New Nation Study Guide
Constitutional Convention: a meeting in which 55 delegates traveled to
Pennsylvania to discuss how to change the Articles of Confederation
● James Madison, George Washington, and Benjamin Franklin were among
the major leaders of the convention
● Issues debated:
○ Weaknesses of the Articles of Confederation
■ No respect - people didn’t respect the central government
because it could not enforce many laws
■ Land/boundary disputes - the states argued over where their
territories ended; the central government could not solve
these problems
■ Quarreling states - each state had their own money, which
caused disputes. The states wanted to make their own laws
which caused them to not work together as a nation
■ No money - Congress could not tax the states to raise money
■ No power - Congress could declare war, make treaties, and
make agreements with other nations. These are very few
powers!
○ Federal system: a system in which each level of government has
certain powers they can use in governing the people
Federal Powers State Powers
Powers the federal government Powers the states possess
possesses
Shared Powers
Powers that both the federal government and the state governments possess
○ Great Compromise: Proposed by Roger Sherman; Congress should
be divided into two parts, called houses
1. The Senate - each state has an equal amount of
representatives
2. The House of Representatives - each state’s representation
would be based on its population
○ Three-Fifths Compromise (slavery): every 5 slaves would be
counted as 3 free people when determining a state’s population
What is the meaning of…?
● Natural rights = rights that the colonists felt they were entitled to. Colonists
wrote the Declaration of Independence to assert their natural rights to
King George III
● “We the People”/Consent of the Governed = the power to govern belongs
with all the people
● Representative democracy/Republic = the people elect their leaders to
represent them
The First Amendment guarantees the following freedoms...
● Freedom of religion - you may practice whichever religion you want
● Freedom of speech - you may say what you want
● Freedom of the press - you may print whatever you want in the news
● Freedom to petition - you may ask others to support you in writing a
petition to change something
● Freedom of assembly - you may assemble together to support a common
cause
Our Government
● There are THREE (3) branches to our government:
1. Legislative: creates the laws
2. Judicial: interprets the laws
3. Executive: enforces the laws
● Checks & balances: system that ensures that no one branch has too much
power
● Separation of powers: each branch limits the powers of the other branches
The Bill of Rights
● What is it? The Bill of Rights is the first 10 amendments to the Constitution
● What does it do? Protects the essential rights of citizens
● Why did they decide to include this in the Constitution? To make a promise
to the United States people that their rights would be protected
Key Terms
Constitutional Articles of Federal system Great Senate
Convention Confederation Compromise
House of Three-Fifths Natural rights We the People Consent of the
Representatives Compromise Governed
Republic First Amendment Legislative Judicial Executive
Separation of Bill of Rights Checks &
powers balances