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HIS 303 ASH Academic Achievement/uophelp

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For more course tutorials visit www.uophelp.com HIS 303 Week 1 DQ 1 English Politics and Political Traditions HIS 303 Week 1 DQ 2 The Constitutional Convention of 1787 HIS 303 Week 2 DQ 1 Powers of the Federal Government HIS 303 Week 2 DQ 2 A Symbolic Figurehead HIS 303 Week 2 Early Constitutional Controversies HIS 303 Week 3 DQ 1 The Constitution and Reconstruction – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: HIS 303 ASH Academic Achievement/uophelp


1
HIS 303 ASH Course Tutorial
  • For more course tutorials visit
  • www.uophelp.com

2
HIS 303 ASH Course Tutorial
  • HIS 303 Entire
    Course (Ash)
  • For more course tutorials visit
  • www.uophelp.com
  •      
  •  
  • HIS 303 Week 1 DQ 1 English Politics and
    Political Traditions
  • HIS 303 Week 1 DQ 2 The Constitutional Convention
    of 1787
  • HIS 303 Week 2 DQ 1 Powers of the Federal
    Government
  • HIS 303 Week 2 DQ 2 A Symbolic Figurehead
  • HIS 303 Week 2 Early Constitutional Controversies

3
HIS 303 ASH Course Tutorial
  • HIS 303 Final Guide
    (Ash)
  • For more course tutorials visit
  • www.uophelp.com
  •  
  •      
  • Final Paper
  • From the time the Constitution was ratified,
    Americans have disagreed over its meaning and the
    extent of the powers it gave to different
    branches and reserved to the states and the
    people. Since the Constitution took effect, it
    has been

4
HIS 303 ASH Course Tutorial
  • HIS 303 Week 1 DQ 1 English Politics and
    Political Traditions (Ash)
  • For more course tutorials visit
  • www.uophelp.com
  •  
  •      
  • English Politics and Political TraditionsAmerican
    s often imagine that their political institutions
    and principles are unique and unheralded yet,
    many of them might be traced back to the heritage
    of England at the time the colonies were first
    formed, and over the course of the

5
HIS 303 ASH Course Tutorial
  • HIS 303 Week 1 DQ 2 The Constitutional
    Convention of 1787 (Ash)
  • For more course tutorials visit
  • www.uophelp.com
  •  
  •    
  • 1.  
  • The Constitutional Convention of 1787. Americans
    today generally revere the Constitution and
    appeal to it as an impeccable authority on
    current events (even when the Americans in
    question have never closely read the
    Constitution). However, when the Constitution was
    first presented to the American people, many of
    them opposed it

6
HIS 303 ASH Course Tutorial
  • HIS 303 Week 2 DQ 1 Powers of the Federal
    Government (Ash)
  • For more course tutorials visit
  • www.uophelp.com
  •  
  • Powers of the Federal Government. Many Americans
    today believe the federal government has acquired
    too much power, size, and influence in the
    nations domestic affairs. Throughout U.S.
    history, a tension has existed regarding what
    powers the federal government can assume and what
    powers should be left to the states. Review the
    text of the

7
HIS 303 ASH Course Tutorial
  • HIS 303 Week 2 DQ 2 A Symbolic
    Figurehead (Ash)
  • For more course
    tutorials visit
  • www.uophelp.com
  •          
  •        
  • DQ 2 A Symbolic Figurehead. Americans tend to pay
    more attention to the president than to any other
    government official, blaming him when things go
    wrong, even in areas over which the president has
    little control, and crediting him with successes
    which stem from the legislature instead of the
    executive. In many ways, the president serves as
    a

8
HIS 303 ASH Course Tutorial
  • HIS 303 Week 2 Early Constitutional
    Controversies (Ash)
  • For more course tutorials visit
  • www.uophelp.com
  •    
  •    
  • Early Constitutional Controversies. In 1788,
    Alexander Hamilton and James Madison, who had
    both played active roles at the Constitutional
    Convention, worked together to write The
    Federalist Papers, a series of articles
    originally published in New York newspapers to
    convince readers to back the ratification of the
    Constitution. Constitutional

9
HIS 303 ASH Course Tutorial
  • HIS 303 Week 3 DQ 1 The Constitution and
    Reconstruction (Ash)
  • For more course tutorials visit
  • www.uophelp.com
  •  
  •      
  • The Constitution and Reconstruction. A common
    misconception about the end of the Civil War is
    that, after ending slavery, the federal
    government did nothing to assist former slaves.
    In fact, the Constitution itself was
    substantially altered to define the rights of
    Americans and to allow the federal government to
    protect those rights. Review the contents of the
    Fourteenth, Fifteenth, and Nineteenth Amendments,
    along with the history of the period from 1865 to

10
HIS 303 ASH Course Tutorial
  • HIS 303 Week 3 DQ 2 Populists and
    Progressives (Ash)
  • For more course tutorials visit
  • www.uophelp.com
  •  
  •    
  • Populists and Progressives. According to much
    populist rhetoric since the 1980s, the federal
    government is too active in domestic affairs,
    particularly the economy. Yet, a century earlier,
    the Populists and Progressives a agitated to have
    the federal government intervene more actively in
    domestic affairs. Explain why many Americans
    during this
  •  

11
HIS 303 ASH Course Tutorial
  • HIS 303 Week 3 Supreme Court
    Decision (Ash)
  • For more course tutorials visit
  • www.uophelp.com
  •        
  •    
  • Supreme Court Decision. The judiciary is one of
    the three branches involved in the checks and
    balances associated with the U.S. government
    under the Constitution. It is also the branch
    over which the American people have the least
    direct control, making it particularly
    controversial, especially when it seems to
    controvert the popular will as

12
HIS 303 ASH Course Tutorial
  • HIS 303 Week 4 DQ 1 The
    New Deal (Ash)
  • For more course tutorials visit
  • www.uophelp.com
  •            
  •  
  • The New Deal. Franklin Roosevelts New Deal
    greatly expanded the federal governments role in
    the countrys domestic and economic affairs,
    which led to a long-running constitutional crisis
    in the 1930s that remains controversial to this
    day. Although the Supreme Court threw out several
    New Deal programs, others survived and laid the
    foundation for later developments over the next
    three decades.

13
HIS 303 ASH Course Tutorial
  • HIS 303 Week 4 DQ 2 The
    Bill of Rights (Ash)
  • For more course tutorials visit
  • www.uophelp.com
  •          
  • The Bill of Rights. After the Preamble, The Bill
    of Rights is probably the most famous section of
    the Constitution, but is often imperfectly
    understood. For instance, the Bill of Rights
    initially served only to limit the actions of the
    federal government, and did not protect citizens
    from the actions of state governments (as
    affirmed in the 1833 Supreme Court case of Barron
    v. Baltimore). Moreover, many rights that
    Americans take for grantedsuch as votingdo not
    appear in the Bill of Rights, and many other
    rights were not fully articulated or protected
    until the mid-twentieth century.

14
HIS 303 ASH Course Tutorial
  • HIS 303 Week 5 DQ 1 Conservative
    Constitutionalism (Ash)
  • For more course tutorials visit
  • www.uophelp.com
  •            
  • Conservative Constitutionalism. Historians
    sometimes speak of the Reagan Revolution that
    occurred after Ronald Reagan became president in
    1981. This revolution represented a conservative
    backlash against the liberalism of the first half
    of the twentieth century, and arguably continues
    to set the tone of political debate in the
    country today

15
HIS 303 ASH Course Tutorial
  • HIS 303 Week 5 DQ 2 Expansion of
    Executive Power (Ash)
  • For more course tutorials visit
  • www.uophelp.com
  •          
  • Expansion of Executive Power. Classical
    republican philosophy warned against the
    expansion of executive power, and throughout U.S.
    history, critics have assailed presidentsfrom
    Washington, to Jackson, to Lincoln, and
    beyondfor allegedly abusing their power in
    tyrannical ways. These fears arguably peaked
    during the Cold War, when foreign policy, a
    matter often delegated to the executive, expanded
    exponentially in importance. By the 1970s

16
HIS 303 ASH Course Tutorial
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