” for help, then arrange the images in the correct order following the electoral college process (not by the dates on the documents since they come from different elections).
The steps in the process are:
When students have finished ordering the documents, they should click “When You’re Done” and respond to the following information and questions:
The Founders established the Electoral College in the Constitution, in part, as a compromise between the election of the President by a vote in Congress and election of the President by a popular vote. Since the process is part of the original design of the Constitution, it would be necessary to pass a Constitutional amendment to change this system.
- What are the benefits of the Electoral College system for electing the President?
- What are the drawbacks (or negatives)?
Many different ideas for changing the Presidential election process have been suggested over the years, such as direct nation-wide election by voters. But no proposals have been passed by Congress and sent to the States for ratification as a Constitutional amendment. Under the most common method for amending the Constitution, an amendment must be proposed by a two-thirds majority in both houses of Congress and ratified by three-fourths of the States.
- Do you think that Congress should suggest an amendment to change how we elect a President? What is your suggestion?
Conduct a class discussion based on students’ answers.
Find more information about the Electoral College from the National Archives, including:
The National Archives administers the electoral process by receiving Certificates of Ascertainment of electors and Certificates of Vote from the States and the District of Columbia. The Office of the Federal Register at the National Archives reviews the Certificates for legal sufficiency and makes them available to Congress for the official accounting of electors and votes.
In this activity, students will learn the steps in the Electoral College process, from Election Day to Inauguration Day. They will analyze historical primary sources from various Presidential elections, each representing a different step in the process, and arrange them in the correct sequence.