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Title: Today


1
Todays Agenda
  • Any Announcements?
  • Any Questions?
  • Let's Review our Bellwork....
  • Now...
  • Lets Begin Todays Lesson..

2
Our Standards Today
  • Principles of United States Government
  • Students explain the fundamental principles and
    moral values of the American government as
    expressed in the Constitution and other essential
    documents of American federalism.
  • GC.5 Summarize (CC) with supporting evidence why
    the Founding Fathers established a constitutional
    system that limited the power of government. (H,
    P)
  • GC.6 Describe the systems of enumerated and
    shared powers, the role of organized interests
    (Federalist Number 10), checks and balances
    (Federalist Number 51), the importance of an
    independent judiciary (Federalist Number 78),
    implied powers, rule of law, federalism, popular
    sovereignty, and civilian control of the
    military. (P)
  • GC.7 Analyze how the Bill of Rights limits the
    powers of the federal government and state
    governments. (P)
  • GC.8 Assess the claims, reasoning, and evidence
    of various authors to analyze the tensions within
    our Republic and the importance of maintaining a
    balance between the following concepts (H, P)
  • Majority rule and individual rights Liberty
    and equality State and national authority in a
    federal system
  • Civil disobedience and the rule of law
    Freedom of the press and censorship
    Relationship of religion and government
  • Relationship of legislation and morality
    Government regulation and free enterprise

3
Our objectives today
  • 1. Describe the structure of the government set
    up under the Articles of Confederation.
  • 2. Explain why the weaknesses of the Articles of
    Confederation led to a critical period for our
    government in the 1780s.
  • 3. Describe how a growing need for a stronger
    national government led to plans for a
    Constitutional Convention.
  • 4. Compare and contrast the Virginia Plan and the
    New Jersey Plan for a new constitution.
  • 5. Summarize the major compromises that the
    delegates agreed to make and the effects of those
    compromises.

4
Our Goal Today
  • The Articles of Confederation established a
    fairly weak central government, which led to
    conflicts among the States. The turmoil of the
    Critical Period of the 1780s led to the writing
    of the Constitution and the creation of a
    stronger National Government. The Framers of the
    Constitution created a document that addressed
    the major concerns of the States. By reaching
    compromise on items about which they disagreed,
    the Framers created a new National Government
    capable of handling our nation's problems.

5
Origin of the State
  • Turn your book to page 6. Four Characteristics of
    a State.
  • Is our classroom a state? Is Tennessee a state
    by this definition? Is the United States a State?

6
Origin of the State
  • Turn your book to page 8. These are the four
    theories of the Origins of the State.

7
Force Theory
  • What is a good example of Force Theory?

8
Evolutionary Theory
  • What is an example of this Evolutionary Theory?

9
Divine Right Theory
  • What is an example of Divine Right Theory?

10
Social Contract Theory
  • What is an example of the Social Contract Theory?

11
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14
Articles of Confederation
  • One vote per state. No Executive or Judicial
    branch. Any change had to be approved by all 13
    states. 9 out of 13 votes required to pass any
    law.

15
Powers of Congress
  • 1) Make war and peace
  • 2) Send and receive ambassadors
  • 3) Make treaties
  • 4) Borrow money
  • 5) Set up a money system
  • 6) Establish a post office
  • 7) Build a navy
  • 8) Raise an army by asking States for troops
  • 9) Create a uniform standard for weights and
    measures
  • 10) Settle disputes between the States

16
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18
Our Standards Today
  • Principles of United States Government
  • Students explain the fundamental principles and
    moral values of the American government as
    expressed in the Constitution and other essential
    documents of American federalism.
  • GC.5 Summarize (CC) with supporting evidence why
    the Founding Fathers established a constitutional
    system that limited the power of government. (H,
    P)
  • GC.6 Describe the systems of enumerated and
    shared powers, the role of organized interests
    (Federalist Number 10), checks and balances
    (Federalist Number 51), the importance of an
    independent judiciary (Federalist Number 78),
    implied powers, rule of law, federalism, popular
    sovereignty, and civilian control of the
    military. (P)
  • GC.7 Analyze how the Bill of Rights limits the
    powers of the federal government and state
    governments. (P)
  • GC.8 Assess the claims, reasoning, and evidence
    of various authors to analyze the tensions within
    our Republic and the importance of maintaining a
    balance between the following concepts (H, P)
  • Majority rule and individual rights Liberty
    and equality State and national authority in a
    federal system
  • Civil disobedience and the rule of law
    Freedom of the press and censorship
    Relationship of religion and government
  • Relationship of legislation and morality
    Government regulation and free enterprise

19
Our objectives today
  • 1. Describe the structure of the government set
    up under the Articles of Confederation.
  • 2. Explain why the weaknesses of the Articles of
    Confederation led to a critical period for our
    government in the 1780s.
  • 3. Describe how a growing need for a stronger
    national government led to plans for a
    Constitutional Convention.
  • 4. Identify the Framers of the Constitution and
    discuss how the delegates organized the
    proceedings at the Philadelphia Convention
  • 5. Compare and contrast the Virginia Plan and the
    New Jersey Plan for a new constitution.
  • 6. Summarize the major compromises that the
    delegates agreed to make and the effects of those
    compromises.

20
Creating our Constitution
21
Different States Different Ideas
  • The Virginia Plan called for three branches of
    government Legislative, Executive and Judicial.
    Bicameral government both houses number of
    members based on each State's population or the
    amount of money that state contributes to the
    national government.

22
New Jersey Plan
  • Unicameral government, only one legislative body.
    Each state gets same number of seats in the
    legislature.
  • What is our first problem in writing our
    constitution?

23
Our First Compromise
  • Connecticut delegates offered what has been named
    the Connecticut Comprise, but some have called
    the Great Compromise.
  • What do YOU think the compromise was?

24
The Great Compromise
  • Bicameral Government Two legislative bodies, a
    House and a Senate.
  • The house would have its members for each state
    determined by population.
  • The senate would have each state have the same
    number of members.

25
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26
Population?
  • What about states that have slaves? Do they count
    as population?
  • Do states with large slave populations want them
    to count?

27
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28
3/5ths Compromise Time for Role Play
29
3/5ths Compromise
  • The three-fifths compromise is found in Article
    1, Section 2, Paragraph 3 of the United States
    Constitution
  • "Representatives and direct Taxes shall be
    apportioned among the several States which may be
    included within this Union, according to their
    respective Numbers, which shall be determined by
    adding to the whole Number of free Persons,
    including those bound to Service for a Term of
    Years, and excluding Indians not taxed, three
    fifths of all other Persons."
  • http//www.archives.gov/exhibits/charters/constitu
    tion_transcript.html

30
The South Wants Another Compromise
  • The Commerce and Slave Trade Compromise was an
    agreement that Congress could not tax exports of
    goods from any state. Why was the south worried
    about this? It also placed a 20-year moratorium
    on any laws concerning the slave trade, the
    migration or importation of such persons as any
    State now existing shall think proper to admit.

31
One of our Standards Today
  • GC.6 Describe the systems of enumerated and
    shared powers, the role of organized interests
    (Federalist Number 10), checks and balances
    (Federalist Number 51), the importance of an
    independent judiciary (Federalist Number 78),
    implied powers, rule of law, federalism, popular
    sovereignty, and civilian control of the
    military. (P)

32
Federalist Paper 10
  • Federalist 10 is part of a remarkable public
    discussion, spawned by the ratification debates,
    between Federalists and Antifederalists on the
    nature of republican government. Many
    Antifederalists believed that the Constitution
    would lead to a large, consolidated nation and
    abolish the republican governments in the states,
    which in turn would lead to violations of the
    rights of citizens. Madison turned that argument
    on its head by pointing out that in republican
    governments, in which the majority must rule, an
    all-powerful majority often sacrifices the
    natural rights of the minority to their own
    selfish interests. Tyranny was just as possible
    in republican governments as under monarchies
    and smaller republics that is, republics the
    size of the American states were especially
    prone to the danger of majority faction. Some
    remedy for this mortal disease must be found,
    Madison argued, if we are to have a republic in
    which the natural rights of all, including the
    minority, are protected.
  • http//teachingamericanhistory.org/library/docume
    nt/federalist-no-10/

33
What was Madison worried about?
  • Questions for consideration How does Madison
    define a faction? What two things may be done to
    eliminate the causes of faction, and why does
    Madison reject them? What aspects of a republic
    make it prone to faction, but less susceptible
    than a democracy? What advantages does a large
    republic have over a small one for preventing and
    controlling the effects of majority faction?

34
Two Solutions Can we do either one?
  • Madison wrote in Federalist 10
  • There are two methods of curing the mischiefs of
    faction The one, by removing its causes the
    other, by controling its effects.
  • There are again two methods of removing the
    causes of faction The one, by destroying the
    liberty which is essential to its existence the
    other, by giving to every citizen the same
    opinions, the same passions, and the same
    interests.

35
Federalist Paper 51
  • James Madison, like most Americans at the time,
    understood that once a single branch of
    government legislative, executive or judicial
    had accumulated all political power in its hands,
    nothing could stop it from acting tyrannically.
    The checks and balances between the branches
    built into the proposed Constitution, he
    explained in Federalist 51, are therefore
    essential to keep those powers properly separated
    among the branches. In the midst of explaining
    these inventions of prudence, Madison offered
    thoughtful reflections on why human nature makes
    politics especially the great task of framing a
    government comprised of men rather than angels
    so challenging.
  • http//teachingamericanhistory.org/library/documen
    t/federalist-no-51/

36
Is Three Branches Important?
  • Questions for consideration What is the best way
    to keep the powers of government properly
    separated among the branches in practice? Why is
    framing a good government made difficult by human
    nature? What are the two possible sources of
    oppression and what remedies does Madison propose
    to prevent them?

37
What could be an issue?
  • Madison wrote First. In a single republic, all
    the power surrendered by the people, is submitted
    to the administration of a single government and
    the usurpations are guarded against, by a
    division of the government into distinct and
    separate departments. In the compound republic of
    America, the power surrendered by the people, is
    first divided between two distinct governments,
    and then the portion allotted to each subdivided
    among distinct and separate departments. Hence a
    double security arises to the rights of the
    people. The different governments will control
    each other at the same time that each will be
    controlled by itself.

38
Hard to make everyone happy!
  • Second. It is of great importance in a republic,
    not only to guard the society against the
    oppression of its rulers but to guard one part
    of the society against the injustice of the other
    part. Different interests necessarily exist in
    different classes of citizens. If a majority be
    united by a common interest, the rights of the
    minority will be insecure. There are but two
    methods of providing against this evil the one,
    by creating a will in the community independent
    of the majority, that is, of the society itself
    the other, by comprehending in the society so
    many separate descriptions of citizens, as will
    render an unjust combination of a majority of the
    whole very improbable, if not impracticable.

39
Federalist Paper 78
  • "We proceed now to an examination of the
    judiciary department of the proposed government."
    So begins Federalist, no. 78, the first of six
    essays by Alexander Hamilton on the role of the
    judiciary in the government established by the
    U.S. Constitution.
  • Hamilton made two principal points in the essay.
    First, he argued for the independence of the
    judiciary from the other two branches of
    government, the executive and the legislative. In
    presenting a case for the judiciary, he reached
    his second major conclusion that the judiciary
    must be empowered to strike down laws passed by
    Congress that it deems "contrary to the manifest
    tenor of the Constitution."
  • http//legal-dictionary.thefreedictionary.com/Fede
    ralist,No.78,andthePoweroftheJudiciary

40
Ratification - Federalists
  • Federalists stressed the weakness of the Articles
    of Confederation and campaigned for the
    ratification of the new Constitution. James
    Madison and Alexander Hamilton were among their
    leaders.
  • Think Federalist Papers.

41
Ratification - Anti-Federalists
  • Anti-Federalists attacked the Constitution and
    argued against its ratification. They worried
    about having a central government and noted how
    it did not have a bill of rights, or a list of
    basic liberties.
  • Its leaders included Patrick Henry, John Hancock
    and Samuel Adams.
  • I look upon that paper as the most fatal plan
    that could possibly be conceived to enslave a
    free people. - Patrick Henry

42
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47
Beard's Thesis
48
Beard's Thesis
  • The first historian to challenge the motives of
    the Founders was Charles Beard in An Economic
    Interpretation of the Constitution of the United
    States (1913).
  • In this landmark book, Beard, a professor of
    history at Columbia University, argued that the
    Constitution was an economic document drawn with
    superb skill by men whose property interests were
    immediately at stake. The Founders, then, rather
    than being patriots, wise lawmakers, or
    thoughtful students of government, were primarily
    in the Constitution-writing business to protect
    their property interests.
  • Read more http//www.fee.org/the_freeman/detail/t
    he-founders-the-constitution-and-the-historiansix
    zz2rHxigjjs

49
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50
Vocabulary
  • Autocracy
  • Oligarchy
  • Unitary Government
  • Federal Government
  • Division of Powers

51
Autocracy
  • Autocracy a form of government in which a
    single person holds unlimited political power.

52
Vocabulary
  • Oligarchy
  • Unitary Government
  • Federal Government
  • Division of Powers

53
Oligarchy
  • Oligarchy a form of government in which power
    to rule is held by a small, usually
    self-appointed elite.

54
Vocabulary
  • Unitary Government
  • Federal Government
  • Division of Powers

55
Unitary Government
  • Unitary Government a centralized government in
    which all government powers belong to a single,
    central agency.

56
Vocabulary
  • Federal Government
  • Division of Powers

57
Federal Government
  • Federal Government a form of Government in
    which powers are divided between a central
    government and several local governments.

58
Our Classroom.
  • Is our classroom a Unitary Government
  • or a Federal Government?

59
Vocabulary
  • Division of Powers

60
Division of Powers
  • Division of Powers basic principle of
    federalism the constitutional provisions by
    which a government powers are divided on a
    geographic basis (in the United States, between
    the National Government and the States)

61
Our classroom
  • Do we divide powers in our classroom?

62
Vocabulary
  • Articles of Confederation ratification
  • Virginia Plan New Jersey Plan
  • Connecticut Compromise
  • Three-Fifths Compromise
  • Federalists Anti-Federalists

63
Articles of Confederation
  • Established a firm league of friendship among
    the states. Each state kept its sovereignty,
    freedom, and independence.

64
Vocabulary
  • Articles of Confederation ratification
  • Virginia Plan New Jersey Plan
  • Connecticut Compromise
  • Three-Fifths Compromise
  • Federalists Anti-Federalists

65
Ratification
  • Formal approval.
  • ratification
  • rat-uh-fi-key-shuhn
  • noun
  • 1. the act of ratifying confirmation sanction.
  • 2. the state of being ratified.
  • http//dictionary.reference.com/browse/ratificatio
    n

66
Vocabulary
  • Articles of Confederation ratification
  • Virginia Plan New Jersey Plan
  • Connecticut Compromise
  • Three-Fifths Compromise
  • Federalists Anti-Federalists

67
Virginia Plan
  • Endorsed by the larger states. Base
    representation on population.

68
Vocabulary
  • Articles of Confederation ratification
  • Virginia Plan New Jersey Plan
  • Connecticut Compromise
  • Three-Fifths Compromise
  • Federalists Anti-Federalists

69
New Jersey Plan
  • Endorsed by the smaller states. Each state
    should have equal representation.

70
Vocabulary
  • Articles of Confederation ratification
  • Virginia Plan New Jersey Plan
  • Connecticut Compromise
  • Three-Fifths Compromise
  • Federalists Anti-Federalists

71
Connecticut Compromise
  • Also referred to as the Great Compromise.
  • Do both have one legislative body based on
    population and one where each state gets equal
    representation.

72
Vocabulary
  • Articles of Confederation ratification
  • Virginia Plan New Jersey Plan
  • Connecticut Compromise
  • Three-Fifths Compromise
  • Federalists Anti-Federalists

73
Three-Fifths Compromise
  • Slaves (although not called slaves in the
    Constitution) will count as 3/5 of a person.

74
Vocabulary
  • Articles of Confederation ratification
  • Virginia Plan New Jersey Plan
  • Connecticut Compromise
  • Three-Fifths Compromise
  • Federalists Anti-Federalists

75
Federalists
  • Campaigned for the ratification of the
    Constitution. Supported a new Federal
    government.

76
Vocabulary
  • Articles of Confederation ratification
  • Virginia Plan New Jersey Plan
  • Connecticut Compromise
  • Three-Fifths Compromise
  • Federalists Anti-Federalists

77
Anti-Federalists
  • Campaigned against a new Federal government.

78
Assessment Time -)
  • 1) What were the Articles of Confederation and
    what powers did they grant to Congress?
  • 2) Identify three weaknesses of our government
    under the Articles of Confederation.
  • 3) Why did smaller states object to the Virginia
    Plan?
  • 4) What was the 'Great Compromise'?

79
Our Standards Today
  • Principles of United States Government
  • Students explain the fundamental principles and
    moral values of the American government as
    expressed in the Constitution and other essential
    documents of American federalism.
  • GC.5 Summarize (CC) with supporting evidence why
    the Founding Fathers established a constitutional
    system that limited the power of government. (H,
    P)
  • GC.6 Describe the systems of enumerated and
    shared powers, the role of organized interests
    (Federalist Number 10), checks and balances
    (Federalist Number 51), the importance of an
    independent judiciary (Federalist Number 78),
    implied powers, rule of law, federalism, popular
    sovereignty, and civilian control of the
    military. (P)
  • GC.7 Analyze how the Bill of Rights limits the
    powers of the federal government and state
    governments. (P)
  • GC.8 Assess the claims, reasoning, and evidence
    of various authors to analyze the tensions within
    our Republic and the importance of maintaining a
    balance between the following concepts (H, P)
  • Majority rule and individual rights Liberty
    and equality State and national authority in a
    federal system
  • Civil disobedience and the rule of law
    Freedom of the press and censorship
    Relationship of religion and government
  • Relationship of legislation and morality
    Government regulation and free enterprise

80
Our objectives today
  • 1. Describe the structure of the government set
    up under the Articles of Confederation.
  • 2. Explain why the weaknesses of the Articles of
    Confederation led to a critical period for our
    government in the 1780s.
  • 3. Describe how a growing need for a stronger
    national government led to plans for a
    Constitutional Convention.
  • 4. Compare and contrast the Virginia Plan and the
    New Jersey Plan for a new constitution.
  • 5. Summarize the major compromises that the
    delegates agreed to make and the effects of those
    compromises.

81
Our Goal Today
  • The Articles of Confederation established a
    fairly weak central government, which led to
    conflicts among the States. The turmoil of the
    Critical Period of the 1780s led to the writing
    of the Constitution and the creation of a
    stronger National Government. The Framers of the
    Constitution created a document that addressed
    the major concerns of the States. By reaching
    compromise on items about which they disagreed,
    the Framers created a new National Government
    capable of handling our nation's problems.

82
Group Time!!!
  • Get in your groups now
  • Each person will do their OWN Social Contract
    discuss ideas in your group but do your own
    Social Contract.
  • I will be a great Student if Riverdale
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