Title: POL 201 Course Great Wisdom / tutorialrank.com
1POL 201 Course Great Wisdom-tutorialrank.com
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2POL 201 Course Great Wisdom-tutorialrank.com
- ASHFORD POL 201 Entire Course
- ASHFORD POL 201 Week 1 DQ 1 Separation of Powers
Checks and Balances
- ASHFORD POL 201 Week 1 DQ 1 Separation of Powers
Checks and Balances - ASHFORD POL 201 Week 1 DQ 2 Amending the U.S.
Constitution - ASHFORD POL 201 Week 2 DQ 1 Policy-making in the
Federal System
- Separation of Powers/Checks and Balances. For
much of 2011 and 2012, public dissatisfaction
with Congress rose to all time highs, with 70-80
expressing disapproval with how Congress does its
job. Many commentators note that Americans are
fed up with Washington "grid-lock"
3POL 201 Course Great Wisdom-tutorialrank.com
- ASHFORD POL 201 Week 1 DQ 2 Amending the U.S.
Constitution
- ASHFORD POL 201 Week 2 DQ 1 Policy-making in the
Federal System
- Amending the U.S. Constitution. The formal
process of amending the Constitution is
cumbersome and slow. While this fact explains why
relatively few amendments have been adopted, it
does not discourage advocates of constitutional
change from proposing them.
- Policy-making in the Federal System. The U.S.
government's expansive role in public policy is
caught in a swirl of conflicting cross-currents.
On the one hand, popular expectations about
government's responsibility to solve problems
often exceed the capacity of state and local
authorities
4POL 201 Course Great Wisdom-tutorialrank.com
- ASHFORD POL 201 Week 2 DQ 2 Meet Your Rep
- ASHFORD POL 201 Week 2 Short Essay -
Policy-making in the Federal System
- Meet Your Rep. The Constitution states, "The
House of Representatives shall be composed of
Members chosen every second Year by the People of
the several States..." (Art. I, Sec. 2). Contrast
this with the original constitutional language
for the other house of Congress, "The Senate of
the United States shall
- Short Essay Policy-making in the Federal
System. The U.S. government's expansive role in
public policy is caught in a swirl of conflicting
cross-currents. On the one hand, popular
expectations about government's responsibility to
solve problems often exceed the capacity
5POL 201 Course Great Wisdom-tutorialrank.com
- ASHFORD POL 201 Week 3 DQ 1 Presidential
Leadership and the Electoral College
- ASHFORD POL 201 Week 3 DQ 2 Defence Spending and
the Military-Industrial Complex
- Presidential Leadership and the Electoral
College. Americans expect their presidents to get
things done, to solve problems, to govern
effectively, and to be strong leaders. The
framers of the Constitution did not envision such
presidential leadership. A scholar of the
presidency points
- Defense Spending and the Military-Industrial
Complex. Levin-Waldman (2012, pp. 186-89)
analyzes how "iron triangles" link Congress, the
bureaucracy, and interest groups in self-serving
relationships that influence policy in ways that
are contrary to the public interest. In 1961
6POL 201 Course Great Wisdom-tutorialrank.com
- ASHFORD POL 201 Week 4 DQ 1 The Supreme Court and
Judicial Review
- ASHFORD POL 201 Week 4 DQ 2 Habeas Corpus and the
War on Terror
- The Supreme Court and Judicial Review. In a
recent lecture at Yale University, Supreme Court
Justice Stephen Breyer cautioned that while most
citizens assume that judicial review is an
enduring part of American government, judges
should not take it for granted.
- Habeas Corpus and the War on Terror. Soon after
the U.S. invasion of Afghanistan in 2001, the
Bush administration developed a plan for holding
and interrogating prisoners captured during the
conflict. They were sent to a prison inside a
U.S. naval base at Guantanamo Bay on land leased
from the government of Cuba. Since 2002, over 700
men have been detained at "GITMO."
7POL 201 Course Great Wisdom-tutorialrank.com
- ASHFORD POL 201 Week 5 DQ 1 Party Platforms and
Winning Elections
- ASHFORD POL 201 Week 5 DQ 2 Voting and Turnout
- Party Platforms and Winning Elections. Political
parties mobilize voters to win elections and
implement policy goals. Parties use their stated
policy goals (i.e., their platforms) as a way to
mobilize voter support. Generally, in order to be
successful in a two-party system
- Voting and Turnout. The U.S. has one of the
lowest voter turnout rates among modern
democratic political systems. One study ranks the
U.S. 120th on a list of 169 nations compared on
voter turnout (Pintor, Gratschew, Sullivan,
2002). While during the last decade many
initiatives
8POL 201 Course Great Wisdom-tutorialrank.com
- ASHFORD POL 201 Week 5 Final Paper Civil
Liberties, Habeas Corpus, and the War on Terror
- The final assignment for this course is a Final
Paper. The purpose of the Final Paper is to give
you an opportunity to apply much of what you have
learned about American national government to an
examination of civil liberties in the context of
the war on terror. The Final Paper represents 20
of the overall course grade.
- POL 201 Week 1 DQ 1 The U.S. Constitution
- POL 201 Week 1 DQ 2 Week One Reflection
- POL 201 Week 1 Learning Activity The Constitution
- POL 201 Week 1 Quiz
- POL 201 Week 2 DQ 1 Policy and Your Life
9POL 201 Course Great Wisdom-tutorialrank.com
- POL 201 Week 1 DQ 1 The U.S. Constitution
- POL 201 Week 1 DQ 2 Week One Reflection
- The U.S. Constitution
- Prepare Prior to writing your initial post, read
Chapters 1 and 2 of American Government. In
addition, watch the video provided on the U.S.
Constitution, Episode IV - Built to Last. - Reflect The U.S. Constitution is the cornerstone
of our federal government.
- Week One Reflection.
- Prepare Prior to beginning your reflection this
week, complete all course readings, your
introduction, and the - Discussion, The U.S. Constitution.
- Reflect Once you have completed these
assignments think about how American politics
have and could affect your career aspirations.
10POL 201 Course Great Wisdom-tutorialrank.com
- POL 201 Week 1 Learning Activity The Constitution
- The Constitution. The weekly worksheets will help
you build all the necessary parts for your Final
Paper. This week, you will evaluate the strengths
and weaknesses of the most important document for
Americas national government, the U.S.
Constitution. In your worksheet, you will
describe one strength and one weakness of the
Constitution. In addition, you will need to
recommend
- Question 1. The American system of government can
be most accurately described as a _________. - Question 2. In 1607, the English monarch King
James I granted a charter to which organization
to establish a settlement in the Chesapeake
region? - Question 3. The Connecticut Plan, also known as
the Great
11POL 201 Course Great Wisdom-tutorialrank.com
- POL 201 Week 2 DQ 1 Policy and Your Life
- POL 201 Week 2 DQ 2 Week Two Reflection
- Policy and Your Life
- Prepare Prior to beginning work on this
discussion question, read Chapters 3 and 4 in
American Government. In addition, watch the
videos provided on federalism Quick Study of
Federalism
- Prepare Prior to beginning your reflection this
week, complete all course readings and assigned
videos, and the - Discussion, Policy and Your Life.
- Reflect Once you have completed these
assignments, think about how federalism and the
U.S. Congress have or will affect your life. - The federal structure ensures that there is a
clear line between local
12POL 201 Course Great Wisdom-tutorialrank.com
- POL 201 Week 2 Learning Activity Federalism
- Federalism This week, we continue completing the
worksheets in preparation for the Final Paper.
One of the most important structures in the
national government is federalism. Understanding
the relationship between local, state, and
national level governments is critical in being
able to understand
- Question 1. The national government can attempt
to gain the cooperation of state governments by
using what type of coercive measures? - Question 2. The Tenth Amendment balances out
national authority by - Question 3. A presidential veto of a bill can be
overridden by what percentage vote of all members
of Congress?
13POL 201 Course Great Wisdom-tutorialrank.com
- POL 201 Week 3 DQ 1 The Electoral College
- POL 201 Week 3 DQ 2 Week Three Reflection
- Prepare Prior to beginning work on this
discussion question, read Chapters 5 and 6 in
American Government. In addition, read the
following articles - What Are the Arguments Made in Favor and
Against the Electoral College?, - GOP Leaders United in Defense of the Electoral
College, and the ProQuest article
- Week Three Reflection
- American Government. Review the videos, Episode I
- A More Perfect Union and Episode II - Its a
Free Country regarding the U.S. Constitution. - Reflect The executive and judicial branches of
the U.S. national government often seem to
operate independently and with little conflict.
Many laws are signed by the President and then
implemented
14POL 201 Course Great Wisdom-tutorialrank.com
- POL 201 Week 3 Learning Activity Branches of
Government
- Branches of Government. The three branches of
our government each play crucial roles in the
U.S. national government. Each branch has
specific power, duties, and responsibilities that
are the most apparent features of our system of
separate powers. Nevertheless, each branch has
been critiqued for having definite strengths .
- 1. Question In the realm of foreign affairs,
presidents are usually weak and must solicit
congressional approval before entering into
agreements with other countries. - Question 2. Question Prior judicial experience
is required to be appointed as a judge on the
federal level.
15POL 201 Course Great Wisdom-tutorialrank.com
- POL 201 Week 4 DQ 1 Individual Rights and the
Obligations of Government
- POL 201 Week 4 DQ 2 Week Four Reflection
- Prepare Prior to beginning work on this
discussion, read chapters 8, 9, and 10 in
American Government and watch the video, Episode
II - Its a Free Country. - Reflect Our political system is characterized by
certain fundamental features to include a system
of laws, rights, and liberties. The laws, created
and supported by the Constitutional framework
- Prepare Prior to beginning work on this
discussion, read chapters 8, 9, and 10 in
American Government, watch the video, Episode II
- Its a Free Country, and review your results
from the Political Typology Quiz. - Reflect Political parties mobilize voters to win
elections and implement policy goals. Parties use
their stated policy goals (i.e., their platforms)
as a way to mobilize
16POL 201 Course Great Wisdom-tutorialrank.com
- POL 201 Week 4 Learning Activity Political
Parties, Interest Groups, and Elections
- Political Parties, Interest Groups, and
Elections. The various political actors involved
in the processes, activities, and policies of the
U.S. government each have evolving goals and
objectives. In addition, these actors have
produced differential effects, both positive and
negative, on the processes, activities, and
policies of the federal government. In this last
weekly worksheet, you will assess
- Question 1.What constitutional amendment
guaranteed women the right to vote? - Question 2. How are interest groups are different
from political parties? - Question 3. Which Supreme Court decision stated
that affirmative action intended to promote
greater equality was acceptable public policy,
but the use of quotas was not.
17POL 201 Course Great Wisdom-tutorialrank.com
- POL 201 Week 5 DQ 1 Voting and Voter Turnout
- POL 201 Week 5 DQ 2 Week Five Reflection
- Prepare Prior to completing this discussion
question, review Chapters 9 and 10 in American
Government and the following articles - How Voter ID Laws Are Being Used to
Disenfranchise Minorities and the Poor, Fraught
with Fraud, and Proof at the Polls.
- Prepare Prior to beginning your reflection,
review all course readings and videos as
required. - Reflect The U.S. national government is based on
the framework detailed in the U.S. Constitution.
The process that the Founding Fathers used to map
out our national government is fascinating and
illuminating. The Constitution creates a system
of checks and balances
18POL 201 Course Great Wisdom-tutorialrank.com
- POL 201 Week 5 Final Paper Americas Democracy
Your Report Card (2 Papers)
- POL 201 Week 5 DQ 2 Week Five Reflection
- Prepare Prior to beginning your reflection,
review all course readings and videos as
required. - Reflect The U.S. national government is based on
the framework detailed in the U.S. Constitution.
The process that the Founding Fathers used to map
out our national government is fascinating and
illuminating. The Constitution creates a system
of checks and balances
- Prepare Prior to beginning your reflection,
review all course readings and videos as
required. - Reflect The U.S. national government is based on
the framework detailed in the U.S. Constitution.
The process that the Founding Fathers used to map
out our national government is fascinating and
illuminating. The Constitution creates a system
of checks and balances
19POL 201 Course Great Wisdom-tutorialrank.com
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