
Articles of Confederation to Constitution
Presentation
•
Social Studies
•
11th Grade
•
Practice Problem
•
Medium
Aaron Dranoff
Used 2+ times
FREE Resource
10 Slides • 4 Questions
1
The Critical Period and US Constitution
2
The Articles of Confederation
1781-1789
Confederacy: State Governments control Central Government
The Articles of Confederation was the governing document of the US before the Constitution
The war was not yet officially over
3
Read Page 98 - 99
The Articles of Confederation Section
Prepare to respond without the textbook to
1) the powers of the central government
2) problems with the Articles without the Textbook
4
Multiple Choice
Which was not a power of the Confederate Central Government?
Settling Disputes between states
Declaring War
Borrowing Money
Override any state decision
5
Confederacy
The Central Government is subordinate to the State Governments
Central Government is made up of a congress which can
deal with certain foreign affairs
borrow money
regulate value of currency
Declare or end war
raise an army
Mediate and settle disputes between states
6
Open Ended
What were the 3 major problems of the Articles?
7
Problems with the Articles
1) Incredibly difficult to pass anything - 9 out of 13 vote
2) The Central Government didn't have much ability to do anything
3) Congress couldn't raise taxes
8
Multiple Choice
Were the Articles of Confederation ratified before or after the Declaration of Independence?
Before
After
Same time
time time
9
Presidents of the US
John Hanson
Elias Boudinot
Thomas Mifflin
Richard Henry Lee
John Hancock
Nathaniel Gorham
Arthur St. Clair
Cyrus Griffin
10
Problems with the Articles
1) Incredibly difficult to pass anything - 9 out of 13 vote
2) The Central Government didn't have much ability to do anything
3) Congress couldn't raise taxes
11
Final Major Victory
1781
In 1781 General Cornwallis (British) lost a major defeat at Yorktown
Scattered Battles continued for the next year, but the war was essentially lost for the British
12
The Treaty of Paris (#2)
1783 - War officially over
England recognized the 13 Independent States
Still governed under the Articles of Confederation by the Continental Congress
13
The Constitution
1783 - War officially over
England recognized the 13 Independent States
Still governed under the Articles of Confederation by the Continental Congress
14
Multiple Choice
What is the correct order of the Documents?
1) The Constitution, 2) Dec. of Independence, 3)Articles of Confederation
1)Dec. of Independence 2)Articles of Confederation
3) Constitution
1)Dec. of Independence 2)Constitution
3) Articles of Confederation
The Critical Period and US Constitution
Show answer
Auto Play
Slide 1 / 14
SLIDE
Similar Resources on Wayground
11 questions
The Distribution of Power in Governments
Presentation
•
11th Grade
10 questions
Chapter 7: Section 2: Hamilton and National Finance
Presentation
•
KG
11 questions
McCarthy and Murrow
Presentation
•
11th Grade
12 questions
Prepositions
Presentation
•
3rd Grade
10 questions
Indonesia
Presentation
•
11th Grade
11 questions
WWI Homefront Part 1
Presentation
•
11th Grade
10 questions
Return to Normalcy: reading and questions
Presentation
•
11th Grade
10 questions
Amendments Fun Friyay
Presentation
•
11th Grade
Popular Resources on Wayground
20 questions
STAAR Review Quiz #3
Quiz
•
8th Grade
20 questions
Equivalent Fractions
Quiz
•
3rd Grade
6 questions
Marshmallow Farm Quiz
Quiz
•
2nd - 5th Grade
20 questions
Main Idea and Details
Quiz
•
5th Grade
20 questions
Context Clues
Quiz
•
6th Grade
20 questions
Inferences
Quiz
•
4th Grade
19 questions
Classifying Quadrilaterals
Quiz
•
3rd Grade
12 questions
What makes Nebraska's government unique?
Quiz
•
4th - 5th Grade
Discover more resources for Social Studies
17 questions
Adulting 101: Car Ownership & Insurance
Quiz
•
9th - 12th Grade
10 questions
Progressive Era EOC Warm-up/ Exit Ticket
Quiz
•
9th - 12th Grade
14 questions
World Power - Rise to Global Leadership
Quiz
•
11th Grade
59 questions
US History EOC Review
Quiz
•
11th Grade
10 questions
Gilded Age EOC Warm-up/Exit Ticket
Quiz
•
9th - 12th Grade