Unit III Exam Review.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
The Congress Congressional Powers.
Advertisements

The Legislative Branch Congressional Committees. Bills and the Committee System A bill is a proposed law. Both houses of Congress must consider thousands.
Chapter 5 Vocabulary Section 1. Chapter 5 Vocabulary Section 1.
Legislative Branch: U.S. CONGRESS Duty of the Legislative Branch is to make laws. We call our national legislature CONGRESS Congress is located in Washington.
1101 Section (March 22, 2013)  Attendance Roll Call  Bureaucracy “Quiz”  Textbook Highlights: Interest Groups (11:15 only)  Focus on key terms only.
Goal 2 Review What you MUST know about the Constitution and the National Government.
Dec. 8, How a Bill becomes a law? -Committee Action ---- Floor action ---- Conference action.
Unit III LEGISLATIVE BRANCH. CONGRESS PROJECT You will choose a topic to instruct the class. You must turn in INDIVIDUAL research on your topic worth.
Unit 4 Review Congress.  The People’s Influence Constituents’ views (Delegate) Party Views (Partisan) Personal Views (Trustee)  Congress in the Constitution.
Political Science American Government and Politics Chapter 10 The Congress.
Unit 3, Lesson 2 How does the Legislative Branch work?  Essential Questions: How do our Federal, state, and local governments work?  Learning Target:
Dec. 18, How a Bill becomes a law? -Committee Action ---- Floor action ---- Conference action.
Article I- The Legislative Branch (Congress). A. Rules, Qualifications and Powers 1. Congress is divided into two houses: The House of Representatives.
ALL ABOUT CONGRESS THE BICAMERAL LEGISLATURE Unit 5 Review for AP Government By: Maddy Collins and Deanna Pierce.
Introduction to the American Political Process Legislative Behavior: The Committee Model.
Congress. Congress and the Constitution Bicameral – Great Compromise – Pluralism Differences between House and Senate – Qualifications and Terms – Filibuster.
 Pork Barrel – legislation that only benefits one region or district (Congressmen are bringing home the bacon to get re-elected)  Logrolling – Members.
The Legislative Branch TEST REVIEW. Activator  Pick up a notecard  Take out your pink Unit 3 Sheet.  Write down 3 questions/terms that you do not understand.
Welcome to Senate The HousePeople Odds and Ends Free for All Terms $200 $100 $400 $300 $100 $200 $300 $400 $100 $200 $300 $400 $100 $200 $300 $400 $100.
By: Lindsay Hoerig, Matt Buchanan, Taha Taha. Vocab Part 1  Gerrymandering - Like process by which the majority party in each state legislation redraws.
Article I Legislative Branch. Article I Establishes a bicameral (2 house) legislature 1.House of Representatives (Virginia Plan) 2.Senate (New Jersey.
The Congress: House of Representatives. HOW IS THE CONGRESS LIKE A TEACUP AND SAUCER? CONGRESSIONAL CHARACTERISTICS All bills (taxes, war) must pass both.
Chapter 12 The Congress. Why was Congress Created? founders feared tyrannical rulers founders also had experienced the weakness of the congress under.
Congress Chapter 11 AP United States Government and Politics.
Over the years, Congress has grown, making it very difficult to conduct congressional business. Therefore, rules have been established in both Houses.
Chapter 5 Legislative Branch Vocabulary. Bi-cameral  Congress is a two house legislature  House of Representatives  Senate.
Congressional Leadership and Committees AP GOPO. Role of Congress Member Examples Lawmaking  Initiating Bills  Serving on Committees  Participating.
Review Block U.S. Congress
Congress: the Senate and the House of Representatives
The Legislative Branch
Unit 7: The Legislative Branch & Congress
You Can Do It! Congress Review.
Legislative Branch: Congress
Sec. 1 Sec. 2 Sec. 3 Sec. 4 Sec. 5 Sec. 6 Sec. 7 Sec. 8 Sec. 9 Sec. 10
Lawmakers and Legislatures
CHAPTER 10 Congress  Bicameral  Off-year Election  Congress
How does a Bill Become a Law?
The Principles of the Constitution
Introduction to the American Political Process
Congressional Committees

The Legislative Branch
AP Gov Review: Video #17 Iron Triangles
Congress: Representation and Lawmaking
Legislative Branch.
The Legislative Branch Article I of the Constitution
C3.3(1) Powers of Gov’t Supremacy Clause
AP Gov Review: Video #17 Iron Triangles
Unit IV Exam Review.
Chapter 5 Legislative Branch.
Unit V/Final Exam Review
C3.3(1) Powers of Gov’t Supremacy Clause
Congressional Committees
Overview The U.S. Constitution is comprised of seven articles, each of which concerns a power of government. The first three articles deal with the three.
Unit 2 – The Legislative Branch
Legislative Branch Test
Congress: The Legislative Branch
House of Representatives Senate Leadership Committees Powers
Jeopardy Senate House of Reps About Congress Leaders of
Study Guide Answers.
The Legislative Branch Article I
Legislative Branch Test
The Legislative Branch: Congress
Jeopardy Senate House of Reps About Congress Leaders of
Legislative Branch Notes
Congress Unit Vocabulary Review.
House and Senate Vocab Bills and Laws Money
The Legislative Branch: Congress
2008 Multiple Choice.
Legislative Process: How a Bill Becomes a Law
Presentation transcript:

Unit III Exam Review

Big List: 15 points 5 Terms Same grading rules apply. Oddly, 4/5 terms are from Unit III

Chronology: 5 points How a Bill becomes a Law

Multiple Choice: 5 points 6 questions Committees Committee Placement Leadership positions

Support or Attack: 5 points Question deals with Controversial Congressional Issues Seniority System Pork Barrel Legislation Term Limits Gerrymandering

Political Cartoon Analysis: 5 points Pork Barrel Legislation

Essay: 15 points Delegated and Implied powers of Congress Use of the Elastic Clause