1 / 12

NATIONAL GOVERNMENT

NATIONAL GOVERNMENT. Chapter 8, Lesson 3 Learning Target: How Government Works. Some Background Knowledge…. From 1781 to 1783, the capital city of the United States was Philadelphia, PA…NOT Washington, D.C. Why do you think that is?

donkor
Download Presentation

NATIONAL GOVERNMENT

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. NATIONAL GOVERNMENT Chapter 8, Lesson 3 Learning Target: How Government Works

  2. Some Background Knowledge… • From 1781 to 1783, the capital city of the United States was Philadelphia, PA…NOT Washington, D.C. Why do you think that is? • The United States Capitol building has about 540 rooms. The bronze State of Freedom is the crowning feature of the dome on the Capitol.

  3. Building on our Schema! • We learned in the last unit on Citizenship that government needs POWER and AUTHORITY to work. One person can not have all of the POWER and AUTHORITY. The POWER and AUTHORITY go to a group of people.

  4. Building on Our Schema! • We have learned that the Government is like a tree. There are 3 branches that work together to keep our nation safe and equal. • Each branch has a different job. But they all work together.

  5. Building on Our Schema! • What is the capital of our state? What is the capital of our NATION? National leaders meet and work in ________________________________________! Vocabulary: Legislature – first branch that makes laws, or Congress Executive branch – branch that signs laws, the President Judicial branch – branch that enforces laws; the Courts Monument – a building or statue that helps people remember a person or an event

  6. LEGISLATIVE BRANCH -Makes the Laws -The people that make the laws are elected by the citizens -They are members of CONGRESS (2 parts) Senate House of Representatives

  7. EXECUTIVE BRANCH • Carries out the laws • Makes sure that people follow the laws • In a city/town, this person in charge is the mayor. • In a state, this person in charge is the governor. • In the country, this person in charge is the president.

  8. JUDICIAL BRANCH • Decide what the laws mean • The people that do this are called judges. The judges work in the courts and also help decide if someone breaks the law. • -Some judges are voted in by the community and others are picked by the executive branch.

  9. SYMBOLS of our Country The bald eagle was chosen as our national bird in 1789. Why do you think we chose the bald eagle?

  10. Symbols of our Country NOW 1959 THEN 1777 50 stars = 50 states 13 stars/stripes = 13 original colonies When Washington was president Why RED? N Red shows hardiness Why WHITE? White shows purity and innocence Why BLUE? Blue shows perseverance and justice

  11. Memorials/Monuments • A monument is a building or statue that helps people ___________________ a person or special event.

  12. DISCUSS • Why are national symbols and monuments important to people in the United States? • If you had the opportunity to chose a symbol or design a monument for our country, what would you chose/design and why?

More Related