AP Test Review. 2 part test – PART I - 60 MC – 45 MINUTES – Part II = 4 Free Response – 100 MINUTES – Each part is worth 50 percent of your grade.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Need to know AP US Government and Politics Vocabulary
Advertisements

AP US Government Key Review Topics
AP US Government Year in Review. Constitutional Underpinnings and Federalism Influences on the Constitution Articles of Confederation Accomplishments.
1. In which of the following scenarios would a presidential veto most likely be upheld? A D C B.
“Con Law” It’s in the BudgetDecisions “Chief” among Equals Juris- diction Policy Points Mis-cell- any AP Government Jeopardy –
Final Review. What do the following have in common? Right to bear arms Freedom of speech Privacy rights No cruel and unusual punishment Bill of Rights.
Government Jeopardy StudentsTeachers Game Board SenatorsRepresentatives LegislativeExecutiveJudicial Limited Gov Grab Bag Government.
POLS 1101 FINAL REVIEW.
Government, Chapter 3 The Constitution
THE CONSTITUTION.
Final AP Review Flash Cards. Compare/contrast a direct democracy with an indirect democracy (republicanism).
CHAPTER 2 THE CONSTITUTION. I. ORIGINS OF THE CONSTITUTION: THE PROBLEM OF LIBERTY A. English heritage concept of limited government Magna Carta (1215)
CONGRESS TEST REVIEW. When members of Congress add special amendments to a routine bill this is called pork barrel politics.
U.S. Government Terms.
Final Jeopardy Question Early Years of our U.S. government Congress 100 VocabularySupreme Court Elections
AP Government Review Quiz Game. Question 1 What is the difference between a “democracy” and a “republic”?
Begin $100 $200 $300 $400 $500 Amendments Plus the Constitutions Court Cases House V. Senate Federalismcampaigns Voting and elections.
Overview of U.S. Constitutional Gov’t. Articles and Amendments U.S. Constitution consists of: 7 Articles – Art 1 Legis Branch Art 2 Exec Branch Art 3.
1 Chapter #3 Review. 2 Q: What is the main role of Congress? A: Make Laws.
Judicial Branch and Civil Liberties
Final Jeopardy Question Constitutional Underpinnings Political Beliefs / Behaviors / Media 100 Civil Rights / Civil Liberties Executive / Legislative.
Review Constitution. What is the Bill of Rights? First ten amendments to the Constitution which guarantee personal freedoms.
Begin $100 $200 $300 $400 $500 Key Terms Legislature CongressElections Political Parties/Media Misc.
Structure of the Constitution Articles 1-7– The Constitution as originally ratified 1. Legislative Branch (elastic clause – allows Congress to expand its.
Date: May 1, 2015 Topic: The “Practice Test” and the “2013 Test.” Aim: How can we learn from these tests and dominate the multiple choice on May 12 th.
Top 20 Topics. The Incumbency Advantage  Determines outcome of congressional elections  House incumbency is more important than Senate incumbency 
American Government Final Review. Theory behind US Government? Social Contract.
United States Government Risk. What amendments guarantee due process?? 5 and 14.
Goal 2 Review What you MUST know about the Constitution and the National Government.
The Constitution of the United States of America.
TAKS REVIEW: Forging a New Government. Articles of Confederation Weaknesses Summarization 8.4C Strengths
THE CONSTITUTION HISTORY, STRUCTURE, AND PRINCIPLES.
By Mr. Sutton. Basics of Democracy:  The Enlightenment Thinkers:  influence American democracy  Key: John Locke, Montesquieu  Federalist Papers: 
1 AP US Government & Politics Unit I ~ Constitutional Underpinnings JEOPARDY.
American Government Final Review. Theory behind US Gov’t.? Social Contract.
Date: January 24, 2013 Topic: Mid-Term Review. Aim: How can we successfully review for our mid-term exam? Do Now: Multiple Choice Questions.
THE CONSTITUTION.  Section 1: Structure and Principles  The Constitution is divided in to three parts – the Preamble, articles, and amendments.  Preamble.
CONSTITUTION REVIEW Theories of Government  Force  Social Contract  Evolutionary  Divine Right.
The Judicial Branch. United States v other nations Only in the U.S. do judges play such a large role in policy-making. Judicial Review- the right of federal.
Miss Butcher Aim: How do we review the US constitution for the regents exam? Do Now: 1. Have your review sheets and vocabulary on your desk to be graded.
Unit 1 Philosophical & Historical Origins of the Constitution & Government.
Major Topic Review 1 st 9 Weeks. Court Cases 1. Marbury v. Madison 2. McCulloch v. Maryland 3. Gibbons v. Ogden 4. Dred Scott v. Sanford 5. Plessy v.
100 Political Beginnings Major Concepts ConstitutionFederalismPolitical Parties
Begin $100 $200 $300 $400 $500 C1-$100 - $100 Constitutional sharing of power between a central government and state governments federalism.

The United States Government Review. Shay’s Rebellion was a factor leading to the Convention being called After the colonies gained independence, the.
United States Constitution 101 Constitution 101: An Introduction & Overview to the US Constitution.
LECTURE #1: Introduction to U.S. Government & Politics Derrick J. Johnson, MPA, JD Advanced Placement United States Government & Politics, School for Advanced.
CONSTITUTIONAL UNDERPINNINGS NEED TO KNOW : Unit 1.
1 US GOVERNMENT CBA REVIEW. 2 WORD, PERSON, or CONCEPT In your own wordsPicture or illustration.
Constitution JEOPARDY!!. Legislative Branch Judicial.
7. Problems arising under the Articles of Confederation led to debate over the adoption of the U.S. Constitution.
Government Basketball It’s a review… and it’s basketball!
A Vocabulary Review Activity Ready to play? Pendleton Civil Service Reform Act federal law established in 1883 that stipulated that government jobs.
U.S. Constitution Legislative Branch Executive Branch.
UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT and POLITICS
The Judicial Branch.
Test Tips.
Final Grudge Ball Units 1-5.
Unit 2: Foundations of US Government The Constitution
Government, Chapter 3 The Constitution.
Branches of Government Review
3.3 THE CONSTITUTION PREAMBLE AND ARTICLES.
Final Exam Review.
Unit 2 – U.S. Constitution Objective 1 Analyze the structure and flexibility of the Constitution. Objective 2 Evaluate the principles of democracy and.
The Principles of the United States Constitution
Government, Chapter 3 The Constitution.
Philosophical & Historical Origins of the Constitution & Government
AP Government Review Topics to Know.
AP U.S. Government & Politics
Presentation transcript:

AP Test Review

2 part test – PART I - 60 MC – 45 MINUTES – Part II = 4 Free Response – 100 MINUTES – Each part is worth 50 percent of your grade

Let’s Break it Down Constitution Political Beliefs and Behaviors Pol Parties, Int Grps, Mass Media Cong, Pres, Bureaucracy, Fed Crts Public Policy Civil Rights and Liberties

Grades 1 to a 5 Mult Choice 5 – % 4 – % 3 – % 2 – % 1 – %

Last Minute Study Guide 1. Review the Big Ideas 2. Review the Test Taking Tips 3. Take a practice Test 4. Be Prepared

Study Sites Cram for the Exam 2013

Big Ideas Federalism – Dual vs. Cooperative/fiscal – McCulloch v. Maryland, 1819 Nat Gov’t reg interstate commerce

Big Ideas Separation of Powers – Legislative/Executive/Judicial – No one branch intended to dominate American Government

Big Ideas Checks an Balances – Prevent tyranny – Know at least two way a branch can counteract another branch – War powers Act - Uncon

Big Ideas Constitution and Limited Government – “Constitutionalism” – Replaced Articles of Confed – “Bundle of Compromises” – CT Comp, Electoral College, Commerce and Slave trade – LESSAS 9/13

Big Ideas Bill of Rights and Civil Liberties – Part of Con in 1791 – 1-10 – 14 TH “Amend Due Process Clause” – SC used this clause to incorporate the rights in the B of R to the States, Gitlow vs. NY, st case

Big Ideas Freedom of Expression – 1 st Amend – Speech – verbal and symbolic – Not absolute – can be denied if – endangers National security/obscene/false(libel & slander)

Big Ideas Freedom of Religion – Establishment Clause – Engel v. Vitale – Free Exercise Clause – Wisconsin v. Yoder – Lemon Test

Big Ideas Equal Rights – 14th Amend – “equal protection clause” – 13/14/15 Amends – Civil War Amends – Plessy/Brown v. Board – Civil Rights Act of 1964 – Voting Rights Act 1965 – 19/24/26 Amend

Big Ideas The Legislative Process – Bill – Committees Standing Conference – Filibuster/cloture - Senate

Big Ideas Presidential Leadership – Bully pulpit – Activist president

Big Ideas Federal Bureaucracy – Bureaus/Depts/administrations/commissions/ agencies – Civil service system – Cabinet – Independent regulatory agencies

Big Ideas Independent Judiciary – Jurisdiction – Rule of 4 – writ of certiorari – Stare decisis – Judicial restraint ( decide case based on precedent and defer to elected leaders to make policy) v. Judicial activism ( courts should take action when elected leaders have failed) – Warren Court ( ) activist court

Big Ideas Majority Rule – Representative democracy – “republic” – Government should be the “will of the people” – Minority rights have to be respected Rule of 4 filibuster

Big Ideas Elections – Presidential elections – every 4 years Midterms – lower voter turnout – State make election laws Registration Ballot access – Primary Elections Open/Closed/Blanket – $$$$ - Media Events – Swing State/Swing voters

Big Ideas Two Party System – Dem – Repub since Civil War – Left v. Right coalitions – Third Parties Hurt by winner take all and single member districts – Parties in decline – more independents

Big Ideas Electoral College and Presidential Selection – Caucuses/Primaries – convention – national election – Electoral college – inauguration – 538 electors – 270 to win – Winner take all – Swing states – 2000 election

Big Ideas Interest Groups - pluralism – “pressure groups” – “special interest” AARP/NAACP/PETA/AFL-CIO/NRA – Lobbying - negative connotation – but can provide info testify, campaign $ – Influence public

Basic Test Taking Strategies If you don’t know answer start by eliminating choices Answer every question Be careful on the answer sheet Mark up the test booklet Pace yourself

Basic Test Taking Strategies Free Response – Think first and then write – Read the entire question – Decide the number of responses needed – Outline your response before writing – Answer all parts to the question – Guess even when you don’t know – Write legibly and coherently

Grades 1 to a 5 Mult Choice 5 – % 4 – % 3 – % 2 – % 1 – %

Mastering Multiple Choice Straight forward question – find the best choice(1) (41) The negative question – Which of the following is NOT…(2) (42) – Looking for the “wrong” answer – Plug the answer back into the question

Mastering Multiple Choice The Chart or Graph question(10)(40) – About 6-9 questions on the test – Big question – trends – Specific questions - compare – Interpret the chart first – If you don’t understand skip and comeback later – Pay attention to labels

Mastering Multiple Choice The Multiple Choice within a Multiple Choice Question(18)(36) – Expect 3 to 5 questions on the test – Take the time to be careful with this confusing question – Read all the Roman numeral choice and circle the statements that are correct

Mastering Multiple Choice The Political Cartoon Question – Expect one question – Interpret the cartoon

Mastering the Free Response Describe Define Explain Identify Identify and Explain Define and Explain “Identify and explain two reasons voter turnout is considerably lower in midterm elections than presidential elections”

Mastering Multiple Choice Make sure to provide enough responses to a question… you can give more. The Your Choice Questions Choose two of the three Supreme Court decisions below and describe how each of the decisions expanded a constitutional right of privacy – Griswold v. Connecticut – Roe v. Wade – Lawrence v. Texas

Mastering Multiple Choice The Essay question with a Table or Graph – Look at graph or table to get a general understanding – Pay attention to labels

Key Terms Amendment Articles of Confederation Checks and Balances Constitution Constitutional Convention ‘Declaration of Independence Democracy Executive Branch Federalist papers Great Compromise Judicial Branch Legislative Branch Limited Government

Key Terms Natural Rights Popular sovereignty Ratification (federalist v. Antifederalists) Republic Separation of Powers Social Contract

Key Terms Concurrent Powers Cooperative Federalism Devolution Dual Federalism Enumerated powers Federalism Fiscal federalism Implied Powers Interstate Commerce clause Necessary and Proper Clause Reserved powers Supremacy Clause mandates

Key Terms Bicameral Bill Caucus Cloture Conferences committee Congressional Committee System Congressional district Earmarks Filibuster Gerrymandering Impeachment Incumbent Open seat Pork barrel

Reapportionment Redistricting Rider Safe seat Sonority system 17 th Amendment Vacant seat War Powers Act

Key Terms Administrative law Cabinet Civil service system Departments Discretionary spending Entitlements programs Executive Office of the President Executive order Executive privilege Federal budget Federal bureaucracy Fiscal power Independent regulatory agency Mandatory spending Monetary policy Presidential veto

Key Terms The presidents “bully pulpit” 25 th Amendment 22 nd Amendment Vice president

Key Terms Amicus Curiae briefs Appellate jurisdiction Brief Civil law Concurring opinion Criminal law Dissenting opinion Judicial activism Judicial restraint Judicial Review Jurisdiction Majority opinion Original jurisdiction

Key Terms Precedent Supreme Court Us Court of appeals Writ of certiorari Writ of habeas corpus

Key Terms Bill of Rights Cruel and unusual punishment Due process clause Due process of law Eminent domain Establishment clause Exclusionary rule Free exercise clause Freedom of expression Miranda rule Prior restraint Rights of the accused – 5 th amendment Right to bear arms – District of Columbia v. Heller, 2008 Right to privacy – Griswold v. Connecticut, 1965

Key Terms Symbolic speech Unreasonable search and seizure Affirmative action Civil Rights Act of 1964 Disenfranchisement Equal Protection Clause – 14 th 15 th Amend Literacy test 19 th Amend Poll tax Racial segregation (de facto, de jure) 13 th Amendment Voting Rights Act 1965

Key Terms Blanket primary Closed primary Electoral college Electoral realignment General election Midterm elections Minor parties/third parties National convention Open Primary Caucuses Political party Primary election Ticket splitting Two party system Grass roots lobbying Interest group Iron triangle

Key Terms Lobbying Lobbyist Pluralism Political Action committee (PAC) Political gridlock Capitalism Ideology Liberal/Conservative Libertarianism Political apathy Political culture Political efficacy Political socialization Socialism