Chapter 1: Introduction: The Citizen and the Government
Study Plan
Key Concepts
- Even though the relationship between the citizen and the government is central to American government, the government does not necessarily do what the majority of the people want.
- Government affects our lives every day.
- Different types of government are defined by how powerful the government is and how free the people are.
- Politics in America changed when more people won the right to participate.
- The identity and characteristics of Americans have changed over time.
- Liberty, equality, and democracy are core American values, though they often come into conflict.
As you work through the below assignments, don't forget to generate a Progress Report. Fill out the sections you have completed and send a copy to your email account.
Organize
- Follow this Study Plan to access your chapter assignments.
- Print out the Chapter Outline and bring it to lecture to help structure your note-taking and check-off topics covered in class.
- Access Quiz+! The results of this chapter quiz create a Custom Study Plan that links you directly to materials that will assist your pre-exam review.
Learn
- Read Chapter 1 in your textbook or ebook.
- Read the Chapter Review of Chapter 1. Note any material you have difficulty remembering from the text.
- Master the key terms for this chapter by working through the deck of Flashcards.
Connect
- Explore the Interactive Politics Simulation and the questions that follow.
- Answer the Questions for Discussion and Thought and articulate your own point of view on the chapter's material.
- Complete the What Government Does Exercises to understand the structure of American government and how it affects your life in a direct way.
- Complete the Get Involved Exercise to see how you can use what you have learned in this chapter to effect change in politics and policy.
- Watch the Video Exercises for this chapter and answer the accompanying questions.
- Mobilize for political action with Mobilize.org!