A Signer’s Day: The Recommended 12 Declaration Signers | Interactive Revolutionary War Curriculum Grades 6-12 | 250th Anniversary Edition

EGP Media and Press

Walk in their shoes. Face their choices. Honor their sacrifice. Interactive scenarios exploring 12 Declaration signers through critical decision-making moments. Perfect for the 250th anniversary. Grades 3-12, but emphasis for secondary students.

$21.00

212

Pages

Experience History Through Colonial and Revolutionary Decision-Making
 
A Signer’s Day: Volume 1 transforms how students learn about the Declaration of Independence. Instead of reading about what the signers did, students step into their shoes and face the actual choices these men confronted—then discover the consequences.
 
Should Benjamin Franklin defend himself when humiliated by Parliament, or stand in silent dignity? Should Caesar Rodney ride 80 miles through a thunderstorm despite cancer? Should Richard Stockton recant under torture to save himself? Students don’t just learn history—they grapple with it.
 

The Recommended 12: Representative Revolutionary Stories

Of the 56 signers, we’ve curated 12 who represent the full spectrum of Revolutionary experience:
 

THE FAMOUS THREE – The household names every American should know:

  • Benjamin Franklin (70, oldest signer) – International diplomat who secured the French alliance
  • Thomas Jefferson (33) – Wrote the Declaration while owning 600+ enslaved people
  • John Hancock (39) – Famous bold signature, bankrupted himself funding the war

THE ACTION HEROES – Dramatic physical courage:

  • Caesar Rodney (47) – The midnight ride through a thunderstorm despite cancer
  • Thomas Nelson Jr. (37) – House struck by cannon fire at Yorktown, died bankrupt

THE COMPLEX SEVEN – The full reality of Revolutionary sacrifice:

Forgotten Heroes:
  • Josiah Bartlett (47) – First to vote for independence, country doctor
  • Button Gwinnett (42) – Died in duel 9 months after signing
Family Sacrifices:
  • Abraham Clark (50) – Sons captured and tortured; he refused to recant
  • Francis Lewis (63) – Wife imprisoned and died from brutal treatment
Principled Stands:
  • John Witherspoon (53) – Only active clergyman; son died in battle
  • Richard Stockton (45) – Only signer who recanted under torture
Young Revolutionary:
  • Edward Rutledge (26) – Youngest signer, initially opposed independence
 
Together, these 12 show students the famous and forgotten, the heroic and the broken, the principled and the compromised—the Declaration of Independence in human form.
Interactive Choose-Your-Path Format
  • Each signer presents 3-5 critical moments where students make choices
  • Students read ALL consequences (even for paths not taken) to understand alternatives
  • Accumulated decisions shape understanding of each signer’s Revolutionary experience

Historical Accuracy Without Hero Worship

  • Addresses slavery, torture, moral contradictions honestly
  • Includes “What’s Documented vs. Speculative” guide
  • Comprehensive MLA bibliography with verified scholarly sources
  • Teaching guide on avoiding presentism while maintaining moral clarity

Complete Implementation Package

  • 3 flexible implementation options (individual choice, full rotation, family learning)
  • Differentiation guidance for grades 3-12
  • Continental Salon showcase event guide
  • 5 types of comparison activities
  • Formative and summative assessment options
  • 8 extension activities
  • Complete answer keys and discussion guides

Perfect for the 250th Anniversary (2026)

  • Timely and relevant for Declaration’s 250th anniversary celebrations
  • Connects historical courage to modern civic engagement
  • “2026 and beyond” framing throughout
This product moves students from simple → dramatic → complex understanding:
  1. Famous Three provide essential foundational knowledge
  2. Action Heroes deliver memorable, dramatic examples of courage
  3. Complex Seven challenge students with moral complexity and human limits
Students learn that not all heroes are perfect, not all courage succeeds, not all deaths are meaningful, and revolution was messy, human, and complicated.

What’s Included?

12 Complete Signer Profiles
  • Who He Was (background, path to independence, significance)
  • Critical Moments (3-5 decision scenarios with full consequences)
  • What Happened Next (fate during and after war)
  • Reflection Questions (personal, historical, modern connections)
Front Matter & Context
  • Historical Context & Presentism teaching guide
  • How to use (for students, teachers, parents)
  • Signer Selection Guide (by type, colony, question)
  • Understanding the 12 (ages, occupations, wealth, families, slaveholding, outcomes)
  • Myths vs. Reality guide
  • Three Groups Explained
Support Materials
  • Continental Salon: Student Showcase Event Guide
  • Historical Accuracy Guide (What’s Documented vs. Speculative)
  • Reflection Questions by Theme
  • Comparison Activities
  • Assessment Options (Formative & Summative)
  • Extension Activities
  • Teacher/Parent Implementation Guide
  • Complete Answer Keys & Discussion Guides
Comprehensive MLA Bibliography
  • Verified scholarly sources for all 12 signers
  • Primary sources (letters, documents, papers)
  • Specialized studies (slavery, diplomacy, battles, prison conditions)
  • Digital archives and museum resources
 
Total: 200+ pages of complete, ready-to-use educational content
Target Audience
Grades 6-12 (with built-in differentiation)
  • Middle school: Focus on choices, courage, personal sacrifice
  • High school: Political philosophy, moral complexity, Enlightenment thought

Perfect for:

  • Classroom teachers (3-5 class periods or full unit)
  • Homeschool families (12-week family study)
  • 250th anniversary commemorations
  • American history units
  • Civics and government courses
  • Character education programs
 

Three Main Implementation Options

OPTION 1: Individual Student Choice (Recommended for Classroom)
  • Each student selects one signer independently
  • Students present their signer to class
  • Class discusses diverse experiences
  • Time: 3-5 class periods
OPTION 2: Assign All 12 (Deep Dive)
  • Each student gets one of the 12 (or rotate through all)
  • Ensures all groups represented
  • Rich comparison discussions
  • Time: 3-4 week unit or year-long integration
OPTION 3: Family Learning (Homeschool)
  • Family experiences one signer together each week
  • 12 weeks total
  • Discussion at family dinner table
  • Culminates in family “Continental Salon”
 

Learning Outcomes

Students who complete this product will be able to:
✓ Identify 12 representative signers and their significance
✓ Explain the diversity of Revolutionary experiences (age, wealth, occupation, sacrifice)
✓ Analyze moral complexity in historical figures (slavery contradiction, limits of courage)
✓ Distinguish between historical myth and verified reality
✓ Connect historical courage and sacrifice to modern civic engagement
✓ Think critically about choices and consequences
✓ Practice historical empathy while maintaining moral clarity
✓ Avoid presentism while making sound moral judgments
 

Addressing Difficult Topics

This curriculum tackles challenging subjects honestly and age-appropriately:
Slavery: States facts about slaveholding without excusing it. Presents the contradiction between “all men are created equal” and the reality that half these signers owned enslaved people. Provides historical context without moral relativism.
Torture: Addresses Richard Stockton’s torture and recantation honestly, exploring human limits under extreme duress without graphic details.
Moral Complexity: Shows that people can do both great and terrible things. Jefferson’s words inspired abolition even though he never freed most of his enslaved people. Franklin transformed from enslaver to abolitionist.
 

Perfect Timing for 2026

The 250th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence (July 4, 2026) makes this the ideal time to help students truly understand the men who risked everything to create America—with all their courage, contradictions, and complexity.
 

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: Is this appropriate for middle school? A: Yes! Grades 6-12. Differentiation guidance helps you adjust depth and discussion for different ages.
Q: Does it address slavery honestly? A: Yes. We state facts about slaveholding without excusing it and help students understand the contradiction without dismissing the Founders entirely.
Q: How long does it take to complete? A: Flexible! 3-5 class periods for one signer, or 3-4 weeks for full unit covering all 12.
Q: Can I use this for homeschool? A: Absolutely! Includes specific family learning implementation option with 12-week plan.
Q: Is there a religious perspective? A: We address John Witherspoon’s role as only clergyman signer and his theological justification for revolution, but the overall curriculum is academic/historical, not devotional.
Q: What if I only want to teach a few signers, not all 12? A: Perfect! The Signer Selection Guide helps students choose based on interest, and each signer stands alone.
Q: Are primary sources included? A: MLA bibliography directs you to primary sources, and scenarios are based on documented historical events.
 

DIGITAL PRODUCT REFUNDS

 

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A Signer’s Day: The Recommended 12 Declaration Signers | Interactive Revolutionary War Curriculum Grades 6-12 | 250th Anniversary Edition

$21.00

Walk in their shoes. Face their choices. Honor their sacrifice. Interactive scenarios exploring 12 Declaration signers through critical decision-making moments. Perfect for the 250th anniversary. Grades 3-12, but emphasis for secondary students.

Experience History Through Colonial and Revolutionary Decision-Making
 
A Signer’s Day: Volume 1 transforms how students learn about the Declaration of Independence. Instead of reading about what the signers did, students step into their shoes and face the actual choices these men confronted—then discover the consequences.
 
Should Benjamin Franklin defend himself when humiliated by Parliament, or stand in silent dignity? Should Caesar Rodney ride 80 miles through a thunderstorm despite cancer? Should Richard Stockton recant under torture to save himself? Students don’t just learn history—they grapple with it.
 

The Recommended 12: Representative Revolutionary Stories

Of the 56 signers, we’ve curated 12 who represent the full spectrum of Revolutionary experience:
 

THE FAMOUS THREE – The household names every American should know:

  • Benjamin Franklin (70, oldest signer) – International diplomat who secured the French alliance
  • Thomas Jefferson (33) – Wrote the Declaration while owning 600+ enslaved people
  • John Hancock (39) – Famous bold signature, bankrupted himself funding the war

THE ACTION HEROES – Dramatic physical courage:

  • Caesar Rodney (47) – The midnight ride through a thunderstorm despite cancer
  • Thomas Nelson Jr. (37) – House struck by cannon fire at Yorktown, died bankrupt

THE COMPLEX SEVEN – The full reality of Revolutionary sacrifice:

Forgotten Heroes:
  • Josiah Bartlett (47) – First to vote for independence, country doctor
  • Button Gwinnett (42) – Died in duel 9 months after signing
Family Sacrifices:
  • Abraham Clark (50) – Sons captured and tortured; he refused to recant
  • Francis Lewis (63) – Wife imprisoned and died from brutal treatment
Principled Stands:
  • John Witherspoon (53) – Only active clergyman; son died in battle
  • Richard Stockton (45) – Only signer who recanted under torture
Young Revolutionary:
  • Edward Rutledge (26) – Youngest signer, initially opposed independence
 
Together, these 12 show students the famous and forgotten, the heroic and the broken, the principled and the compromised—the Declaration of Independence in human form.
Interactive Choose-Your-Path Format
  • Each signer presents 3-5 critical moments where students make choices
  • Students read ALL consequences (even for paths not taken) to understand alternatives
  • Accumulated decisions shape understanding of each signer’s Revolutionary experience

Historical Accuracy Without Hero Worship

  • Addresses slavery, torture, moral contradictions honestly
  • Includes “What’s Documented vs. Speculative” guide
  • Comprehensive MLA bibliography with verified scholarly sources
  • Teaching guide on avoiding presentism while maintaining moral clarity

Complete Implementation Package

  • 3 flexible implementation options (individual choice, full rotation, family learning)
  • Differentiation guidance for grades 3-12
  • Continental Salon showcase event guide
  • 5 types of comparison activities
  • Formative and summative assessment options
  • 8 extension activities
  • Complete answer keys and discussion guides

Perfect for the 250th Anniversary (2026)

  • Timely and relevant for Declaration’s 250th anniversary celebrations
  • Connects historical courage to modern civic engagement
  • “2026 and beyond” framing throughout
This product moves students from simple → dramatic → complex understanding:
  1. Famous Three provide essential foundational knowledge
  2. Action Heroes deliver memorable, dramatic examples of courage
  3. Complex Seven challenge students with moral complexity and human limits
Students learn that not all heroes are perfect, not all courage succeeds, not all deaths are meaningful, and revolution was messy, human, and complicated.

What’s Included?

12 Complete Signer Profiles
  • Who He Was (background, path to independence, significance)
  • Critical Moments (3-5 decision scenarios with full consequences)
  • What Happened Next (fate during and after war)
  • Reflection Questions (personal, historical, modern connections)
Front Matter & Context
  • Historical Context & Presentism teaching guide
  • How to use (for students, teachers, parents)
  • Signer Selection Guide (by type, colony, question)
  • Understanding the 12 (ages, occupations, wealth, families, slaveholding, outcomes)
  • Myths vs. Reality guide
  • Three Groups Explained
Support Materials
  • Continental Salon: Student Showcase Event Guide
  • Historical Accuracy Guide (What’s Documented vs. Speculative)
  • Reflection Questions by Theme
  • Comparison Activities
  • Assessment Options (Formative & Summative)
  • Extension Activities
  • Teacher/Parent Implementation Guide
  • Complete Answer Keys & Discussion Guides
Comprehensive MLA Bibliography
  • Verified scholarly sources for all 12 signers
  • Primary sources (letters, documents, papers)
  • Specialized studies (slavery, diplomacy, battles, prison conditions)
  • Digital archives and museum resources
 
Total: 200+ pages of complete, ready-to-use educational content
Target Audience
Grades 6-12 (with built-in differentiation)
  • Middle school: Focus on choices, courage, personal sacrifice
  • High school: Political philosophy, moral complexity, Enlightenment thought

Perfect for:

  • Classroom teachers (3-5 class periods or full unit)
  • Homeschool families (12-week family study)
  • 250th anniversary commemorations
  • American history units
  • Civics and government courses
  • Character education programs
 

Three Main Implementation Options

OPTION 1: Individual Student Choice (Recommended for Classroom)
  • Each student selects one signer independently
  • Students present their signer to class
  • Class discusses diverse experiences
  • Time: 3-5 class periods
OPTION 2: Assign All 12 (Deep Dive)
  • Each student gets one of the 12 (or rotate through all)
  • Ensures all groups represented
  • Rich comparison discussions
  • Time: 3-4 week unit or year-long integration
OPTION 3: Family Learning (Homeschool)
  • Family experiences one signer together each week
  • 12 weeks total
  • Discussion at family dinner table
  • Culminates in family “Continental Salon”
 

Learning Outcomes

Students who complete this product will be able to:
✓ Identify 12 representative signers and their significance
✓ Explain the diversity of Revolutionary experiences (age, wealth, occupation, sacrifice)
✓ Analyze moral complexity in historical figures (slavery contradiction, limits of courage)
✓ Distinguish between historical myth and verified reality
✓ Connect historical courage and sacrifice to modern civic engagement
✓ Think critically about choices and consequences
✓ Practice historical empathy while maintaining moral clarity
✓ Avoid presentism while making sound moral judgments
 

Addressing Difficult Topics

This curriculum tackles challenging subjects honestly and age-appropriately:
Slavery: States facts about slaveholding without excusing it. Presents the contradiction between “all men are created equal” and the reality that half these signers owned enslaved people. Provides historical context without moral relativism.
Torture: Addresses Richard Stockton’s torture and recantation honestly, exploring human limits under extreme duress without graphic details.
Moral Complexity: Shows that people can do both great and terrible things. Jefferson’s words inspired abolition even though he never freed most of his enslaved people. Franklin transformed from enslaver to abolitionist.
 

Perfect Timing for 2026

The 250th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence (July 4, 2026) makes this the ideal time to help students truly understand the men who risked everything to create America—with all their courage, contradictions, and complexity.
 

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: Is this appropriate for middle school? A: Yes! Grades 6-12. Differentiation guidance helps you adjust depth and discussion for different ages.
Q: Does it address slavery honestly? A: Yes. We state facts about slaveholding without excusing it and help students understand the contradiction without dismissing the Founders entirely.
Q: How long does it take to complete? A: Flexible! 3-5 class periods for one signer, or 3-4 weeks for full unit covering all 12.
Q: Can I use this for homeschool? A: Absolutely! Includes specific family learning implementation option with 12-week plan.
Q: Is there a religious perspective? A: We address John Witherspoon’s role as only clergyman signer and his theological justification for revolution, but the overall curriculum is academic/historical, not devotional.
Q: What if I only want to teach a few signers, not all 12? A: Perfect! The Signer Selection Guide helps students choose based on interest, and each signer stands alone.
Q: Are primary sources included? A: MLA bibliography directs you to primary sources, and scenarios are based on documented historical events.
 

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Only logged in customers who have purchased this product may leave a review.

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