Define the term "citizen." (SS.7.CG.2.1)
A person recognized under law as a member of a state/nation
Might as well quit now...
Plus 1000 points.
Name the document that declared the American colonies' independence from Britain. (SS.7.CG.1.5)
What is...Declaration of Independence.
Name the three branches of the U.S. government. (SS.7.CG.3.3)
Legislative, Executive, Judicial.
Lets go...
Minus all your points.
Name one constitutional way a person can become a U.S. citizen. (SS.7.CG.2.1)
What is... By birth in U.S. (jus soli) or through naturalization (or citizenship through parents).
What is the "rule of law"? Give a short definition. (SS.7.CG.1.11)
What is...Rule of law = everyone, including leaders, must follow the law.
Oh Em GEE...
Plus 500 points.
Oh no...
Plus 2000 points.
Name one right guaranteed by the First Amendment. (SS.7.CG.2.3)
Freedom of speech (or religion, press, assembly, petition).
Explain the difference between a responsibility and an obligation of citizenship and give one example of each. (SS.7.CG.2.2)
What is...Responsibility = voluntary (e.g., voting); obligation = required by law (e.g., paying taxes, jury duty).
Identify one idea from John Locke or Montesquieu that influenced the Founding Fathers and explain it in one sentence. (SS.7.CG.1.4)
What is... Locke: natural rights; Montesquieu: separation of powers.
Explain one major weakness of the Articles of Confederation that led to the Constitutional Convention. (SS.7.CG.1.7)
Weak federal government, no power to tax, no national judiciary or strong executive
Describe one power of the executive branch and one way it carries out that power. (SS.7.CG.3.8)
Executive enforces laws; example: President issues executive orders, enforces federal law through agencies.
Explain the amendment process in Article V in one or two sentences. (SS.7.CG.3.5)
Article V: amendment proposed by 2/3 of Congress or national convention and ratified by 3/4 of states.
Describe how fulfilling civic obligations and responsibilities can impact society. Provide one clear example. (SS.7.CG.2.2)
What is... Voting (responsibility) leads to representation that affects laws; paying taxes (obligation) funds public services.
List two documents (other than the U.S. Constitution) that shaped colonists’ views of government. (SS.7.CG.1.3)
What is... Magna Carta, Mayflower Compact, English Bill of Rights, Common Sense
Contrast one key belief of the Federalists and one key concern of the Anti-Federalists about ratifying the Constitution. (SS.7.CG.1.10)
Federalists: strong central government; Anti-Federalists: wanted bill of rights and more state power.
Explain the role of the judicial branch in one sentence. (SS.7.CG.3.9)
Judicial interprets laws, resolves disputes, reviews constitutionality.
Wowzers...
Minus all your points.
A student is born abroad to U.S. citizen parents. Explain whether that student is a U.S. citizen at birth and why. (SS.7.CG.2.1)
What is ... Yes — children born abroad to U.S. citizen parents may be U.S. citizens at birth due to law of blood.
Oh no...
Minus 500 points from your team of choice.
Not again...
Minus 500 points.
Name our classroom goose's name...
Gary.
Describe how the Bill of Rights safeguards individual rights and give one concrete classroom-level example of a right protected by the Constitution. (SS.7.CG.2.4; SS.7.CG.2.3)
First Amendment protects free speech—students can express opinions within certain school limits.