American Population -late 1700’s less than 4 million people -today over 300 million -what caused the growth? immigration birthrate What are times when.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
DO NOW! Come in and grab worksheets and a textbook.
Advertisements

The Path to Citizenship
Rights and Responsibilities of Citizenship
Immigration and Citizenship. Citizen A citizen is a member of a community who owes loyalty to the government and is entitled to protection from it.
Section 2.  The 14 th Amendment defines a U.S. citizen. - born in the U.S. - Naturalization – for foreigners who choose to become citizens.
Chapter 1 Section 2. 2 ways to become a U.S. citizen 1.By being born in the U.S. 2.By going through the process of naturalization Who is in charge of.
US Citizenship. 2 ways to become a US Citizen: 1.Anyone born in the United States 2.Anyone “Naturalized” in the United States (Naturalization = Process.
Chapter 1 Section 2 The Path to Citizenship
Ch. 1 Section 2 The Path to Citizenship. Who are America’s Citizens? The U.S. Constitution establishes two ways to become a citizen: - by birth - by naturalization,
Government. The Path to Citizenship C1S2 Key Terms Naturalization: The legal process where foreigners decide to become citizens Alien: Noncitizens Immigrants:
Notes Chapter 1-2 The Path to Citizenship. Who is a citizen ? With few exceptions anyone born in the U. S., Washington D.C., and U.S. Territories. Children.
CHAPTER 1.2/1.3 AMERICAN CITIZENSHIP 101. WHAT ARE SOME BENEFITS OF BEING AN AMERICAN CITIZEN? My ideas Rights Freedoms Protection A voice – VOTE Education.
We the People 1787 fewer than 4 million people in 13 states 1800 over 5 million people in 17 states 2006 about 296 million people in 50 states.
Rights and Responsibilities of Citizenship. Who is an American citizen?
1/31 THURSDAY TOTD: Out of the duties we learned yesterday, which should be a responsibility? Explain. Out of the responsibilities listed, which do you.
GOVERNMENT AND CITIZENSHIP
Welcome Welcome You will need your Chapter 1 Outline and something to write with for today’s lesson. Write in your learning goal sheet : Students will.
Immigration Unit Unit Question: Should the U.S. welcome all those who wish to come?
American Citizenship Do Now: Take Citizenship Quiz.
Random Fact of the Day On average, women utter approximately 7,000 words a day; men manage just over 2,000 On average, women utter approximately 7,000.
Chapter 1.2 The Path to Citizenship. Who are America’s Citizens?  The U.S. Constitution establishes two ways to become a citizen: by birth and, for foreigners,
 Citizens are people with rights and certain responsibilities to a government.  Every country has rules about how to gain citizenship.  In the US there.
What is Civics? American Citizenship. What is Civics? Study of the rights and duties of Citizens Every American Citizen has rights and responsibilities.
People of the United States enjoy special privileges because they are citizens. The United States grants citizenship to people through the following three.
CIVICS The study of the rights, duties, and responsibilities of members of a state or nation. Analyzes the interaction between citizens and their government.
Review for Test. What type of government does the U.S have? Representative Democracy: citizens delegate authority to elected representatives.
CitizenCitizenship Odds and Ends- Mixed BagGovernment.
Chapter 1 Section 2 1/13/14. I. Who are America’s Citizens? A. Two ways to become a citizen: 1.by birth 2.for foreigners, by a legal process called naturalization.
1.2 The Path to Citizenship. 1. Citizenship – by birth - by naturalization process.
The Path to Citizenship Chapter 1-2 Pgs Key Terms O Naturalization – a legal process in which foreigners become citizens. O Alien – a noncitizen.
Path to Citizenship September 30, Paths to become U.S. Citizen 1.By Birth Born in U.S. State; U.S. territory; Washington D.C.; or military base.
A.a. Europec.Latin America b.b. Asiad.none of the above Bellringer: Answer the question below and write two to three sentences on why you feel so many.
Citizenship Today’s Outline: –What’s Up –Website –State of the Union Address Assignment due Wednesday –Schedule for the week Monday – Citizenship Tuesday.

PROUD TO BE AN AMERICAN Unit 1. CITIZENSHIP Citizen- an official member of a country  If you are born in the U.S., you are automatically a U.S. citizen.
Bellwork  Why do you think we need a government?.
Directions: Copy this screen in your learning log. Learning Log Entry (Part 1 of 4) What are we learning today? 1. How is US citizenship obtained?
American Citizens Foundations of United States Citizenship Lesson 2, Chapter 6, Civics1.
American Citizenry.  US citizenship is defined in the _?_ Amendment. “All persons born or naturalized in the US are citizens of the US.” 1. Law of the.
Who are American Citizens? What is the Path to Citizenship?
Unit 1 Who are American Citizens?. I. Americans are from Everywhere a.People from ALL AROUND THE WORLD settled here in the U.S. b.They have brought different.
Warm-up Who is a citizen? Who is a citizen? How does a person become a citizen? How does a person become a citizen?
American Population -late 1700’s less than 4 million people -today nearly 300 million -what caused the growth? immigration birthrate.
Citizenship Notes 1.2
Unit 1 Day 3, Citizenship, Who are Americans?. Answer the following: 1.Describe who can be a citizen of the U.S. 2.Explain and evaluate the steps in the.
1. American Population a. Late 1700’s nearly 4 million b. Today over 300 million c. What caused the Growth? Immigration Birthrate, death rate Medicines.
American Population -late 1700’s less than 4 million people -today nearly 300 million -what caused the growth? immigration birthrate.
UNIT 1 Foundations of American Citizenship. What is civics?  Civics is the study of the rights and duties of citizens.  Rights- privileges guaranteed.
CITIZENSHIP What is civics? What is civics? What is civics? What is civics? Rights Rights Rights Duties Duties Duties Responsibilities Responsibilities.
Warm-up Take out your signed Syllabus for teacher to check
Odds and Ends- Citizen Citizenship Government Mixed Bag
Bell Ringer ***IN YOUR NOTEBOOK
Chapter Three (Section Two) “Becoming a Citizen”
GOVERNMENT CHAPTER 21.
Citizenship Notes Page 2
Chapter 1 Foundations of American Citizenship
Who are American Citizens? What is the Path to Citizenship?
The Path to Citizenship
EQ: How can people become citizens of the U.S.?
WHO ARE AMERICA’S CITIZENS?
“Becoming a Citizen”.
Wednesday, August 24 SSL Parent Verification Forms are due today! Please have these out. You will need your Chapter 1 Outline and something to write with.
“Becoming a Citizen”.
“Becoming a Citizen”.
Bellringer: Answer the question below and write two to three sentences on why you feel so many immigrants come from that country to the U.S. More immigrants.
Chapter Three (Section Two) “Becoming a Citizen”
“Becoming a Citizen”.
Government in Society Citizenship.
Bellringer “It is the State which educates its citizens in civic virtue, gives them a consciousness of their mission and welds them into unity.” In 3 to.
The Path to Citizenship
Presentation transcript:

American Population -late 1700’s less than 4 million people -today over 300 million -what caused the growth? immigration birthrate What are times when birthrates have risen?

Citizenship -What is a citizen? A person who legally belongs to the United States -two ways to become a citizen -born a citizen -through naturalization: a process to become a citizen of a person not born to the US

Citizen By Birth -Citizenship by Birth -born anywhere in any part of the United States -If your parents are citizens no matter where you were born -possible to be a dual citizen at birth - Military families

Naturalization -naturalization -5 requirements -file an intent form -live in U.S. for 5 years -be 18 years old -take naturalization test -take citizenship oath

Naturalization -naturalization -5 requirements -file an intent form -live in U.S. for 5 years -be 18 years old -take naturalization test -take citizenship oath

Naturalization What are downfalls of this process? -Expensive -Long -Often seems impossible

Legal Aliens -Legal alien: citizen of one country who lives in another country -immigrant: People who move from one country to make their homes in another -have written permission to be in the U.S. Visa / Green Card- Formal permission for a non-citizen to be in a nation -can’t vote or hold public office -have same legal rights as citizens

Legal Aliens -Legal alien -immigrant vs. MIGRANT (moving within the same country -have written permission to be in the U.S. Visa / Green Card- Formal permission for a non-citizen to be in a nation -can’t vote or hold public office -have same legal rights as citizens

Illegal Aliens -Illegal Aliens: immigrants who entered a country to live there in an illegal way Examples? -can not do anything legally in the U.S. vote, hold office, work -can be deported if found -The process of being expelled from a nation -why would someone come here if they would be an illegal alien???