Enlightenment and Revolution
Founding Principles
Constitutional Convention & Ratification
Development of American Democracy
MISC
100

This Enlightenment idea says people are born with rights like life, liberty, and property.

What are natural rights?

100

This principle means government power is divided between national and state governments

What is federalism?

100

This compromise counted enslaved people as 3/5 of a person for representation.

What is the 3/5 Compromise?

100

Rights and freedoms guaranteed by the Constitution are called this.

What are civil liberties?

100

Examining where a source came from is called this.

What is sourcing?

200

This philosopher argued government exists to protect natural rights and can be overthrown if it fails.

Who is John Locke?

200

This principle means no one, including leaders, is above the law.

What is rule of law?

200

These supporters of the Constitution favored a strong central government.

Who are the Federalists?

200

Participating in government and community is called this.

What is civic participation?

200

A first-hand account from the past is this type of source.

What is a primary source?

300

This Enlightenment thinker argued people are naturally selfish and need strong government for order.

Who is Thomas Hobbes?

300

This term describes government authority coming from the people.

What is popular sovereignty?

300

Compare Federalist and Anti-Federalist views on government power.

Federalists wanted stronger national government; Anti-Federalists feared tyranny and wanted stronger states

300

These opponents feared too much national power.

Who are the Anti-Federalists?

300

This event showed the weaknesses of the Articles of Confederation.

What is Shay’s Rebellion?

400

This early self-government agreement was signed aboard a ship in 1620.

 What is the Mayflower Compact?

400

Compare a republic and a direct democracy.

Republic = elected representatives; direct democracy = citizens vote directly on laws.

400

This compromise created two houses of Congress.

What is the Great Compromise?

400

Explain how American democracy has been a “work in progress.”

Rights expanded over time through amendments, laws, and social movements.

400

Explain why evaluating sources is important in civics.

Helps determine credibility, bias, and accuracy of information.

500

Explain how Enlightenment ideas influenced the Declaration of Independence.

The Declaration reflects natural rights, social contract, and consent of the governed.

500

Explain how checks and balances protect against tyranny

Each branch can limit the others, preventing one branch from gaining too much power.

500

 Explain why the Articles of Confederation failed.

Weak central government, no taxation power, no strong executive, no national army.

500

Explain why the Bill of Rights was necessary for ratification.

 Anti-Federalists wanted protections for individual freedoms.

500

Compare the Magna Carta and the Declaration of Independence.

Both limit government power and assert rights; Magna Carta limited a king, Declaration justified independence.