Back in my day...
I've only been out of high school for a little over a decade, and I find it hard to believe that things have changed this much. We didn't have pocket sized pamphlets handed out in school. We didn't need to because the classroom had GIGANTIC poster sized reprints of the Declaration of Independence, and The Bill of Rights. The same thing was printed in our textbooks, and we had to take tests and pop quizzes on them, and have class discussions on what the Bill of Rights was and what it means.
It just so happens that I did have a miniature version of the US Constitution (which gathered dust on a bookshelf for many years) but it was distributed by the Boy Scouts during 'citizenship' week when I was, oh, I think nine or ten years old. (At the time I had only a vague idea of what the Constitution was, so it got set aside until I found it years later)
Of course, liberals would probably condemn my high school as a breeding ground for terrorists seeing as how the teachers brought in firearms at least once a year for demonstrations-- Historical muzzle loaders in History class, along with a demonstration of how they were loaded and fired with paper 'cartriges', semi-automatic pistols in JROTC for firearms safety lessons (from a much beloved Vietnam veteran who was our instructor), not to mention the fact that students actually touched (GASP!!) M-1A1 rifles during drill practice and actually FIRED (DOUBLE GASP!!) .117 daisy may pellet rifles every day after school for 2 hours because we actually had a competitive rifle team. (State Champs, btw)
Anyway, back to the subject at hand. I don't think schools should be a segway for any political organization to preach their message. If I had a kid, and they brought home a copy of the Constitution with an Apollo Alliance stamp on it, that sucker would go straight into the fireplace, and I reckon if I don't want liberal agencies stamping things on school material, I probably shouldn't suppor the 9/12-ers doing it either.