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Old Parchment, New World: The Constitution 10th Grade Quiz (Medium) ワークシート • 無料PDFダウンロード 解答キー

Analyze the ideological shifts from the Rhode Island currency crisis to the legal nuances of the Supremacy Clause.

教育的概要

This worksheet assesses student understanding of the foundational tensions and legal frameworks that shaped the United States Constitution during the late 18th century. It utilizes a rigorous retrieval-based assessment model to evaluate knowledge of early economic crises, federalist theory, and specific constitutional clauses. The resource is ideal for high school civics or history formative assessments, focusing on the transition from the Articles of Confederation to a centralized federal republic.

Old Parchment, New World: The Constitution 10th Grade Quiz - social-studies 10 Quiz Worksheet - Page 1
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ツール: 選択肢クイズ
件名: 社会研究
カテゴリ: アメリカ史
レベル: 10th レベル
難易度:
トピック: 初期共和国&憲法
言語: 🇬🇧 English
アイテム: 10
解答キー: はい
ヒント: いいえ
作成: Feb 14, 2026

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学習内容

  • Analyze the causal link between 1780s state fiscal crises and the development of the Contract Clause.
  • Evaluate the anti-federalist critique of the Necessary and Proper Clause as a threat to state sovereignty.
  • Compare the structural differences between the Articles of Confederation and the Constitution regarding federal interactions with individual citizens.

All 10 Questions

  1. Which specific event in 1780s Rhode Island served as a catalyst for federalists to argue that state-led fiscal policies were becoming dangerously 'leveling' or radical?
    A) The implementation of the 'Stay Laws' delaying debt collection
    B) The Printing of massive amounts of paper money to pay off state debts
    C) The refusal to send delegates to the Philadelphia Convention
    D) The seizure of Newport Harbor by disgruntled merchant sailors
  2. To prevent the 'tyranny of the majority,' the Constitution established ______, which allowed for the indirect election of the President rather than a direct popular vote.
    A) The Three-Fifths Clause
    B) The Electoral College
    C) The Council of Revision
    D) The Supremacy Clause
  3. The 'Necessary and Proper Clause' (Article I, Section 8) was viewed by Anti-Federalists like Brutus as an unlimited grant of power to the federal government.
    A) True
    B) False
Show all 10 questions
  1. Unlike the Articles of Confederation, the Constitution allowed the federal government to bypass state governments to interact directly with citizens through:
    A) The power of federal taxation and law enforcement
    B) The creation of a national public education system
    C) Mandatory national military service for all males
    D) The establishment of a single state-sponsored religion
  2. The ______ of 1787 was a significant achievement of the Confederation Congress because it established the precedent that new territories would enter the Union as equal states, not colonies.
    A) Land Act
    B) Treaty of Greenville
    C) Northwest Ordinance
    D) Enclosure Act
  3. The original Constitution of 1787 contained a specific clause that explicitly legalized the formation of political parties (factions).
    A) True
    B) False
  4. In Federalist No. 10, James Madison argues that a large republic is better than a small one because:
    A) It is easier to collect taxes across a large geographic area
    B) A large population ensures a stronger standing army
    C) Diverse interests make it harder for a single faction to form a majority
    D) It limits the number of representatives to keep the government small
  5. The ______ Resolution, written by Thomas Jefferson, introduced the theory of 'nullification,' suggesting states had the right to void unconstitutional federal laws.
    A) Kentucky
    B) Hartford
    C) Albany
    D) Charleston
  6. Which specific provision in Article I, Section 9 of the Constitution protected the international slave trade from being banned by Congress until 1808?
    A) The Fugitive Slave Clause
    B) The Commerce Compromise
    C) The Migration or Importation Clause
    D) The Three-Fifths Clause
  7. The Chisholm v. Georgia (1793) Supreme Court case led directly to the ratification of the 11th Amendment to protect states from being sued in federal court.
    A) True
    B) False

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Grade 10 HistoryUs GovernmentConstitutional LawFederalismCivics QuizSecondary Social StudiesSummative Assessment
This 10th-grade social studies quiz assesses advanced constitutional concepts including the Rhode Island currency crisis, the Electoral College, and the Elastic Clause. It employs multiple-choice, fill-in-the-blank, and true-false formats to evaluate student mastery of early American political theory and legal precedents like the Northwest Ordinance and Chisholm v. Georgia. The content is structured to bridge the gap between historical events and constitutional law, focusing on the shift from state-centric governance to federal supremacy.

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よくある質問

Yes, this Social Studies Quiz on the Constitution is a perfect choice for a substitute teacher because the comprehensive answer key and self-contained explanations allow students to self-correct and learn independently.

Most tenth-grade students will complete this social studies quiz in approximately 20 to 30 minutes, making it an efficient tool for a single class period assessment.

This Social Studies Quiz provides high-depth questions that can be used for gifted and talented students as a primary assessment or for other learners as a scaffolded review when paired with a primary source reading on the Federalist Papers.

While specifically designed for 10th grade history or civics students, this social studies quiz contains rigorous academic vocabulary suitable for AP United States Government or advanced high school learners.

Teachers can use this Social Studies Quiz as a pre-test or a mid-unit check to identify misconceptions regarding federal preemption, the Supremacy Clause, and the early American fiscal crisis before moving on to later periods.