From the Author:
Updating this book, prepared in the summer and fall of 2017, reflects a 20-year cycle of test changes that were incorporated when the first edition of the Barron's AP U.S. Government and Politics was published. The 11th edition has more changes than any previous edition. This edition incorporates and reflects the new AP U.S. Government and Politics curriculum that has been implemented in the 2018-2019 school year. This edition also reflects the implementation of a brand new test that has major structural changes. For example, there are 55 multiple choice questions and each question has only four choices. There are four different types of free response questions, one of which will be an "argumentation" essay.
From the Inside Flap:
Table of Contents:
Barron's Essential 5
Preface
Introduction
Using the Book
A Guide to the Redesigned Course and Exam
Skills Needed to Succeed
How the Test Is Scored
Study Strategies
Newly Redesigned Course Outline
Multiple-Choice Questions
Free-Response Questions
1 Foundations of American Democracy (Unit 1)
Big Ideas: Constitutionalism, Liberty and Order, Competing Policy-Making Interests
Key Terms Students Must Know
Required Primary Documents Students Must Know
Required Supreme Court Cases Students Must Know
Key Concept 1.a: Evolution of Representative Democracy
Key Concept 1.b: Origins of the Constitution
Key Concept 1.c: The Constitution
Key Concept 1.d: Federalism
Review Multiple-Choice Questions
2 Interactions Among the Branches of Government (Unit 2)
Big Ideas: Constitutionalism, Competing Policy-Making Interests
Key Terms Students Must Know
Required Primary Documents Students Must Know
Required Supreme Court Cases Students Must Know
Key Concept 2.a: The Legislative Branch
Key Concept 2.b: The Executive Branch
Key Concept 2.c: The Judicial Branch
Key Concept 2.d: The Federal Bureaucracy
Review Multiple-Choice Questions
3 Civil Liberties and Civil Rights (Unit 3)
Big Ideas: Liberty and Order, Constitutionalism, Competing Policy-Making Interests, Civic Participation in a Representative Democracy
Key Terms Students Must Know
Required Primary Documents Students Must Know
Required Supreme Court Cases Students Must Know
Key Concept 3.a: The Bill of Rights
Key Concept 3.b: The Fourteenth Amendment
Key Concept 3.c: Equal Protection Under the Law and Selective Incorporation
Key Concept 3.d: Civil Rights
Key Concept 3.e: The Supreme Court Interprets Civil Rights Issues
Review Multiple-Choice Questions
4 American Political Ideologies and Beliefs (Unit 4)
Big Ideas: Methods of Political Analysis, Competing Policy-Making Interests
Key Terms Students Must Know
Key Concept 4.a: Demographics and Political Socialization
Key Concept 4b: Polling
Key Concept 4c: Political Philosophies and Political Party Ideology
Review Multiple-Choice Questions
5 Political Participation (Unit 5)
Big Ideas: Civic Participation in a Representative Democracy, Competing Policy-Making Interests, Methods of Political Analysis
Key Terms Students Must Know
Required Supreme Court Case Students Must Know
Key Concept 5a: Voting
Key Concept 5b: Linkage Institutions
Key Concept 5c: Elections as Linkage
Key Concept 5d: The Media as Linkage
Review Multiple-Choice Questions
Practice Test 1
Section 1: Multiple-Choice Questions
Section 2: Free-Response Questions
Answer Key
Answers Explained
Test-Analysis Worksheet
Practice Test 2
Section 1: Multiple-Choice Questions
Section 2: Free-Response Questions
Answer Key
Answers Explained
Test-Analysis Worksheet
Glossary
Appendix
Required Unit 1 Foundational Documents
Required Supreme Court Cases
Index
"About this title" may belong to another edition of this title.