Warm Up – February 20 Answer the following questions on a post it:

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Government Unit 3 Amendments
Advertisements

Constitution 101: An Introduction & Overview to the US Constitution.
Constitutional Amendments
Amendments Chapter 4 Section 3. Amendments Video.
The Amendments Directions: Find the stupid commas! By: Chasen Sherman and Gavin Mack.
Amendments to the U.S. Constitution. 11 th Amendment First amendment created after the original ten (The Bill of Rights) Came after the decision.
The 27 Amendments Amendments th Amendment This amendment provides immunity of states from certain lawsuits. In other words it protects states.
Amending the U.S. Constitution Objective Proposal  Vote of 2/3 of members of both houses Or  By national convention called at the request of 2/3.
Amendments th Amendment (1795)- No citizen can sue a state in federal court without its consent 12th Amendment (1804)- Electors in Electoral.
Extending the Bill of Rights Amendments
Chapter 7 Section 1 The Amendments 13 th Amendment Abolition of slavery
Category Heading Category Heading Category Heading.
Amendments More Amendments Still more amendments.
Amendments Amending the U.S. Constitution. Proposal [ask to create]  Vote of 2/3 of members of both houses Or  By national convention.
The Amendments Mr. Gritman’s Honors History.
Amendments ALL 17 OF THESE AMENDMENTS WERE PROPOSED BY A 2/3 VOTE IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES AND THE US SENATE NONE OF THE 17 AMENDMENTS THAT.
True or False An individual can sue the state in federal court.
Amendments to the U.S. Constitution The 11 th Amendment Citizen of one state can't sue another state in federal court. Immunity of states from.
Amendments
Extending the Bill of Rights Amendments The Other Amendments The first 10 amendments, or the Bill of Rights, were added to the Constitution in.
Starter Briefly describe each amendment in the Bill of Rights Briefly describe each amendment in the Bill of Rights.
Constitutional Amendments If text is in red, you don’t need to write it down.
11-27 AMENDMENTS.  Federal courts do not have jurisdiction in cases against a state  People of one state who want to sue people of another state cannot.
U.S. Constitution The Rest of the Amendments. 11 th Amendment A state may only be sued by people within that state. States may not sue one another. Other.
Amendments Goal C&G.2.6: Specify how the U.S. Constitution can be changed and analyze the impact of specific changes.
Warm-up 1. What are 4 major principles of the Constitution? 2. What are the 5 freedoms in the 1 st Amendment? 3. Why was the Bill of Rights added to the.
 Established each states sovereignty immunity.  States that the Supreme Court has the right to hear cases "between a state and citizens of another state."
Warm Up 1. What are the 5 parts of the 1 st amendment? 2. What is the 2 nd amendment? 3. Where does the 3 rd amendment come from?
2 nd Amendements The Right to Bear Arms 3 rd Amendment No forced housing of soldiers.
Extended Bill of Rights Goal 2. Eleventh Amendment  Placed limits on suits against states.
CHAPTER 8 Lesson 1 and 2 Review. POPULAR SOVEREIGNTY People Power People Power We The People We The People Elected Representative create a limited government.
American Government US Amendments. Amendment 11 Purpose limiting Federal Courts Year Ratified 1798 States people can not sue the states because they have.
Constitutional Amendments Learning Goal Students will be able to explain the amendments to the Constitution.
Changes to the Constitution Amendments Amendment 11 Lawsuits Against States 1798 A state government cannot be sued in federal court by a private.
Amendments to the U.S. Constitution
Chapter 4 - Beyond the Bill of Rights
Chapter 4 - Beyond the Bill of Rights
Amendments
Government Unit 10 Amendments 11-27
Its Wednesdays!! Get out your Amendments List and finish it from the wall 5 minutes. Reminder: History of Life due Thursday! Test Monday Spiral needed.
27 Amendments Amendment 1: Freedom of Religion…….
Warm-Up Should students be allowed to display the Confederate flag in school? Take out your HW and worksheet from yesterday.
Tuesday, February 14th BoR Notes today amendments Current Events.
Constitutional Amendments
Amendment Review 1-27 First 10 Amendments make-up the Bill of Rights.
Chapter 7 Our Enduring Constitution
Chapter 6 - Beyond the Bill of Rights
Amendments to the U.S. Constitution
Extending the Bill of Rights Amendments
AMENDMENT 11 Suits against States: Lawsuits against states may not be tried in federal court AMENDMENT 12 Changed Electoral College: Electors cast separate.
Extending the Bill of Rights Amendments
OTHER RIGHTS OF THE CONSTITUTION
Due Process.
Amendments
The U. S. Constitution Amendments
Chapter 4 - Beyond the Bill of Rights
Bell Work Get out your notes
Constitutional Amendments
Chapter 6 - Beyond the Bill of Rights
CE Notes Constitutional Amendments!.
Amendments Chapter 4 Section 3.
What amendment gave African –Americans the right to vote?
UNIT 7 AMENDMENTS 11 THROUGH 27 MR. dickerson.
Amendments
Chapter 4 - Beyond the Bill of Rights
Constitutional Amendments
Constitutional Amendments
Adding to the Bill of Rights
Quiz Video Amendments 11-27
OTHER AMENDMENTS NOTES.
Presentation transcript:

Warm Up – February 20 Answer the following questions on a post it: 1. What are the six principles of the Constitution? 2. What rights are protected by the 1st and 2nd Amendments? 3. Which British Action was the third amendment a direct response to? 4. What is due process? 5. Which amendments protect the rights of the accused? 6. What is the purpose of the 9th Amendment? 7. What term describes the 10th amendment reserving powers to the states that are not given to the federal government?

Federalism Reading 1. Define Federalism Download the Federalism Reading from today’s date on my website and answer the following questions on the same post it as the warm up: 1. Define Federalism 2. What were the framers of the Constitution determined to create? 3. What does Article 1, Section 10 do in regards to states’ powers? What areas does it gives states powers to? Which amendment corrected this reduction in power? 4. What is dual sovereignty? 5. What examples does the reading provide that are concurrent powers or “cooperative federalism”?

Unit 2: The Constitution Amendments 11 - 27

11th Amendment - 1795 Places limits on an individual’s right to sue states.

12th Amendment - 1804 Electoral College must cast separate votes for president and vice president. Prior to being passed the losing presidential Candidate became Vice President

13th Amendment - 1865 Prohibits/abolishes slavery

14th Amendment - 1868 Defines “Citizenship” All people born or naturalized in the United States Extended citizenship to blacks Equal protection under law and due process

15th Amendment - 1870 Extended voting rights to all citizens regardless of race Additional Information: 13th, 14th, 15th amendments are considered the Reconstruction Amendments

16th Amendment - 1913 Federal Income tax

17th Amendment People directly elect U.S. Senators Additional Information: Senators were previously chosen by state legislatures

18th Amendment - 1919 Prohibits sale and distribution of alcohol

19th Amendment - 1920 Women’s suffrage Right to vote

20th Amendment - 1933 Establishes when the presidential and congressional terms are to begin and end

21st Amendment - 1933 Repealed prohibition

22nd Amendment - 1951 Limits president to only 2 terms in office

23rd Amendment - 1961 Allows the residents of Washington, D.C. to vote in presidential elections Additional Information: Wash DC receives 3 electoral college votes

24th Amendment - 1964 Bans poll taxes Additional Information: Poll Taxes – passed after Civil War to prevent African Americans from voting

25th Amendment - 1967 Establishes the presidential succession

26th Amendment - 1971 Lowered the voting age from 21 to 18.

27th Amendment - 1992 If Congress votes itself a pay increase, that increase cannot take effect until after the next election.

TOD – February 20 Answer the following questions on the same post it as the warm up: How has the constitution provided the government the ability to adjust to a changing society? What do you think is the difference between a right and a privilege? How have constitutional amendments changed suffrage rights throughout US History? Which Amendments are related to voting rights? Which amendments are considered the Reconstruction Amendments? Which constitutional/legal protections provide “equal protection” to all citizens? Use an amendment to support your answer.