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Creating the Bill of Rights

Creating the Bill of Rights

Assessment

Presentation

Social Studies, English, History

6th - 8th Grade

Practice Problem

Easy

Created by

Joshua Wright

Used 10+ times

FREE Resource

36 Slides • 26 Questions

1

By Bianca Rodriguez

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2

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  • Freedom of religion

  • Freedom of speech

  • Freedom of the press​

  • Freedom of assembly

  • Freedom of petition​

1st Amendment

3

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Guarantees the right to bear (carry) arms (weapons)

2nd Amendment

4

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Stops the government from forcing citizens to keep soldiers in their homes

3rd Amendment

5

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Limits searches and seizures (police officers cannot enter your home without a signed warrant)

4th Amendment

6

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  • Cannot be tried for the same crime twice

  • No self-incrimination

  • Government must pay a fair price for your property​

5th Amendment

7

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  • Speedy trial after your arrest

  • A fair jury of citizens

  • Opportunity to defend yourself

  • Lawyer represents you paid by the government​

6th Amendment

8

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Extends your right to a trial by jury in civil cases

7th Amendment

9

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  • The government cannot demand a person to pay bail or fines that are too high and unreasonable

  • No cruel or unusual punishments​

8th Amendment

10

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Entitles you to rights not listed in the Constitution

9th Amendment

11

Powers not given to the U.S. government are reserved to the states or to the people

10th Amendment

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12

Multiple Choice

Question image

Which amendment is this case referring to?

1

1st

2

10th

3

3rd

4

8th

13

Multiple Choice

Question image

Which amendment is this case referring to?

1

2nd

2

1st

3

9th

4

7th

14

Multiple Choice

Question image

Which amendment is this case referring to?

1

11th

2

3rd

3

8th

4

4th

15

Multiple Choice

Question image

Which amendment is this case referring to?

1

7th

2

6th

3

2nd

4

4th

16

Multiple Choice

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Which amendment is this case referring to?

1

8th

2

9th

3

7th

4

6th

17

Creating the Bill of Rights

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18

Multiple Choice

Amendment means..

1

change

2

new

19

Multiple Choice

how many amendments are there to the constitution

1

10

2

5

3

27

20

For all his hopes, John Hancock never got to be president. By a narrow vote, Virginia did ratify the Constitution. In the first presidential election, held in 1789, George Washington became the nation's first president. John Adams of Massachusetts became the vice president.


21

When the first Congress met that year, no one seemed in much of a hurry to amend the Constitution. Representative James Madison, however, did not forget the promises made during the ratification debate. Originally, he had opposed adding a bill of rights to the Constitution because such a listing seemed unnecessary to him. However, Thomas Jefferson helped change his mind. In a letter to Madison, Jefferson argued that “a bill of rights is what the people are entitled to against every government on Earth . . . and what no just government should refuse.”

22

Multiple Choice

How many rights does the bill of rights have?

1

1

2

5

3

10

4

28

23

Debate and Approval in Congress

 While Congress debated other issues, Madison sifted through nearly 100 proposed amendments. He chose those that seemed least controversial, or least likely to cause conflict, and presented them to Congress on June 8, 1789.

24

Debate and Approval in Congress

Critics jumped on Madison's proposals as meaningless “milk-and-water” cures for imaginary problems. The debate that followed was, in Madison's words, “extremely difficult.” As months dragged on with no agreement, he wrote that the task had become a “nauseous project.” Still, he persevered until Congress approved 12 amendments.


25

Ratification by the States

 Under the Constitution, three-quarters of the states must ratify an amendment before it can become law. The states rejected the first two amendments, which dealt with the size of congressional districts and congressional pay raises. Both amendments were considered unnecessary. By 1791, the required number of states (nine) had approved the other ten amendments. Together, these ten amendments form the Bill of Rights.


Bill of Rights: a formal listing of the basic rights of people in the United States


26

Ratification by the States

When Madison first proposed the Bill of Rights, some people saw his amendments as useless “paper barriers” against abuses of government power. For more than 200 years, however, his “paper barriers” have proven far stronger than even Madison might have hoped.



27

Multiple Choice

The Bill of Rights contains the first ten amendments to the U.S. Constitution.

1

true

2

false

28

Multiple Choice

Who took the lead in making sure the Bill of Rights was eventually included in the Constitution?

1

Hamilton

2

Madison

29

Multiple Choice

What is the Bill of Rights?

1

a document that replaced the Constitution as the supreme law in the United States

2

a document that details how to make constitutional amendments

3

a formal listing of the basic rights of people in the United States

30

The US Bill of Rights

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31

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32

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33

Multiple Choice

Which amendment protects the rights of every American, such as Freedoms of Speech, Religion and Press?

1

Second Amendment

2

First Amendment

3

27 Amendments

4

Third Amendment

34

Multiple Choice

Which amendment guarantees Americans right to bear arms (own weapons)

1

Second Amendment

2

First Amendment

3

27 Amendments

4

Third Amendment

35

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36

Multiple Choice

What does the third amendment say?

1

Protects the rights of every American, defines the Freedoms of Religion, Speech and Press

2

Prevents the government from forcing citizens to shelter soldiers in their homes

3

Guarantees Americans right to bear arms (own weapons)

37

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38

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39

Multiple Choice

The idea that anyone accused of a crime is innocent until proven guilty is in which amendment?

1

First

2

Second

3

Fifth

4

Third

40

Multiple Choice

Under the Fifth Amendment, can someone be put on trial twice for the same crime?

1

Yes

2

No

41

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42

Multiple Choice

What does the Sixth Amendment say?

1

It prevents the government from forcing citizens to shelter soldiers in their homes

2

It discusses the need for search warrants

3

It describes freedom to protest

4

It outlines a right to a speedy public trial

43

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44

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45

Multiple Choice

Which amendment protects people from having to pay unreasonably high bail in order to be released from jail while awaiting trial?

1

Eighth

2

Second

3

Fifth

4

Fourth

46

Multiple Choice

Under the Eighth Amendment, is cruel and unusual punishment allowed for criminals?

1

Yes

2

No

47

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48

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49

Multiple Choice

Which amendment recognizes the Americans have rights that are not listed in the Constitution?

1

Seventh

2

Eighth

3

Ninth

4

None of them

50

Creating the Bill of Rights

media

51

Multiple Choice

Amendment means..

1

change

2

new

52

Multiple Choice

how many amendments are there to the constitution

1

10

2

5

3

27

53

For all his hopes, John Hancock never got to be president. By a narrow vote, Virginia did ratify the Constitution. In the first presidential election, held in 1789, George Washington became the nation's first president. John Adams of Massachusetts became the vice president.


54

When the first Congress met that year, no one seemed in much of a hurry to amend the Constitution. Representative James Madison, however, did not forget the promises made during the ratification debate. Originally, he had opposed adding a bill of rights to the Constitution because such a listing seemed unnecessary to him. However, Thomas Jefferson helped change his mind. In a letter to Madison, Jefferson argued that “a bill of rights is what the people are entitled to against every government on Earth . . . and what no just government should refuse.”

55

Multiple Choice

How many rights does the bill of rights have?

1

1

2

5

3

10

4

28

56

Debate and Approval in Congress

 While Congress debated other issues, Madison sifted through nearly 100 proposed amendments. He chose those that seemed least controversial, or least likely to cause conflict, and presented them to Congress on June 8, 1789.

57

Debate and Approval in Congress

Critics jumped on Madison's proposals as meaningless “milk-and-water” cures for imaginary problems. The debate that followed was, in Madison's words, “extremely difficult.” As months dragged on with no agreement, he wrote that the task had become a “nauseous project.” Still, he persevered until Congress approved 12 amendments.


58

Ratification by the States

 Under the Constitution, three-quarters of the states must ratify an amendment before it can become law. The states rejected the first two amendments, which dealt with the size of congressional districts and congressional pay raises. Both amendments were considered unnecessary. By 1791, the required number of states (nine) had approved the other ten amendments. Together, these ten amendments form the Bill of Rights.


Bill of Rights: a formal listing of the basic rights of people in the United States


59

Ratification by the States

When Madison first proposed the Bill of Rights, some people saw his amendments as useless “paper barriers” against abuses of government power. For more than 200 years, however, his “paper barriers” have proven far stronger than even Madison might have hoped.



60

Multiple Choice

The Bill of Rights contains the first ten amendments to the U.S. Constitution.

1

true

2

false

61

Multiple Choice

Who took the lead in making sure the Bill of Rights was eventually included in the Constitution?

1

Hamilton

2

Madison

62

Multiple Choice

What is the Bill of Rights?

1

a document that replaced the Constitution as the supreme law in the United States

2

a document that details how to make constitutional amendments

3

a formal listing of the basic rights of people in the United States

By Bianca Rodriguez

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