I concur with the general consensus that these days too many teenagers are growing up with the idea the founding of the country they live in was one of the worst decisions possible because the people who lived in the 18th century did not have the values that the students have decided are correct at this current moment. It's the same problem you see so many times in which the problems people have with the Founders was that they somehow couldn't foresee the Internet.
There were many good books written about the American Revolution when I was younger - I am reminded of the YA novel My Brother Sam is Dead, which looks at the war from the side of the Loyalists - but honestly considering that these days teenagers would probably start any discussion of the Continental Congress with: "Why didn't the founders give full equality to LGBTQ+ when they were writing the Constitution?" - I honestly expect them to want lesson plans where they now say - obviously the best thing for America was for it to never have been founded in the first place. That does seem to be something people on this site actually are leaning too. Of course they also blame the West for everything by a default, but don't expect logic from them. I gave up on that long ago