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Nervous Politics
APUSGOPO
Rules• Get in one of three teams• Pick a person to be your speaker• Pick a person to be your guesser• None of the other team members
may speak but they may use their notes or textbooks and write down answers
Rules
• The speaker faces the overhead where the words are projected
• The guesser sits with their back to the overhead• The team has 30 seconds • Terms will be flashed on the overhead, one at a
time• The speaker tries to get the guesser to say as
many terms as possible within 30 seconds
Rules
• The speaker may say anything (within reason) except the actual words they are trying to get the guesser to say. They lose a point every time the speaker says the term.
• The team gets one point every time the guesser guesses the term
• If the speaker gives up they may say “pass” and go on to the next slide. They can not go back to slides they pass.
Rules
• At the end of the time, other teams may guess the unanswered terms for half credit (first hand up, first served)
• The team with the most total points at the end of the game gets that many extra credit points.
•Federal Reserve Board
•Office of Personnel and Management
•EPA
•Brown v Board
•Gideon v Wainwright
•Civil Service
•Federal Register
•FCC
•Miranda v Arizona
•Roe v Wade
•Bakke v University of California Board of Regents
•Spoils system
•Cloture
•Selective Incorporation
•Categorical grant
•Oversight
•FDA
•Tinker v DesMoines
•Engel v Vitale
• Inner Cabinet
•Social capital
•Miranda v Arizona
•Gender gap
•Political socialization
•PAC
•Texas v Johnson
• Independent expenditures
•Dealignment
•Duverger’s Law
•Poll Tax
• incumbent
•midterm election
•Term limits
•Plessy v Ferguson
•Double Jeopardy
•Civil Rights Act of 1964
•Commander in Chief
•Election of 1932
•Commerce Clause
•14th Amendment
•divided government
•Realigning Election
•Speaker of the House
•Gitlow v New York
•Executive Order
•Anti-Federalists
•Reynolds v US
•Clear and Present Danger Doctrine
•4th Amendment
• James Madison
• John Marshall
•Habeas Corpus
•Writ of Certiorari
•Federal Appeals Court
•Heart of Atlanta Motel v US
•Due Process
•Strict Constructionist
•Free Exercise Clause
•Americans with Disabilities Act
•Pocket Veto
•Rule of Four
•Filibuster
•Fiscal Policy
•Block Grant
•Presidential Chief of Staff
•DOMA
•Eminent Domain
•Gideon v Wainwright
•Dissenting Opinion
•Rider
•Solicitor General
•Conference Committee
•Articles of Confederation
•Federalism
•Checks and Balances
•Liberalism
•Liberalism
•Federalist Papers
•Separation of Powers
• No Smoothen the Lion
•Popular Sovereignty
•Medicare
•Socialism
•GDP
•Commerce Clause
•Multilateralism
• Bill of Rights
•Social Security
•Deficit
•Full Faith And Credit Clause