AP GOVERNMENT & POLITICS
HAGEDORN
POLITICAL PARTIES, CAMPAIGNS & ELECTIONS & INTEREST GROUPS
Chapters 7-9
Unit Overview: Topics covered in this unit comprise 10-20% of the multiple choice questions on the AP Exam. Major themes include: the functions, organization, and development of political parties, the effects of parties on the political process, electoral laws and systems, the activities of interest groups, the range of interests represented and the effects of interest groups on the political process.
Directions: Define all of the terms below in a spiral notebook reserved for AP Government vocabulary only. Consult the glossary in your text for all definitions FIRST and consult another source for any definition not found in your book SECOND. Vocabulary notebooks will be turned in on the day of the unit test. Late notebooks will not be accepted. Things to remember:
- Number each term according to the list
- Skip a line in between definitions.
- 501(c)(3) organization
- 527 organizations
- absentee ballot
- activists
- astroturf lobbying
- attack ads
- backbenchers
- blanket primary
- caucus (congressional)
- caucus (electoral)
- closed primary
- coattails
- critical election
- cross cutting
- dealignment
- delegates
- divided government
- Duverger's law
- electioneering
- electoral vote
- FEC
- free-rider problem
- frontloading
- general election
- GOTV
- grassroots lobbying
- hard money
- incumbent
- initiative petition
- insider strategies
- interest group
- latent
- legitimacy
- linkage institution
- lobbying
- matching funds
- mobilization
- Motor Voter Act
- national committee
- New Deal Coalition
- Olson’s law of large groups
- open primary
- outsider strategies
- PAC
- party coalition
- party platform
- plurality voting
- political efficacy
- political machine
- popular vote
- primary
- proportional allocation
- push polling
- realignment
- referendum
- regional primary
- responsible party model
- retail politics
- retrospective voting
- revolving door
- right to work laws
- runoff election
- salience
- seat shift
- single-issue group
- single-member districts
- soft money
- solidary benefits
- split ticket
- spoils system
- straight ticket
- subgovernment
- superdelegate
- swing states
- taking the late train
- undervote
- unified government
- union shop
- wholesale politics
- winner-take-all system
READING SCHEDULE
Read and take notes each night over the pages assigned. Label each reading assignment with the appropriate page numbers and sections in the event you are given a pop quiz over a certain section. Keep up with the reading schedule unless I tell you otherwise. This means if you miss a class or there is a snow day, you are still responsible for the reading and note-taking. Regardless of where we are in our discussion, you must keep up with the reading schedule.
Day / Tonight’s Bianco Reading Assignment / Other AssignmentsM 9/16 / Read “The Problem with Divided Government”
T 9/17 / Ch. 7 p.219-227
W 9/18 / p.228-239
Th 9/19 / p.239-249
F 9/20 / p.249-253
M 9/23 / Catch-up
T 9/24 / p.257-271
W 9/25 / p.271-280
Th 9/26 / p.281-290
F 9/27 / p.291-304
M 9/30 / p.309-323
T 10/1 / p.323-336
W 10/2 / p.336-343
Th 10/3 / Vocab Quiz
F 10/4 / Unit 3 Test MC
Vocab Due
M 10/7 / Unit 3 FRQ