Thursday, December 7, 2017

Lesson on Thursday, December 7, 2017

Aim: What is the organization and structure of the judicial branch, and what is the significance of the Supreme Court and judicial review in ensuring democracy and equity in the United States?  
Bell Ringer: Journal 42 – What is the role of the Judicial Branch? 
Objectives: 
  1. 1. Students will analyze the structures, functions, and processes of the judicial branch as described in Article III of the Constitution. 
Agenda: 
  1. 1. Bell Ringer (10 min) 
  1. 2. Judicial Branch PPT 
  1. 3. Exit Ticket: Describe the difference between exclusive jurisdiction and concurrent jurisdiction.  
Home Learning: NO HW!  

Judicial Branch Notes

JUDICIAL BRANCH – THE FEDERAL COURT SYSTEM



Name______________________________ Date_______________


1. The Federal Court System
¡ Articles of Confederation
ú Major Weakness – No Courts
ú Each State had own courts and laws



2. Article III of the Constitution
Created a ____________ Court
Congress can create inferior courts (courts of lower authority)
Judiciary Act of 1789 – created federal ___________ courts
Later in 1791 appeals courts were created



3. ____________ and ____________ Cases
There are _____ court systems in the US – ___________ and __________ courts
Criminal cases – cases in which ___________ decide whether people have committed crimes
Civil cases – cases in which two sides disagree over some issue


4. Federal Court Jurisdiction
Jurisdiction –
Federal courts have jurisdiction in the following areas:
The Constitution – a constitutional right has been violated


5. Federal laws and Federal crimes – kidnapping, bank robbery
Admiralty and Maritime law –

Controversies between states –




6. Disputes in which the US government is involved – the government can sue if someone does not live up to their part of a contract or a person/company can take the government to court if they do not believe the government lived up to their part of a contract.



7. Controversies between citizens of different states – if a person in Maine is cheated by a person from California and it is worth more than $50,000, then the __________ courts can intervene
Disputes involving foreign governments – any dispute between an American (US government, American company) and a foreign country


8. US ambassadors, ministers, and consuls serving in foreign countries – if an ambassador breaks an American law in the embassy, the federal courts will hear the case



9. Exclusive jurisdiction –


Concurrent jurisdiction –



10. District Courts
Lowest level of the _____________________
Are where trials are held and _____________ begin
Original jurisdiction – authority to hear cases for the first time
Only federal courts is where ______________ are held
Each district is a geographic area



11. Civil cases –

Constitution states – “such Trial shall be held in the State where the said Crimes shall have been committed”



12. District Court Judges
Each district has at least ______
Each district court judge
- Decides procedures to be followed
- Explain the law involved in a case to the jury
- Decide on punishment/fine when the jury finds a defendant guilty
- Are paid
- Cannot have pay reduced during term in office


13. Other District Court Officials
Magistrate
Issues court orders
Hears preliminary evidence to determine whether the case should be brought to trial
Hear minor cases
US Attorney
Government’s lawyer
His/Her job to prove that a suspect has committed a crime
Do most of the trial work



14. Serving Subpoenas
Marshal
Arrests suspects
Delivers defendants to court
Serves subpoenas – court order requiring someone to appear in court
Clerks and Secretaries and other individuals help make judicial branch work as swiftly as possible



15. US Courts of Appeals
Also called federal appeals courts (are above district courts)
Jurisdiction – appellate jurisdiction
- Hear only cases which have gone to district courts or through federal regulatory agencies
- Can only be used if the law was not followed properly or if procedures were not followed properly
- Created to ease the work of ______________________
- There are 12 circuits or geographic areas



16. Appeals Court Judges
There are _____ to _____ per court
They do not preside over trials
No jury – only a panel of _________ judges hear arguments and review cases
They only rule if rights are protected and a fair trial was received



17. Three types of rulings
A. Uphold the lower courts verdict
B. Remand (return) the case for a new trial
C. Overturn the decision
Appeals courts’ decision is usually final
Very few cases reach the Supreme Court


18. Special Federal Courts
US ___________ – hears appeals dealing with federal tax laws
US Court of Federal Claims –
US Court of Military Appeals – appeals court for armed forces (after an individual has been court – marshaled)
US Court of International Trade –



19. The Power of the Supreme Court
Original jurisdiction
- Preside over trials in cases that involve diplomats from foreign countries
- Preside over trials where ___________sue each other (usually the Supreme Court allows a __________ court to hear this)


20. Appellate jurisdiction in all other cases – of over 6,000 appealed usually around 150 are heard
Pose significant legal or constitutional questions
Of great public interest or concern

Judicial Review –




21. Judicial Review
A.
B.
C.




22. Marbury v. Madison
Established judicial review in ___________
President John Adams made some midnight appointments; Marbury, who was appointed a justice of the peace, took James Madison to the Supreme Court for not carrying out President Adams appointments invoking the Judiciary Act of 1789)



23. Chief Justice John Marshall wrote the majority opinion turning down Marbury’s claim and the three basic principles of judicial review were created:
- The Constitution is the supreme law of the land
- Where there is a conflict between the Constitution and any other law, the Constitution must be followed
- The judicial branch has the duty to uphold the Constitution and nullify or cancel any law in conflict with the Constitution



24. The power of judicial review has become an important check on any other branch

Checking the Courts Power
Congress can change laws so they are no longer in conflict
Congress can create a new amendment



25. Controversy and the Court
The Court has made people very MAD (they may even ask Congress to change a law to fix the problem)
1857 Dred Scott v. Sanford – ruling; the Constitution did not prohibit slavery in the territories (Slaves were not citizens and therefore could not sue in the federal courts)
Amendment 13 changed that



26. Supreme Court Justices
There are eight associate justices and one chief justice
No set formal qualifications
Informal qualification
- All have been lawyers
- Most have been judges
- Many have been public officials
- W.H. Taft was the only chief justice to have been President first




27. Appointment by the _____________ and approval by the ______________


28. The President tries to appoint judges who share the same ideology, but once appointed the have no obligation to follow the President’s line


29. Facts about the Supreme Court:
- Thurgood Marshall (1967) and Clarence Thomas (1991) were the first African Americans
- Sandra Day O’Connor (1981) and Ruth Bader Ginsberg (1993) were the first women

Wednesday, December 6, 2017

Lesson on Wednesday, December 6, 2017

Aim: What is the organization and structure of the judicial branch, and what is the significance of the Supreme Court and judicial review in ensuring democracy and equity in the United States?

Bell Ringer: Grade and review Executive Branch Exam (15 min)

Objectives:

1. Students will analyze the structures, functions, and processes of the judicial branch as described in Article III of the Constitution.

Agenda:

1. Bell Ringer (15 min)
2. Introduction to Judicial Branch Unit (5 min)
3. BP "Court System", complete activity and graphic organizer (10 min)
4. BP "Supreme Court", complete activity and graphic organizer (10 min)


Home Learning: Complete the "Activity" section of the Supreme Court BP video.

Tuesday, December 5, 2017

Lesson on Tuesday, December 5, 2017

 Today we completed the Executive Branch Exam. Please see me after school to make up the exam.

Monday, December 4, 2017

Executive Branch Quiz-Quiz-Trade

Use the questions and answers below to study for tomorrow's exam. Remember to bring your table on the Cabinet departments to class for notes. You will be able to use the table during class.

1. Q: What makes up the Executive Branch? A: The President, Vice President, The Cabinet, and Executive departments.



2. Q: What are the qualifications of the president/vice president? A: Must be 35 years old, a natural born citizen, lived in the US the last 14 years.




3. Q: How many years is one term for the presidency? A: 4 years




4. Q: What amendment limited the president to two terms or no more than 10 years? A: 22nd amendment




5. Q: As of 2001, what is the salary of the president? A: $400,000





6. Q: What is the order of the presidential succession? (in other words, if the president dies what is the order of leaders who can take his/her place? A: 1. Vice President, 2. Speaker of the House, 3. President pro tempore, 4. Cabinet secretaries in order of department origin (state, treasury, defense)





7. Q: The 25th Amendment of 1967 indicates that if the president cannot complete his term, what happens? A: The V.P. becomes President, or if the V.P. office is vacant, the President appoints one w/ Senate approval.




8. Q: Who became president due to Richard Nixon’s resignation? A: Gerald Ford




9. Q: What was the Watergate scandal? A: a political scandal that occurred in the 1970s, following a break-in at the Democratic National Committee (DNC) headquarters at the Watergate office complex in D.C. in 1972. Nixon’s administration attempted cover-up of its involvement.




10. Q: How did political parties form? A: Disagreements between cabinet members under George Washington’s presidency.




11. Q: Who formed the first two political parties and what were the names of the parties? A: John Adams and Alexander Hamilton formed the Federalist Party and Thomas Jefferson formed the Democratic Republicans





12. Q: What is the name given to the group of advisors that help the president? A: The Cabinet



13. Q: Is the cabinet mandated by the Constitution? A: No



14. Q: What is the head of the Department of State called? A: Secretary of State



15. Q: What does the Department of State handle? A: foreign policy, staffs embassies, analyzes data about American interests in other nations, speaks for the U.S. at the United Nations.



16. Q: Who was the first Secretary of State? A: Thomas Jefferson



17. Q: Who was the first Secretary of the Treasury? A: Alexander Hamilton



18. Q: Who was the first Secretary of Defense? A: Henry Knox



19. Q: Who was the first Attorney General? A: Edmund Randolph



20. Q: How many departments are there today? A: 15



21. Q: What does the Department of the Treasury handle? A: serves as financial division of the government, manages public debt, collects taxes, coins money, regulates the production and distribution of alcohol and tobacco



22. Q: What does the Department of Justice handle? A: oversees the nation's legal affairs, supervises the agencies that serve as the nation's police and prison system, enforces antitrust laws



23. Q: What does the Department of Defense handle? A: Protects the security of the United States, overseas the armed forces through the Joint Chief of Staff.



24. Q: What does the Department of the Interior handle? A: Protects public lands, and natural resources throughout the U.S. It also overseas relationships with Native Americans.



25. Q: What does the Department of Agriculture handle? A: Helps farmers improve incomes and production for home and abroad, safeguards the nation's food supply.




26. Q: What does the Department of Commerce handle? A: Promotes and protects the industrial and commercial parts of the economy; carries out the census.



27. Q: What does the Department of Labor handle? A: Ensures safe working conditions, oversees minimum wages and protects pensions, collects and analyzes data on employment.



28. Q: What does the Department of Health and Human Services handle? A: oversees programs concerned with health and social services of America; manages federal medicare and medicaid.



29. Q: what does the Department of Transportation handle? A: regulates America's transportation needs, policies and planning; works to ensure safe, efficient, and convenient land and air transportation.



30. Q: What does the Department of Energy handle? A: plans energy policy, researches and develops energy technology.



31. Q: Who is the closest agent to the president? A: White House Chief of Staff



32. Q: Who nominates advisors for the cabinet? A: The President



33. Q: Who votes for presidential nominations to the Cabinet? A: The US Senate




34. Q: What department is the newest and what does it handle? A: Department of Homeland Security and it focuses on counter-terrorism.



35. Q: What is foreign policy and what issues involve foreign policy? A: relationship between nation-states, issues that involve foreign policy are war, peace, trade, any general interaction



36. Q: According to the Constitution, the treaty-making power is divided between... A: the President and the Senate.



37. Q: A 1973 congressional resolution required the president to notify Congress upon ordering U.S. troops into military action. If Congress doesn't approve of this action, the president must withdraw the troops within how many days? A: 60 days



38. Q: What is an executive agreement? A: agreements with foreign countires that require only a presidential signature



39. Q: During what years did the Cold War happen? A: 1946-1989



40. Q: Who were the two main rivals during the Cold War? A. United States & Soviet Union



41. Q: What was the Cold War about? A: capitalism vs. Communism and mutual threats about
destruction by nuclear warfare






42. Q: What is the policy of containment? A: U.S. policy that attempted to stop the spread of communism.



43. Q: What does CIA stand for and what does this agency do? A: Central Intelligence Agency, responsible for gathering and analyzing information about the political and military activities of other nations. It was created during the Cold War (National Security Act of 1947).



44. Q: After the Cold War ended, what did the US focus on? A: "Nation Building" - interventions designed to enhance democratic practices in other countries.

Lesson on Monday, December 4, 2017

Aim: How is the Executive Branch of the U.S. designed?

Bell Ringer: Current Events


Objectives:

1. SS.912.C.3.5: Identify the impact of independent regulatory agencies in the federal bureaucracy.
2. SS.912.C.3.15: Examine how power and responsibility are distributed, shared, and limited by the Constitution.
3. SS.912.C.4.2: Evaluate the influence of American foreign policy on other nations and the influences of other nations on American policies and society.


Agenda:
1. Bell Ringer (10 min)
2. Executive Branch QQT
3. Review Test


Home Learning: Study for tomorrow's exam!

Friday, December 1, 2017

Lesson on Friday, December 1, 2017

Aim: How is the Executive Branch of the U.S. designed?  
Bell Ringer: Review PPT slides 1-16 

Objectives: 
  1. 1. SS.912.C.3.5: Identify the impact of independent regulatory agencies in the federal bureaucracy. 
  1. 2. SS.912.C.3.15: Examine how power and responsibility are distributed, shared, and limited by the Constitution. 
  1. 3. SS.912.C.4.2: Evaluate the influence of American foreign policy on other nations and the influences of other nations on American policies and society. 

Agenda: 
  1. 1. Bell Ringer (10 min)  
  1. 2. Foreign and Defense Policy PPT (rest of class) (slides 16-31) 
  1. 3. Students are to complete their notes as teacher explains topics in the PPT. 

Home Learning:  
Study for Tuesday's Executive Branch Exam; refer to the blog for study guide.