AP US Government and Politics Summer Work

Similar documents
AP US Government & Politics Summer Assignment Providence High School

A.P. United States Government & Politics Syllabus

AP United States Government and Politics Syllabus

AP US Government and Politics Syllabus

Course Description: Learning Outcomes:

Chino High School Social Science Department ADVANCED PLACEMENT AMERICAN GOVERNMENT and POLITICS SYLLABUS Ms. Mitchell, Instructor

AP U.S. Government and Politics Syllabus

1. What is political culture? Cite examples of political cultures other than our own.

Texts Wilson, James Q., and John J. DiLuilo Jr. American Government Institutions and Policies, 10th edition. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 2006.

AP Government UNIT 2: POLITICAL BELIEFS AND POLITICAL BEHAVIORS

Name: Student #: Due Date: LACHSA AP Government Summer Assignment: Part 1 Reading, Questions and Vocabulary Terms

Chapter One ONE REPUBLIC TWO AMERICAS? Copyright 2014 Cengage Learning

Name Per. 2. Identify the important principles and issues debated at the Constitutional Convention and describe how they were resolved.

Constitutional Foundations

Advanced Placement United States Government and Politics. Susan R. Duncan. Scott County High School

AP US GOVERNMENT & POLITICS GUIDED READINGS UNIT 1: CONSTITUTIONAL UNDERPINNINGS

AP United States Government

The Constitution I. Considerations that influenced the formulation and adoption of the Constitution A. Roots 1. Religious Freedom a) Puritan

3. Learning how to analyze political information and news, including how to identify political propaganda;

Lecture Outline: Chapter 2

AP United States Government & Politics

The Enlightenment & Democratic Revolutions. Enlightenment Ideas help bring about the American & French Revolutions

Curriculum Catalog

Topic 3: The Roots of American Democracy

Wallingford Public Schools - HIGH SCHOOL COURSE OUTLINE

LESSON TITLE Social Studies Standards- by indicator ELA Standards- WTP Units 1-6

****SS.7.C.1.1 The Enlightenment****

Texts: Patterson, Thomas. The American Democracy. 9. New York, NY: the McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., Print.

Read the Federalist #47,48,& 51 How to read the Constitution In the Woll Book Pages 40-50

Correlation to the Texas Essential Knowledge and Skills (TEKS) United States Government

INSTRUCTIONS C 4 SIMULATED CONGRESSIONAL HEARING STUDENTS UNIT QUESTIONS

Advanced Placement NSL Government Course Syllabus

AP US GOVERNMENT & POLITICS UNIT 1 REVIEW

AP United States Government and Politics

James Madison Debates a Bill of Rights

Declaration of Independence Lesson Plan. Central Historical Question: Why did the Founders write the Declaration of Independence?

Rights of the Individual. In America, if rights of the individual and the liberties of the whole are to be preserved,

US Government Review 3.1

AP Government and Politics Summer Assignment

GRADE TEN SOCIAL STUDIES CONTENT STANDARDS AND OBJECTIVES CORRELATION TO WE THE PEOPLE. Tenth Grade: United States Studies to 1900

AP Government Course Syllabus. Instructor- Mr. Rabalais. Legacy High

CHAPTER 1 INTRODUCING GOVERNMENT IN AMERICA CHAPTER OUTLINE

to support candidates and issues that appear to be popular.

Vocabulary for Evolution of Government

CHAPTER TWO EARLY GOVERNANCE AND THE CONSTITUTIONAL FRAMEWORK

Constitutional Convention Unit Notes

FEDERAL GOVERNMENT GOVT Limited Government & Representative Government September 18, Dr. Michael Sullivan. MoWe 5:30-6:50 MoWe 7-8:30

Annotations for chapters 2 and 3 need to be placed in a spiral notebook Follow the format on pages 23 and 24

Full file at

Why Government Matters? AP Government Lecture #1

SIMULATED CONGRESSIONAL HEARING QUESTIONS LEVEL Douglas Fir Road, Calabasas, CA

Bellringer: Who do you think gives people who run the government the authority or power to rule us?

Unit One Reading Guide DEFINING DEMOCRACY

3.1c- Layer Cake Federalism

EXAM: Constitutional Underpinnings 2

The course will focus on the following broad topic areas, and will give relatively equal emphasis to each:

AP American Government

Birth of a Nation. Founding Fathers. Benjamin Rush. John Hancock. Causes

Lesson 7 Enlightenment Ideas / Lesson 8 Founding Documents Views of Government. Topic 1 Enlightenment Movement

Federalists and anti-federalists The power of subtleties

ELEMENT C: Explain the key features of the Constitution, including the Great Compromise, limited government, and the Three-Fifths Compromise.

We the People: The Citizen and the Constitution

CREATING A GOVERNMENT

Constitutional Convention Unit Notes

Foundations: Background To American History. Chapter 4

Curriculum Map - AP Politics and Government - Author: Brian Powers

Foundations of Government

A Correlation of. To the Mississippi College- and Career- Readiness Standards Social Studies

Unit 1A Early America Class Notes Grade on Notes Name & Period

INDIANA HIGH SCHOOL HEARING QUESTIONS State Level

Chapter Seven. Public Opinion

CORRELATION GUIDE Level 3

Hobbes, Locke, Montesquieu, and Rousseau on Government

Full file at

Advanced Placement Government and Politics

AP US Gov Tri 1 Review

The first fighting in the American Revolution happened in in early 1775

GOVT GOVERNMENT OF THE UNITED STATES Course Syllabus

Oklahoma C 3 Standards for the Social Studies THE FOUNDATION, FORMATION, AND TRANSFORMATION OF THE AMERICAN SYSTEM OKLAHOMA STATE BOARD OF EDUCATION

1 st United States Constitution. A. loose alliance of states. B. Congress lawmaking body. C. 9 states had to vote to pass laws

UNIT 1: Constitutional Underpinnings

CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTION

PS 125 (D) American Politics Spring 2008

Why Government? Activity, pg 1. Name: Page 8 of 26

SUPPLIES Writing utensil Composition notebok YOU MUST HAVE COMPUTER AND INTERNET ACCESS OUTSIDE OF THIS CLASSROOM A binder or folder is suggested

GIS AP U.S. Government and Politics Summer Assignment Requirements

Chapter Two: The Constitution

Chapters 1-3 Test REVIEW CONSTITUTIONAL FOUNDATIONS PART 1

GOV 312P (38645) Constitutional Principles: Core Texts

REACTING TO THE PAST: TOPIC: FOUNDING OF AMERICA HIST 411 SPRING 2018 MW, 10:00-11:50

Focus on Pre-AP for History and Social Sciences

Debating the Constitution

Department of Political Science and International Relations. Writing Papers

JWJ Civics Remediation

Political Science 6040 AMERICAN PUBLIC POLICY PROCESS Summer II, 2009

ARTICLE 6 AMERICAN EXCEPTIONALISM

UNIVERSITY OF ARIZONA SPRING 2012 American National Government

Public Schools and Sexual Orientation

Georgia Standards of Excellence American Government and Civics 2016

Hurricane Irma Can't Stop Us! Civics Unit Two Recap and Review

Transcription:

AP US Government and Politics Summer Work The U.S. Constitution is the fundament of our democracy. It is architectonic, providing a durable frame upon which we have constructed our government. It preserves our most basic liberties, and provides the boundaries within which exists a "democratic space" for Americans to pursue life, liberty and happiness. We rightly venerate the Constitution as our society's compact, and as a timeless document for, even as some interpretations of its prose have evolved from generation to generation, its most basic principles have endured since the ratification. Justice Stephen Breyer has rightly argued that it is vital to convey that the Constitution is first and foremost a design to foster democracy. It creates a protected space within which the people can utilize, and enjoy, their freedoms. That space necessarily has boundaries, and it is the precise limits and nature of those boundaries over which we, as a society, often argue. Too narrow, and the boundaries oppress the people; too broad, and the people trample upon one another's freedom. One's liberty does not exist in a vacuum. Rather, it must balance with the liberties of others. Fundamentally, the Constitution is a document established to preserve the inalienable rights with which people are born. It does so in two ways: as a bulwark against government abuse of power by diffusing that power; and as a safeguard against "democratic tyranny" unfettered majority rule by assuring minorities have the ability to speak effectively in opposition. The Framers created a document that provides avenues for, and indeed invites, political argument. They foresaw an active, involved citizenry hammering out solutions by ultimately compromising. The Framers never sought to dictate answers to specific problems for the ages. Rather, they gifted future generations the arena within which deliberation could take place, and we have used it: Myriad court decisions, legislation and executive actions color our interpretations of the Constitution s prose today. Yet, though we often view it through the prism of prior action, we have never stopped making a concerted effort to remain faithful to the Constitution s basic principles (even though we have fallen short at times). Textbook o Wilson, James Q., and John J. DiIulio. American Government: Institutions and Policies. 12 th ed. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 2010. Print. Course Reader o Woll, Peter. American Government: Readings and Cases. 18th ed. New York: Longman, 2010. Print. Reading Assignments: o Wilson & DiIullio Chapters 1 The Study of American Government (Pp. 1-14) & 4 American Political Culture (Pp. 76-91); The Declaration of Independence (Pp. A1-A5) o Woll Reader Chapter 1 Selections 1. John Locke, Second Treatise of Civil Government, in Woll, pp. 3-9; 2. John P. Roche, The Founding Fathers: A Reform Caucus in Action, in Woll, pp. 10-30. 3. Charles A Beard, Framing the Constitution, in Woll pp. 31-40 Answer the following (Assignment attached as a Word Document):

AP US Government Summer Reading Chapters 1 & 4 Short Answer Questions Essay Due in class on the first day of school. Be ready to discuss. Do the first twenty as you read--makes it easier. The last will be done at the conclusion of all your reading. Chapter 1 Questions 1. Explain the difference between power and authority. 2. Compare and contrast two classic definitions of democracy. 3. Explain what is required for representative democracy to be a reality. 1

4. Assuming the basic requirements for representative democracy are present, what important questions remain? 5. Explain the Founders view of direct democracy and the will of the people. 6. Discuss Aristotle's view of democracy. 7. Discuss John Locke s view of the purpose and role of government. 2

8. Identify the factors that must be present for majoritarian politics to be in play. 9. Summarize the four ways of describing political elites. 10. Provide some examples of how the great shifts in government and policy reflect changes in elite and mass beliefs about what government is supposed to do. 3

Chapter 4 Questions 11. Identify five elements of American political culture. 12. Describe the views that Americans hold with respect to the economic system. 13. List some of the things you learned from this chapter about political culture in Sweden. 14. List some of the things you learned from this chapter about the political culture of upper-status Japanese. 4

15. Summarize the findings of Verba and Orren s classic study of American and Swedish trade-union and political-party leaders. 16. What evidence is there that religion has been a major influence in American political culture? 17. Identify the major influences that have led to America s distinctive way of thinking about politics. 18. Explain James Davison s differentiation between orthodox and progressive beliefs. 5

19. What two things should Americans consider before they get too upset about the apparent decline in trust in government that one sees in recent public opinion polls? 20. What explains the survival of unpopular groups if most Americans have limited tolerance for others? 6

21. Charles A. Beard and John P. Roche wrote during different generations about the same subject matter: the framing of the Constitution. Beard's perspective was a sea change in how the framers were perceived by 20th century generations; and Roche's was equally earth-shaking to many adherents to Beard's perspective. Compare and contrast the two men's arguments about the framers. What is/are the major difference(s) between the two? Please do not give me your opinion as to who is right. Rather, provide a succinct but nuanced report on how these two men perceived the nature of the framers. 7

8

9

10