Ms. Nielsen
South Pasadena High School
2016-2017
Advanced Placement American Government & Politics
Unit I: Constitutional Underpinnings of United States Government
Overview
The study of modern politics in the United States requires grounding in the Constitutional underpinnings of its government. In this unit, students examine the kind of government the Constitution established with particularattentiontofederalism and the separation of powers. Understanding these developments involves both knowledge of the historical situation at the time of the Constitutional Convention and a grasp of the ideological and philosophical traditions on which the framers drew.
Essential Questions
What are the fundamental ideas underlying democratic theory?
What is political power, and how is it actually distributed in the U.S.?
Has the federal government excessively encroached on state authority?
v Does federalism enhance effectiveness in government, or does it inhibit effectiveness in government?v Is the U.S. Constitution “broken”? Why or why not?v How can the U.S. Constitution be improved to address 21st century problems?
Topics and Text (Wilson) readings
- Theories of democratic government (Ch. 1, pp. 2-15)
- Considerations that influenced the formulation and adoption of the Constitution
(Ch. 2, pp. 16-41)
- Separation of Powers (Ch. 2, pp. 30-47)
- Federalism (Ch. 3, pp. 48-74)
Reading assignments (pages and due dates)
Reading#DayOdd Even PagesTopic
148/268/293-15Democracy and power
258/308/3113Initiative process
369/019/0216-27Creation of the Const.
479/069/0728-37Issues re: the Const.
589/089/09A26-A29Federalist #51
699/129/1337-47Const. issues part 2
7119/169/19handout ERA case study
8119/169/1949-54 Intro to federalism
9129/209/2155-59Fed/ism & sovereignty
10139/229/2359-65Federal-State relations
11149/269/2765-74Federal aid; devolution
121510/0110/02articleMotives of the framers
Key Terms/VocabularySee separate lists and definitions
Terms will be used/discussed in class and included on quizzes/test
Key Constitutional Clauses quiz: Class #15 (9/28 or 9/29)
Vocab quiz: Class #18 (10/06 or 10/07)
Supreme Court CasesMarbury v. Madison (individual; due class #10) (9/14 or 9/15)
McCulloch v. Maryland (group 1; due class #12) (9/20 or 9/21)
Barron v. Baltimore (group 2; due class #14) (9/26 or 9/27)
Case StudyThe Equal Rights Amendment (ERA)
Reading and class debate
Due: Class #11 (9/16 or 9/19)
Free Response QuestionIn-class practice
Class #15 (9/28 or 9/29)
Article ReviewRichard Hofstadter, The American Political Tradition
Reading due: Class #15 (9/28 or 9/29)
Paper due: Class #16 (9/30 or 10/03)
Inquiry ProjectNew Constitutional Convention: How can we improve the U.S. Constitution?
Two Constitutional proposals due: Class #13 (9/22 or 9/23)
Team planning and presentation time: Class #16-18 (9/30-10/06 or 10/03-10/07)
Key Constitutional ClausesClass #15 (9/28 or 9/29)
Quiz
Unit Vocabulary QuizClass #18 (10/06 or 10/07)
Unit Test 30 multiple-choice items
2 free response questions
Class #19 (10/10 or 10/11)
Unit Test review/scoringClass #20 (10/12 or 10/13)
Make Up Test1 FRQ
10/13 at lunch (all classes)
Mandatory make up time for anyone who is absent for test