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Amendment Review

Amendment Review

Assessment

Presentation

Other

9th - 12th Grade

Practice Problem

Hard

Created by

Jennifer Sneed

Used 1+ times

FREE Resource

36 Slides • 26 Questions

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Multiple Choice

What is CTE?

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Course and Trade Eligibility

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Career and Technical Education

3

Career and Technology Education

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Multiple Choice

A CTE Concentrator is:

1

A student who has completed multiple courses/credits in one CTE program area.

2

A student who only focuses on CTE courses.

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A student who has completed at least one CTE course in a single CTE program area

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Multiple Choice

Which of the following is a CTE course at WHS

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Pottery I

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Basket Weaving

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Computer Science I

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Theater Stage Design

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Multiple Choice

Which of the following is NOT a CTE course at WHS?

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Welding I

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Boat Building I

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Carpentry I

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Weightlifting

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Multiple Choice

CTE courses at WHS can earn college credit

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True

2

False

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Multiple Choice

CTE courses are not honors courses

1

True

2

False

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Multiple Choice

CTE courses are only for students not attending college.

1

True

2

False

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Multiple Choice

What is the main responsibility of the legislative branch of government?

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Enforces laws

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Interprets laws

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Makes the laws

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Elects the president

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Multiple Select

Which of the following are responsibilities of the legislative branch?

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Declares war

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Approves presidential appointments

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Controls government funding

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Enforces laws

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Multiple Choice

Which branch of government is responsible for enforcing laws?

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Legislative

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Executive

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Judicial

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Congress

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Multiple Select

Which of the following are responsibilities of the Judicial Branch?

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Overseeing criminal and civil trials

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Managing foreign policy

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Reviewing actions of police, government, and laws

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Signing or vetoing laws

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Multiple Choice

Which branch of the U.S. government is responsible for enforcing laws and managing foreign policy?

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Executive Branch

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Judicial Branch

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Legislative Branch

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State Government

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Multiple Choice

Reviews police use-of-force cases.

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Legislative Branch

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Executive Branch

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Judicial Branch

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Multiple Choice

Vetoes a bill.

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Legislative Branch

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Executive Branch

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Judicial Branch

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Multiple Choice

Who approves the President’s cabinet?

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Legislative Branch

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Executive Branch

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Judicial Branch

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Multiple Choice

Patrols highways and responds to emergencies.

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Legislative Branch

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Executive Branch

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Judicial Branch

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Multiple Choice

Writes national laws.

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Legislative Branch

2

Executive Branch

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Judicial Branch

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Multiple Choice

Interprets the Constitution.

1

Legislative Branch

2

Executive Branch

3

Judicial Branch

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Labelling

Label what parts of our government systems go with each branch of government.

Drag labels to their correct position on the image

Congress

enforces laws

President

House of Reps

makes laws

interprets laws

Supreme Court

Senate

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Multiple Choice

Which hypothetical situation would MOST clearly violate the principle established in Weeks v. United States?

1

Whether police could enter a home Officers arrest a suspect outside his home and later enter the home without a warrant, based on a neighbor providing a key, and seize incriminating documents used in federal court.

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Officers enter a suspect’s home with a valid search warrant but seize items not listed on the warrant.

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Officers search a vehicle without a warrant after smelling the odor of marijuana coming from inside the car.

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Officers seize illegal drugs during a pat-down search after obtaining reasonable suspicion that the suspect is armed and dangerous.

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Multiple Select

Which of the following statements about Mapp v. Ohio (1961) are correct?

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Police used a fake warrant to enter Mapp's home

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The Supreme Court ruled that illegally obtained evidence cannot be used in state courts

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The exclusionary rule was applied to all states

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Police had a valid search warrant

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Multiple Choice

What is the significance of the 'reasonable suspicion' standard established in Terry v. Ohio (1968)?

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It allows police to stop It prohibits all forms of stop-and-frisk

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It requires police to have a search warrant before stopping someone

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It only applies to federal officers

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It allows police to stop and frisk individuals based on less than probable cause

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Multiple Choice

Which scenario would MOST clearly violate the standards established in Miranda v. Arizona?

1

Officers question a suspect in a non-custodial setting without reading Miranda rights, and the suspect voluntarily provides information.

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Officers arrest a suspect, place him in an interrogation room, begin questioning him about a robbery, and obtain a confession without informing him of his right to an attorney or right to remain silent.

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Officers read a suspect his rights, and the suspect agrees to talk without a lawyer present.

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Officers ask a suspect for his name and ID during a routine traffic stop without reading him Miranda warnings.

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Multiple Choice

In Tennessee v. Garner (1985), the Supreme Court limited the use of deadly force against fleeing suspects. Which of the following best explains why the Court ruled the Tennessee statute unconstitutional?

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The statute violated the suspect’s Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination because the officer did not verbally warn the suspect before firing.

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The Court determined that using deadly force on any fleeing felon fails the “objective reasonableness” test since officers must always attempt less-lethal alternatives first.

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The use of deadly force constitutes a “seizure” under the Fourth Amendment, and is unreasonable when the suspect is unarmed, non-dangerous, and not posing an immediate threat to officers or others.

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The statute allowed officers to use deadly force during daytime hours only, which the Court said created unequal enforcement standards between jurisdictions.

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Multiple Choice

Under Graham v. Connor, which of the following scenarios would MOST likely be considered an unreasonable use of force?

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An officer uses force on a suspect who is resisting arrest and attempting to take the officer’s weapon.

2

An officer quickly uses physical force on a suspect based on fast-changing, unclear circumstances that suggest the suspect may be dangerous.

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An officer pushes a suspect to the ground after the suspect ignores commands and continues walking toward a busy roadway.

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An officer strikes a handcuffed suspect who is sitting on the ground, not resisting, and posing no immediate threat to anyone.

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Multiple Choice

Which scenario MOST clearly violates the rule established in Chimel v. California?

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Officers arrest a suspect in his bedroom, then search the entire house—including the attic and basement—without a search warrant or consent.

2

Officers arrest a suspect in his kitchen and quickly search the drawers and cabinets next to the suspect, where he could reach weapons.

3

Officers arrest a suspect in his living room and perform a protective sweep of the nearby hallway after hearing movement in an adjacent room.

4

Officers arrest a suspect on his front porch and search a backpack lying next to him within arm’s reach.

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