Founding Ideals
Types and Models of Democracy
Federalists vs Anti-Federalists
Articles of Confederation vs The Constitution
Federalism in Action
100

What are natural rights according to the Declaration of Independence? 

Life, Liberty, and the pursuit of Happiness
100

Name all three models of representative democracy?

Participatory, Pluralist, Elite.

100

Which group supported ratification of the Constitution?

Federalists

100

What was the first written plan of government for the U.S.?

 Articles of Confederation

100
Name all the clauses that increase federal government power?

Necessary and Proper, Supremacy, Commerce, Due process, and equal protection

200

Which principle says all government power comes from the people?

Popular Sovereignty 

200

Which model emphasizes broad participation in politics and civil society?

Participatory democracy.

200

Who wrote the federalists papers?

John Jay, James Madison, and Alexander Hamilton

200

What are the first three articles of the constitution about?

Article I : Legislative

Article II: Executive 

Article III: Judicial

200

What type of power is reserved to the states under the 10th Amendment?

Reserved powers

300

The Declaration of Independence is based on which Enlightenment thinker’s ideas of natural rights and social contract?

Thomas Hobbes


300

Federalist No. 10 argues for which model of democracy to control factions?

Pluralist/large republic model to control factions

300

What compromise helped win Anti-Federalist support for ratification?

: Promise to add Bill of Rights.

300

Which event revealed the weakness of the Articles because the government could not stop the uprising?

Shays' Rebellion.

300

Which type of federalism is compared to a “layer cake” and which type is compared to a “marble cake”?

Layer cake = dual federalism
Marble cake = cooperative federalism

400

Name three out of the four ideals of democracy

Natural Rights 

Social Contract 

Popular sovereignty

Limited government  

400

If Ms. Torres wants a representative democracy where only the smartest and most qualified people make decisions, which model of democracy best represents this

Elite Democracy – emphasizes limited participation where decision-making is placed in the hands of the most educated and qualified.

400

Summarize Madison’s main argument in Federalist No. 10 about factions

We can control the effects of factions through a republic. 

A large republic disperses factions and prevents tyranny of majority.

400

Explain why the framers replaced the Articles with the Constitution.

Needed stronger central government to maintain order and unity.

400

What is the main difference between block grants and categorical grants?

Block grants = broad funding with few restrictions.
Categorical grants = narrow funding with specific restrictions.

500

What are the ideals that LIMIT government? Name and define 3 out of the 4

i. Separation of powers - 3 different branches that are separated and independent

ii. Checks and balances - Limiting another branch so no one branch becomes to powerful 

iii. Federalism - relationship of power between state and federal government 

iv. Republicanism - the idea that government authority comes from the people, and that elected representatives are chosen to make laws

500

Name two examples of interest groups that represent the pluralist model of democracy.

NRA

NAACP

PLANNED PARENTEHOOD 

AMERICAN MEDICAL ASSOCIATION

500

What was the Great Compromise, and what two plans did it compromise between?

The Great Compromise (Connecticut Compromise) created a bicameral legislature:

House of Representatives based on population (Virginia Plan).

Senate with equal representation (New Jersey Plan).

500

Name 3 out of the 5 main weaknesses of the AOC that we talked about. 

1. Lack of Centralized Government 

2. No executive branch

3. No national court system 

4. No power to regulate interstate commerce 

5. No exclusive power to coin money 

500

Which two Supreme Court cases helped define the balance of power between the national and state governments, and how did each affect federal power

McCulloch v. Maryland (1819): Confirmed federal supremacy --> Expanded federal govt. power

United States v. Lopez (1995): Limited federal power under the Commerce Clause