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U.S. History. Living Constitution – Articles 4 - 7. Living Constitution – Articles 4-7. CA Standards: 11.1.3 Understand the history of the Constitution after 1787 with emphasis on federal vs state authority and growing democratization. Objectives:.
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U.S. History Living Constitution – Articles 4 - 7
Living Constitution – Articles 4-7 CA Standards: 11.1.3 Understand the history of the Constitution after 1787 with emphasis on federal vs state authority and growing democratization • Objectives: • Describe how the states are interdependent and subject to the federal government. • Cite ways of proposing and ratifying amendments. • Explain the authority of federal law • Describe how the Constitution was ratified.
Homework • In Notebook – write definitions for: • Bill of Rights • Double Jeopardy • Due Process of Law • Reserved Powers • Suffrage • Definitions are found on page 31 in Reading Study Guide Workbook • Read Pages 96 - 103 • The Americans: Reconstruction to the 21st Century • Prepare for Open notebook Quiz
Living Constitution – Articles 4-7 • Terms & Names page 29 in Reading Study Guide Workbook • Extradition • Ratify
Notes: Living Constitution Guided Reading Articles 4-7 Read Pages 29 & 30 Reading Study Guide
Notes: Living Constitution Guided Reading 1. List two ways the framers made it clear that the United States is one nation, not a loose confederation of semi-independent states? • - States must accept decisions, such as, criminal convictions that occur in other states. • - Citizens have the same rights in all states.
Notes: Living Constitution Guided Reading 2. Why is it harder to ratify an amendment than to propose it? • It takes two-thirds of Congress to propose an amendment. It requires three-fourths of states to ratify the proposed amendment. The framers of the Constitution wanted to make sure amendments had the full support of the nation.