The major purpose of this course is to analyze United States’ system of government and the historical background, fundamental concepts and principles that underlie American democracy. The course covers the development of the Constitution, Bill of Rights, and Federalism. It also includes a study of political parties, voting and voting behavior, and elections at the national, state, and local levels. The course will analyze the influence of special interest groups and the role of the media in shaping public opinion. Additional emphasis is placed on the role and the responsibilities of the three branches of government at the national, state, and local levels. This course will summarize landmark court decisions in terms of civil rights and civil liberties and will also study complex contemporary issues that confront national, state, and local governments such as immigration, race, abortion, gender, sexual orientation, and disabilities.
The content included in this course should be viewed as the culmination of the civics literacy strand of the California History-Social Science Framework.
This course meets the graduation and "A-G" requirements.
Started 5/4, finish at home if not completed. Use Groupwork "What Congress Does and Why it Matters" especially chart with quadrants of major actions and smaller actions of Congress to answer questions. Answer in a minimum of two sentences and use evidence/reasoning to answer.
Please print out and bring to class by Tuesday if you want your own copy. Class copies will be available but you have to write your answers on your own sheet of paper. Do not start on before Tuesday.