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Warm Up – January 10 Answer the following questions on a post it:
What is an executive order? What is the difference between civil and criminal law? What is preponderance of evidence? What kind of case would it apply to? What is burden of proof? What kind of case would it apply to? Describe two differences between adult and juvenile court
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Civics and Economics Final Exam Review
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Civics and Economics Final Exam
Monday – January 14th – 10:00 in this room 38 Multiple Choice Questions (43 total but 5 do not count towards your score) 20% of your Final Grade TOMORROW – Practice Exam
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Question 1 But when a long train of abuses and usurpations, pursuing invariably the same Object evinces a design to reduce them under absolute Despotism, it is their right, it is their duty, to throw off such Government, and to provide new Guards for their future security. - The Declaration of Independence 27. According to this excerpt, what condition is sufficient cause for people to form a new government? A. Citizens become disappointed with election results. B. Government becomes the major employer. C. Citizens become apathetic to the laws. D. Government becomes oppressive to its citizens
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Question 2 How can the Federal Reserve Board discourage inflation?
A. by limiting the amount of money one person can borrow at a time B. by setting the maximum number of loans a bank can issue in a year C. by raising the interest rate member banks pay on borrowed money D. by reducing the amount of money the federal government is allowed to borrow
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Question 3 Why do responsible consumers use credit or credit cards?
A. to make minor purchases without using cash B. to obtain the highest amount of points on a mortgage C. to avoid mortgage insurance when buying a home D. to establish a good credit score for getting a loan
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Question 4 A man claims that he paid $450 for a lawn mower he never received. In which court should he sue to collect his money, and who should he bring suit against? A. small claims court, against the seller B. appeals court, against the manufacturer C. superior court, against the Federal Trade Commission D. tax court, against the Internal Revenue Service
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Question 5 Which expenditure would be paid solely by the federal government as opposed to state or local governments? A. a firing range on an army base B. a new public school C. a sidewalk repair in a major city D. a community recreation center
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Create a Final Exam Quizizz
Using the final exam study guide on sagercivics.weebly.com under January 3 - create a final exam review quizizz 21 questions total - 3 questions per unit (7 units total) – 4 answer choices each per questions Go to quizizz.com – click sign up Sign up with google or your school Select that you are a teacher Fill in the information required Create a new quizizz Title it “Civics Final Exam Review”
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Final Exam Board Game Grading
On the Index card… 1. Write the group number 2. Grade each game based on the following: 1. Questions (do they have 35 questions, are their answers correct, do you think their questions are a good review of the unit they covered) – 25 PTS. 2. Presentation (is the board in color, are their directions in color/printed, does the game look like they put time and effort in) – 25 PTS. 3. Creativity (is there an original idea to their game) – 25 PTS. 4. Overall Quality of the Game – 25 PTS. Add up and circle the TOTAL Number of points out of 100
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TOD – January 10 Tinker v. Des Moines Hazelwood v. Kuhlmeier
Answer the following questions on the same sheet of paper as the warm up: Describe the precedent set in each of the following cases: Tinker v. Des Moines Hazelwood v. Kuhlmeier Mapp v. Ohio TLO v. New Jersey Marbury v. Madison Engel v. Vitale Escobedo v. Illinois Texas v. Johnson Gideon v. Wainwright
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Supreme Court Cases Tinker v. Des Moines - right to free speech applies to school (students are allowed to protest the Vietnam War) Hazelwood v. Kuhlmeier – schools can censor their own newspapers Mapp v. Ohio – authorities require a search warrant to enter a private residence TLO v. New Jersey - Schools do not need a search warrant to search students belongings Marbury v. Madison - established principle of judicial review Engel v. Vitale - students would recite the pledge and a prayer, violated freedom of religion Escobedo v. Illinois - established that the accused must know that they are allowed to speak to their lawyers Texas v. Johnson - US cannot prohibit freedom of speech in regards to protection of American emblems (the flag) Gideon v. Wainwright- Right to an attorney
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