Unit 1&2: A Nation and its Ideals Emerge Chapter 6D: Creating the Constitution: What is the proper role of a national government? NOTES SECTION 6.4 – Page.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Constitutional Convention
Advertisements

Creating & Ratifying the Constitution
Ticket 1. Complete the Quick Check on the Preamble. 2. Keep your Preamble Scramble in your notebook (page 4) 3. Then begin the following warm-up on page.
Sovereignty Freedom to self govern. Independent Free.
8.3 Shays’s Rebellion and the Need for Change
Who: 55 Delegates from 12 states (no Rhode Island) When: May 25 - September 17, 1787 Where: Philadelphia, PA Goal: Met to revise the Articles of Confederation.
Constitutional Convention
The plan created a ___ legislature with an upper and lower house.
The US Constitution The Origins of Our Government.
Compromise and the Constitution How did compromise at the Constitutional Convention help create a more unified nation?
Chapter 2 Section 4.   Interstate Commerce  Extralegal  Anarchy  Advocate  Modification  Publish Vocab.
The Constitutional Convention
Chapter 5 section 3: Creating the Constitution textbook pages
I. Constitutional Convention (1787):
Bell Ringer When you have a different opinion than someone else, what can you do to make it better?
Creating and Ratifying the Constitution (74-78)
I. Constitutional Convention (1787):
Creating and Ratifying the Constitution
The Constitutional Convention
The United States Constitution
Chapter 7 Creating the Constitution Section 2 The Constitutional Convention LEQ: What role did compromise play in the creation of the United.
Key Compromises of the Constitutional Convention
I. Constitutional Convention (1787):
The Road to the Constitution
Creating and Ratifying The Constitution
Constitutional Compromises
Constitutional Compromises
I. Constitutional Convention (1787):
Page 7.
The Road to the Constitution
Forming a New Nation Chapter 11.
Ratifying the Constitution Notes Federalists and Anti-Federalists
The U.S. Constitution.
Chapter 3: The Constitution
The Constitutional Convention: Agreements and Compromises
Random Fact of the Day Too much coffee can kill you. A lethal dose of caffeine for the average adult is somewhere around 10 grams, the equivalent of drinking.
5-2: Drafting the Constitution
The Constitutional Convention
Creating the Constitution
Writing the Constitution
Journal Entry Make a list of as many “founding fathers” as you can think of. Then answer … What does it mean to be a founding father.
Journal Entry Make a list of as many “founding fathers” as you can think of. Then answer … What does it mean to be a founding father.
Constitutional Convention
The Road to the Constitution
What were the problems of the Art of Confed?
Rival Plans THE VIRGINIA PLAN
Writing the Constitution
Plans at the Constitutional Convention
Jeopardy Final Jeopardy Vocab Misc. $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $200 $200
Section 4 Mr. Plude.
2-4 The Constitutional Convention
The Constitutional Convention
Anarchy or Monarchy? In Anarchy, there are no rules. Individuals can do as they please, there is no system of government to protect them or their rights.
The Constitutional Convention
5.3 Creating the Constitution
The Constitutional Convention
Journal #22 Popular sovereignty – the idea that political authority belongs to the people Federalism – the sharing of power between a central government.
Unit 3, Topic 2: Constitutional Compromises
The Constitutional Convention 1787
II. Major Arguments During The Constitutional Convention:
What were the problems of the Art of Confed?
Constitutional Convention
Monday 10/21/13 AIM: Appreciate how people with different points of view accept the wishes of the majority for the common good of all. To know the various.
Road to the Constitution
Convention Compromises
Creating the Constitution
Have out your Unit Two Objective Sheet while you take notes 
Warm-up #4 What were some major disagreements at the Constitutional Convention? Do you think that the Constitution solved the weaknesses of the Articles.
Chapter 3: The Constitution Section 2: Creating and Ratifying the Constitution I. Two Opposing Plans A. James Madison designed the Virginia Plan. It.
Presentation transcript:

Unit 1&2: A Nation and its Ideals Emerge Chapter 6D: Creating the Constitution: What is the proper role of a national government? NOTES SECTION 6.4 – Page #F3: Analyze the image of Signing the Constitution as a class, on page 69. Read Section 6.4, starting on page 66. Follow directions from the Notebook Guide: Recreate the table from the example in guide into your notebook. For each of the 3 compromises, briefly explain what the problem was. Then list the different solutions/conflicting ideas that were debated. Describe the final compromise solution.

Unit 1&2: A Nation and its Ideals Emerge Chapter 6D: Creating the Constitution: What is the proper role of a national government? SECTION 6.4 REVIEW: GREAT COMPROMISE Problem: Delegates disagreed over how the states should be represented in the national legislature. Conflicting Ideas: The New Jersey plan specified a one-house legislature, with each state receiving equal representation. The Virginia Plan specified a two-house legislature, with each state’s representation based on population. Solution: Two-house legislature(bicameral legislature): in the upper house(the Senate), each state is represented equally; in the lower house(the House of Representatives), representation is based on population from each state.

Unit 1&2: A Nation and its Ideals Emerge Chapter 6D: Creating the Constitution: What is the proper role of a national government? THREE – FIFTHS COMPROMISE Problem: Delegates disagreed over how slaves should be counted. Conflicting Ideas: Northerners wanted slaves counted for taxation but not representation. Southerners wanted slaves counted for representation but not taxation. Solution: Three-fifths of the slaves would be counted for both taxation and representation. EXAMPLE: Every 5 slaves would count as 3 freemen in total population.

Unit 1&2: A Nation and its Ideals Emerge Chapter 6D: Creating the Constitution: What is the proper role of a national government? ELECTORAL COLLEGE Problem: Delegates disagreed over how the president should be elected. Conflicting Ideas: Some delegates wanted Congress to select the president. Others wanted the president elected by the people. Solution: Special electors chosen by each state would select the president. Electors represent the vote of the people. Each state receives a number of Electoral votes based on representation in Congress. EXAMPLE: 2 Senators + 7 Representatives = 9 total electoral votes. A candidate needs 270 /538 electoral votes to win the election.

Unit 1&2: A Nation and its Ideals Emerge Chapter 6D: Creating the Constitution: What is the proper role of a national government? NOTES SECTION 6.5 – Page #F3: Read, pages 70-71, then write and answer questions in your note books. What is the group name of supporters for a central government? Those who opposed a central government? What series of essays was written to win support for the Constitution? Describe the issue of a central government according to the essay. What was the major opposing view about the Constitution? When did the Constitution first start to be ratified? When did it end? The first 10 amendments are known as the …….? How many amendments have been added since ratification? What did Thomas Jefferson say about the first 10 amendments?

Unit 1&2: A Nation and its Ideals Emerge Chapter 6D: Creating the Constitution: What is the proper role of a national government? NOTES SECTION 6.5 – Page #F3: Read, pages 70-71, then write and answer questions in your note books. What is the group name of supporters for a central government? Those who opposed a central government? Federalist and Anti-Federalist What series of essays was written to win support for the Constitution? The Federalist Papers Describe the issue of a central government according to the essay. That checks and balances would ensure no branch has power over the other two branches. What was the major opposing view about the Constitution? No Bill of Rights. When did the Constitution first start to be ratified? When did it end? January 1788. By the summer of 1788, but 2 states did not ratify. The first 10 amendments are known as the …….? How many amendments have been added since ratification? The Bill of Rights. 17 more added. What did Thomas Jefferson say about the first 10 amendments? “a bill of rights is what the people are entitled to against every government on earth, general or particular, and what no government should refuse.”