Advanced Placement U.S. Government

Syllabus

Mr. Joel Hughes

  1. Course Purpose

The Advanced Placement U.S. Government course is a college level survey course. This course provides an opportunity for students to pursue and receive credit for their high school U.S. Government requirement and a semester of college credit (3 hours). This course is taught at the college level. Assignments, reading, and tests are at the college level. The national Advanced Placement exam will determine a student’s eligibility to receive college credit.

  1. Course Description

The Advanced Placement course in American Government is designed to give students a critical perspective on politics and government in the U.S. This course involves both the study of general concepts used to interpret American politics and the analysis of specific case studies. It also requires familiarity with the various institutions, groups, beliefs, and ideas that make up the American political reality. The course will focus on national government and national politics, relying on the following text, supplemental reader, and readings provided by the teacher.

Wilson & DiIulio, American Government: Institutions and Policies

Cigler & Loomis, eds., American Politics: Classic and Contemporary Readings

Unit I: The American System

Text: Chapter 1: The Study of American Government

Chapter 2: The Constitution

Chapter 3: Federalism

Reader: Jack N. Rakove, A Tradition Born of Strife,

Charles A. Beard, An Economic Interpretation of the Constitution

John P. Roche, The Founding Fathers: A Reform Caucus in Action

Madison, Federalist 51

Madison, Federalist 39

McCulloch v. Maryland, 1819

John D. Donahue, The Devil in Devolution

Martha Derthick, American Federalism: Half-Full or Half-Empty?

Unit II: Political Culture

Text: Chapter 4: American Political Culture

Chapter 5: Public Opinion

Chapter 6: Political Participation

Chapter 10: The Media

Reader: Benjamin Ginsberg, Polling and the Transformation of Public Opinion

Dana Milbank, I Hear America Ringing

Micah L. Sifry, Finding the Lost Voters

Michael Schudson, Voting Rites: Why We Need a New Concept of Citizenship

Robert D. Putnam, Bowling Alone: America’s Declining Social Capital

Joshua Meyrowitz, Lowering the Political Hero to Our Level

Thomas E. Patterson, Bad News, Bad Governance

Unit III: Parties, Elections, and Interest Groups

Text: Chapter 7: Political Parties

Chapter 8: Elections and Campaigns

Chapter 9: Interest Groups

Reader:Kay Lawson, Why We Still Need Real Political Parties

Everett Carll Ladd, Of Political Parties Great and Strong

J.K. White & Daniel M. Shea, Creative Party Finances in the Information Age

Burt Solomon, Presidency – Disunity for All

Robert Dreyfuss, Rousing the Democratic Base

James Madison, Federalist 10

Jeffrey Birnbaum, Lobbyists: Why the Bad Rap?

Cigler and Loomis, From Big Bird to Bill Gates…

Unit IV: Congress

Text: Chapter 11: Congress

Chapter 15: The Policymaking Process

Reader:Lee Hamilton, Ten Things I Wish Political Scientists Would Teach About Congress

Kenneth A. Shepsle, The Changing Textbook Congress

Mark Murray, King of the Roads

Richard E. Cohen, Crackup of Committees

Deborah Stone, Stories

Nicholas Thompson, Finding the Civil Service’s Hidden Sex Appeal

Unit V: The Presidency and the Bureaucracy

Text: Chapter 12: The Presidency

Chapter 13: The Bureaucracy

Chapter 20: Foreign and Military Policy

Reader: Richard E. Neustadt, The Power to Persuade

Robert A. Dahl, Myth of the Presidential Mandate

Evan Thomas, Why Clinton Won

Carl M. Cannon, Promises, Promises

Charles Peters, From Ouagadougou to Cape Canaveral: Why Bad News Doesn’t Travel Up

Unit VI: The Judiciary, Civil Liberties, and Civil Rights

Text:Chapter 14: The Judiciary

Chapter 18: Civil Liberties

Chapter 19: Civil Rights

Reader: Marbury v. Madison, 1803

Hamilton, Federalist 78

Richard A. Posner, What Am I? A Potted Plant?

Stuart Taylor, Jr., The Tipping Point

Near v. Minnesota, 1931

Jeffrey Rosen, Why Privacy Matters

Unit VII: Who Governs? To What Ends?

Text: Chapter 22: Who Governs?

Chapter 23: To What Ends?

  1. Course Expectations and Evaluation
  • Major grades will consist of multiple choice tests and free-response essays. NOTE: Bring ERASABLE PENS for the essays.
  • Daily reading assignments are mandatory. Students will be evaluated periodically over reading assignments using 10-15 question quizzes. The bottom line is this: If you do not do the reading, you will not be successful in this class or on the AP Exam.
  • Students are required to maintain a notebook in which lecture notes and reading notes are kept.
  • This is a difficult course. I expect you to take the AP Exam, and you should strive for an A or a B in this class. Anything below that indicates a low probability of success on the national exam.
  • Due to the vast number of Supreme Court cases that demand attention in this course, we will be studying cases all through the semester.
  • Grades:
  • Major grades70%
  • Daily grades30% (20% quizzes and 10% homework)

There will be at least 3 major grades and at least 8 daily grades per six weeks.