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What are the powers and structure of the federal courts?

Learn about the powers and structure of the federal courts in the United States. This lesson explores the Supreme Court, landmark cases, and legal terms. Test your knowledge with Jeopardy-style questions and review the three branches of the U.S. government.

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What are the powers and structure of the federal courts?

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  1. What are the powers and structure of the federal courts? A U.S. Government Lesson

  2. The Judicial Branch Look at the words below and determine how much you might already know about them. The Supreme Court The Judicial Branch Supreme Court cases

  3. Jeopardy Rules for Practice Round • The teacher determines if the answer is correct. • When a group is called upon by the teacher, the group can discuss and answer the Jeopardy questiontogether. • The teacher can call “time” when a group takes too long in deciding on an answer. • If a group misses an answer, other groups can choose that question when it is their turn.

  4. Jeopardy Rules for Round 2 • The teacher determines if the answer is correct. • The teacher calls on one group member in each group and ONLY that group member can answer the question. • That group member can use the study guide to help answer the question. • The teacher can call “time” when a group member takes too long.

  5. The Federal Court System The Constitution The Supreme Court Numbers Only Landmark Supreme Court Cases Legal Terms $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 $300 $300 $300 $300 $300 $400 $400 $400 $400 $400 $500 $500 $500 $500 $500 Final Jeopardy

  6. The three branches of the U.S. government. What are the executive branch, the legislative branch, and the judicial branch? 1 - $100

  7. 1 - $200 • The highest court in the land created by the Constitution. • What is the Supreme Court?

  8. 1 - $300 • Name one responsibility of the Supreme Court. • What are…. cases that interpret the Constitution; OR involve foreign ministers or ambassadors; OR those cases that are between two states, citizens of two states, OR between the United States and foreign governments? An • The Supreme Court can also hear cases that have been appealed in the lower federal courts.

  9. 1 - $400 • The document guarantees an impartial trial with a jury of your peers. • What is the Constitution?

  10. 1 - $500 • The length of time a U.S. Supreme Court justice can serve. • What is their lifetime?

  11. 2 - $100 • The title of the “head judge” of the Supreme Court. • What is the Chief Justice? The current chief justice is Justice John Roberts.

  12. 2 - $200 • This person nominates Supreme Court justices to the bench. • Who is the President of the United States?

  13. 2 - $300 • The group that approves the nomination of a Supreme Court justice. • What is Congress or the Senate?

  14. 2 - $400 • The process by which the Supreme Court hears a case. • What is judicial review?

  15. 2 - $500 • What the Supreme Court can do to a law it finds unconstitutional. • What is “null and void”?

  16. 3 - $100 • This is number of branches of U.S. government. • What is 3?

  17. 3 - $200 • The number of Supreme Court justice positions. • What is 9?

  18. 3 - $300 • The current number of vacancies on the Supreme Court bench. • What is 1? Antonin Scalia passed away in 2016, and Congress has waited to appoint a new Supreme Court justice.

  19. 3 - $400 • The number of U.S. Circuit Courts of Appeals (federal courts). • What is 13? The federal government has divided the states into 13 districts for the purpose of hearing cases appealed by the lower federal courts.

  20. 3 - $500 • This is the number of federal District Courts in the United States. • What is 94?

  21. 4 - $100 • This landmark case determined what types of cases the Supreme Court would hear. • What is Marbury v. Madison?

  22. 4 - $200 • This Supreme Court case gave us “separate but equal” opportunities and eventually led to the Jim Crow laws. • What is Plessy v. Ferguson?

  23. 4 - $300 • This Supreme Court case allowed students of any race to attend school for equal opportunity to an education. • What is Brown v. the Board of Education?

  24. 4 - $400 • This Supreme Court case allowed students freedom of speech, as long as it did not disrupt the school day. • What is Tinker vs. Des Moines School District

  25. 4 - $500 • This Supreme Court case determined the 2000 presidential election. • What is Bush v. Gore?

  26. 5 - $100 • The process in which the Supreme Court hears a case based on certain criteria. • What is Judicial Review?

  27. 5 - $200 • When a case is sent to a higher court because the rule of law is being challenged. • What is on Appeal?

  28. 5 - $300 • The legal power or ability of a specific court to hear a case. • What is Jurisdiction?

  29. 5 - $400 • The promise written on the Supreme Court building and guaranteed by the Constitution. • What is Equal Justice under the Law?

  30. 5 - $500 • The number of cases the Supreme Court chooses per year. • What is the Docket? The Supreme Court has a docket of about 150 court cases a year.

  31. Final Jeopardy • Who is the civil rights attorney who argued the Brown v. Board of Education case and later became a Supreme Court justice himself? • Thurgood Marshall

  32. Two Minute Paper • Which Supreme Court case do you believe is the most important for students? Why? Explain your reasoning. • Is there a Supreme Court case that seems unfair to students? Why? Explain your reasoning.

  33. Mind Map Example

  34. Show how these words relate to the Executive Branch Legislative Branch Supreme Court U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals U.S. District Courts State Courts Constitution Judicial Branch

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