College Board-Aligned Original Notes

AP United States Government and Politics Unit 3 Topic 4: Supreme Court interpretations of other amendments

Connect Supreme Court interpretations of other amendments to constitutional principles, institutions, political behavior, and policy consequences.

Unit 3: Civil Liberties and Civil Rights. College Board exam weighting listed for this unit: 13%-18% of multiple-choice score.

What to Know

  • For cases and documents, learn the argument or holding, not just the name.
  • Explain formal powers and the checks on those powers.
  • Apply the concept to the scenario instead of only defining it.
  • Always connect this topic back to the larger unit: Civil Liberties and Civil Rights.

Detailed Notes

Supreme Court interpretations of other amendments should be tied to institutions, powers, rights, or participation. Avoid treating it as a vocabulary-only item; AP Government asks you to apply concepts to real scenarios.

In AP United States Government and Politics, strong explanations identify the constitutional principle or political process, then show how it affects government behavior or citizens' rights.

When writing an FRQ, define the idea briefly, apply it to the prompt, and explain the consequence. If a required case or document is relevant, use its reasoning rather than only naming it.

Key Vocabulary

Federalism

Division of power between national and state governments.

Separation of powers

Distribution of government power among legislative, executive, and judicial branches.

Checks and balances

Mechanisms that allow branches of government to limit one another.

Civil liberty

A protection from government action.

Political participation

Actions citizens take to influence politics or government.

Quick Practice

How would you explain Supreme Court interpretations of other amendments in one or two AP-style sentences?

Name the concept, apply it to a specific example or source, and explain the reasoning that connects the evidence to your answer.

Related Topics in This Unit

  • The intent of the Bill of Rights
  • First Amendment freedoms and Supreme Court interpretation
  • The Second Amendment and Supreme Court interpretation
  • How the due process and equal protection clauses of the Fourteenth Amendment have motivated social movements