The Bill of Rights First 10 Amendments. Reason… States would not ratify Constitution until individual & states’ rights were guaranteed Limit power of.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
The first ten amendments to the Constitution of the United States.
Advertisements

The First Ten Amendments By Jacob Quintieri
Bill of Rights Constitutional Amendments 1-10 Chapters 5 & 6.
Bill of Rights the first 10 amendments
THE BILL OF RIGHTS TO THE TUNE OF “HERE WE GO THE MULBERRY BUSH”
The Bill of Rights First 10 Amendments to the U.S. Constitution.
First Amendment. free exercise of religion, freedom of speech, of the press, peaceably assemble, to petition the government for a redress of grievances.
Amendment: (noun) a change made to a law or document Founders wanted Constitution to be a “living document” (able to evolve with the nation) Making changes.
The Constitution of the United States. This is the Preamble (or introduction) of the Constitution.
Understanding the Bill of Rights
BILL OF RIGHTS.
The Bill of Rights The first 10 amendments to the U. S. Constitution ©2012, TESCCC 10/21/12page 1 of 9.
Week of 4/26- 4/30 The United States Constitution.
The Bill Of Rights The First Ten Amendments to the Constitution
Bill of Rights First 10 Amendments of the Constitution.
The Bill of Rights.
Civics- Chapter 4 The Bill of Rights. Amendment # 1 The First amendment to the Constitution protects five basic freedoms: freedom of religion, freedom.
Bill of Rights United States of America. What is a right? A right is the freedom to act without the permission of others. Protects the people from the.
Complete your chart with the help of this Power Point.
1. How did the Federalists and Anti-Federalists view government differently? 2. What were the Anti-Federalists afraid of?
THE FIRST 10 AMENDMENTS TO THE U.S. CONSTITUTION.
United States Bill of Rights. First Amendment Freedom of religion, press, speech; right to peaceably assemble and petition the government. Congress shall.
Constitutional Roots  By 1790, all 13 original states ratified the Constitution  Many people did not believe the Constitution did enough to protect.
Bill of Rights. What are your First Amendment Rights? Freedom of Right to Peacefully ________ Right to _____________the Government.
THE BILL OF RIGHTS.
Constitutional Roots  By 1790, all 13 original states ratified the Constitution  Many people did not believe the Constitution did enough to protect.
Bill of Rights. The bill of Rights are the first 10 amendments of the United States Constitution. Pushed by Patrick Henry. Made as a protection to the.
Get ready for a WOD. WOD Bill of Rights Definition The first ten amendments to the US Constitution. It was created to list the rights that certain Framers.
Bill of Rights The First 10 Amendments to the U.S. Constitution.
THE BILL OF RIGHTS The First Ten Amendments. FIRST AMENDMENT Guarantees freedom of religion, speech, press, assembly, and petition.
The Bill of Rights What you need to know for the test ~ Packet Page 16 You will be writing down the parts of the amendment that you will need to know for.
The Bill of Rights The first 10 Amendments are known as the “Bill of Rights” These Amendments were ratified in 1791.
PROTECTIONS IN THE BILL OF RIGHTS Civics 6-2. Bill Of Rights (1791) How the Federalists got the Anti-Federalists to ratify the Constitution First 10 amendments.
The U.S. Constitution The U.S Constitution established a limited government based on power shared between the national and state governments. The U.S Constitution.
Other Guarantees in the Bill of Rights The Constitution describes the powers of the national government.
First Amendment  Freedom of speech  Freedom of religion  Freedom of the press  Freedom to assemble  Right to petition.
United States Constitution The Bill of Rights (First Ten Amendments)
 -Freedom of Religion  -Freedom of Assembly  - Freedom of Press  - Freedom of Petition  - Freedom of Speech.
Individual Rights The rights of the people protected in the Bill of Rights including: Economic rights related to property Political rights related to.
Amendments 1 through 10 The Bill of Rights.
1 st Amendment -Freedoms Speech Press Religion Assembly Petition.
Individual Rights The rights of the people protected in the Bill of Rights including: Economic rights related to property Political rights related to freedom.
Understanding the Bill of Rights
The Bill of Rights Chapter 4.
The Bill of Rights   The Bill of Rights are the first 10 amendments to the ___________________. The idea behind the Bill of Rights was to insure certain.
The First 10 Amendments to the Constitution.
The first 10 amendments to the Constitution
Bill of Rights.
Pick up papers as you walk in..
Bill of Rights Constitutional Amendments 1-10
US Bill of Rights USH-1.5.
The Bill of Rights Constitution allows for changes (amendments) – first ten known as the Bill of Rights protect people from gov’t Bill of Rights ratified.
Understanding the Bill of Rights
THE BILL OF RIGHTS Notes 1-6.
Complete your chart with the help of this Power Point.
The Bill of Rights Past Experiences Shaped the Writing
Bill of Rights: The first 10 Amendments to the US Constitution
The First TEN Amendments to the Constitution Passed in 1791
First 10 Amendments The Bill of Rights.
Bill of Rights.
Bill of Rights.
Article V & the Bill of Rights
The Bill of Rights.
Changes to the New Constitution
Bill of Rights.
The Bill of Rights.
Bill of Rights Amendments 1-10.
CH4 THE BILL OF RIGHTS THE 27 AMENDMENTS
--United States Constitution, First Amendment
US Bill of Rights USH-1.5.
Presentation transcript:

The Bill of Rights First 10 Amendments

Reason… States would not ratify Constitution until individual & states’ rights were guaranteed Limit power of government Protect civil liberties of individuals * Rights are NOT ABSOLUTE…limited by the rights of other individuals.

First Amendment Freedom of… –Religion –Speech –The press –Peaceable assembly –Petition the government

Jefferson’s Statute for Religious Freedom was a forerunner to the 1 st Amendment’s right to religious choice Separation of church & state –Secular vs. Religious –Tax exemption of religious organizations

Second Amendment Keep and bear arms & state militias

Third Amendment No quartering of soldiers without consent of homeowner

Fourth Amendment No unreasonable search & seizure –warrant – probable cause –specific place to be searched & person or things to be seized.

Fifth Amendment Rights of the accused in criminal cases –Can’t be held without grand jury indictment for specific crime –No “double jeopardy” –No witness against oneself (remain silent) (protects against self-incrimination…“I claim the 5 th ”). –Can’t deprive life, liberty or property without due process of law –Gov’t can’t take private property without paying fair price

Sixth Amendment Speedy, public trial in criminal cases Accused must be told the charges against him/her Must be allowed a lawyer

Seventh Amendment Preserves right to a trial by jury in civil cases where the complaint exceeds $20.00

Eighth Amendment Prohibits excessive bail or fines No cruel & unusual punishment

Ninth Amendment Gives rights not specifically mentioned in the Constitution to the people (So gov’t can’t say people only have rights listed in the Bill of Rights)

Tenth Amendment Reserves non-delegated powers to the states (balance between national & state power)

U.S. Supreme Court Judicial Review & set precedents

You be the judge… Which of the first 10 Amendments do you think is the most important; why? (Ranking on W.S.) Which one do you think impacts you the most? The least? Why? 10 Guilty go free or 1 innocent in prison?

Supreme Court Cases 1.Tinker v. Des Moines 2.Engel v. Vitale 3. Plessy v. Ferguson 4. Brown v. Board of Ed. of Topeka Kansas **Precedent setting cases 5. Gideon v. Wainwright 6. Miranda v. Arizona 7. Brandenburg v. Ohio **landmarkcases.org

Directions… 1.) Silently read & highlight your research 2.) Recorder is going to copy the information from the directions page onto the notebook paper. (Be sure to use all of the labels like– Name of case: and Summary of background leading to the case: ) 3.) Some of the sentence frames will need to be adjusted depending on your case. (They do not need to be EXACTLY like the directions). 4.) Complete up to “This case still applies…” today & finish the remainder next class. 5.) Reporter needs to be prepared to share and explain your case during our next class.

Last name, first Period U.S. Supreme Court Landmark Case Name of Case:Date: Summary of background leading to the case: (1-2 sentences) Constitutional Issue: (Amendment # & or Const issue) Court’s Decision: In the case of ____________v. __________________, the U.S. Supreme Court decided in favor of ___________________ which means that they (upheld / overturned) ____________ ______________________________________. )