Government and Citizens
Immigration and Citizenship Process
Unit 1 Vocabulary
Identity and American Values
Power & Protest
100

What is the difference between a responsibility and a duty of citizens? List two examples of each

A responsibility is something that a citizen should do. Ex: Voting, Serving the Community 


A duty is something a citizen must do, or be punished.  Ex: Jury Duty, Taxes

100

What are the 3 steps in the naturalization process, in order?

  1. Application+ $725

  2. Examination

3) Final Hearing + Oath

100

What is perception?

A particular way of understanding or thinking about something/someone.

100

What is a natural-born citizen?

Natural-born citizen – someone who is a citizen because they were born in the U.S. (or its territories)

100

What are some of the challenges that immigrants from the LGBTQ community face when they come to this country?

Many are trafficked, enslaved,  and abused.

200

List FOUR rights of American citizens.


Put a STAR next to the one that is also a responsibility. 

Freedom of speech, the right to vote**, freedom of religion, the right to a fair trial

200

What three groups of people can be U.S. Citizens?

People born in the U.S.; People born to U.S. Citizens; People who are naturalized

200

What is the difference between legal alien and an undocumented immigrant?

Legal alien—an immigrant with permission (Green card/Visa)


Undocumented immigrant—an immigrant without permission to be in the U.S

200

Today in America how old do you have to be to get deported? 

21 years old

200

What is the 14th amendment supposed to guarantee? 


If you are born in the US you are a citizen and have the same rights and protection as everyone else.

300

List the four roles government plays in supporting citizens

1) Keeping the Peace

 2)Protecting the Country (Nation)

3) Providing Necessary Services

4) Serving as a Safety Net

300

What are four reasons why people immigrate?

Better jobs, education, more freedom, better future for their children, safety

300

What is Propaganda?


Double Jeopardy  

Information that is spread for the purpose of promoting a cause or idea, even if it isn’t true.

300

According to Malcolm X, why is life in America a nightmare, not a dream?

Malcolm X argued that only white people are treated as Americans, and that Black people are victims in America.

300

What was Japanese internment?  When did it occur in US History?

Japanese Internment—the government ordered Japanese-Americans to sell their belongings and move into camps 


Occurred during World War II (1940s)

400

List one example for each role of government

Keeping the Peace—police, courts


 Protecting the Country—military, alliances, customs & border protection


Providing Necessary Services—schools, MBTA


Serving as a Safety Net—Welfare, FEMA, Food Stamps

400

What can naturalized citizens NOT do that natural-born citizens can do?

Run for President or Vice President

400

What is identity?  List three different things that can make up a person’s identity.

-Identity is the way that a person defines themselves, or who they are


-Language, culture, race, religion, family, experiences, hobbies

400

During Hurricane Katrina, what role was the government supposed to play?


Bonus: What year was Hurricane Katrina?

Providing necessary services; serving as a safety net.


Bonus - 2005

400

Who was Fred Korematsu? Why did he take the US government to court?


Bonus – who won the Korematsu v. U.S. case?

A U.S. citizen of Japanese descent who took the U.S. government to court for discriminating against Japanese-Americans


Bonus – the U.S. government won

500

What does “rule of law” mean?

Rule of law-no individual is above the law.

500

What rights do legal residents not have?

Legal residents cannot vote or run for office.

500

What does the word ‘immigrate’ mean?

 To move from one country to another for the purpose of living there permanently.

500

What is the percentage of businesses in the United States that are started by immigrants? 

Of 25%

500

What was one argument used to support the U.S. in Korematsu v. the U.S?  What was one argument used to support Korematsu?  

U.S.—Constitution provides the power to protect the country; possible spies and can’t tell the difference between the loyal and disloyal.  


Korematsu—Violates right to fair trial; discriminates based on race