US elections

US elections
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Slide 1: Slide
EngelsSecundair onderwijs

This lesson contains 39 slides, with interactive quizzes, text slides and 2 videos.

time-iconLesson duration is: 120 min

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US elections

Slide 1 - Slide

What do you see here? 
Biden, blue, democrat
Trump, red, republican
white house: official residence of the president of the USA in Washington DC
1. Elections in the US
Let's test how much do you know 
about politics and elections in the US? 
Answer the questions.

Slide 2 - Slide

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There are two main political parties and they are called...
A
Democrats and Conservatives
B
Democrats and Republicans
C
Liberals and Republicans
D
Liberals and Socialists

Slide 3 - Quiz

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The people who work in the US Congress to make new laws are called
A
Ministers and Senators
B
Representatives and Secretaries
C
Senators and Representatives
D
Secretaries and Ministers

Slide 4 - Quiz

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The US Constitution is
A
the supreme law of the country
B
the highest court in the country
C
what politicians say they'll do if they win the election
D
the Representatives in Congress

Slide 5 - Quiz

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Presidential candidates run for office every...
A
3 years
B
4 years
C
5 years
D
6 years

Slide 6 - Quiz

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When a new president is inaugurated and takes office, they have to
A
move into the White House
B
throw a party for international leaders
C
promise to support the Constitution
D
give a speech to the world press

Slide 7 - Quiz

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A president is allowed to hold office for a total of
A
three terms
B
two terms
C
four terms
D
there is no limit

Slide 8 - Quiz

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How are US presidents elected?

Slide 9 - Mind map

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Read these sentences out loud. 
Think about the meaning of the underlined words.
  1. Presidential candidates campaign around the country and compete to try to win their party’s nomination.
  2. Both political parties hold a national convention to select a Presidential nominee.
  3. On election day, people in every state cast their vote.
  4. People vote for the candidate they want to represent them in the general election.
  5. When a president is chosen he is inaugurated in Congress.

Slide 10 - Slide

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speak publicly
bring out a vote
a large meeting 
the official candidacy
officially act for people
official ceremony to start task

to campaign
a nomination
a convention 
to cast a vote
to represent
inauguration

Slide 11 - Drag question

Which of these words are often used in business contexts? 

Which word is often used in a business context?
campaign
nomination
convention
cast a vote
represent
inaugurate

Slide 12 - Poll

a person who is nominated is called ... 

a nominee
cfr. 
interviewee, trainee, employee
campaign
e.g. 
- a social media campaign
- marketing campaign

= a planned set of activities that people carry out over a period of time in order to achieve something 
convention 
e.g. 
- a medical convention
- a convention center

= large gathering or meeting for people who work in the same industry or sector

Slide 13 - Slide

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"How to become president of the USA." 
look at this infographic
try to predict the missing info

Slide 14 - Slide

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Slide 15 - Video

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5

Slide 16 - Video

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natural born citizen
live in US 14 years
35 years old
primaries 
 caucuses
to win over delegates
candidate => nominee
vice president candidate
In July and August
electors 

538

270
decides after election day on Nov 5th
January 20th

Slide 17 - Slide

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The electoral college in detail
Read the text on the following slide or on paper 
and answer the questions

Slide 18 - Slide

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00:33
Give the 3 requirements to become a US president

Slide 19 - Open question

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01:09
How can you win a nomination?

Slide 20 - Open question

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01:38
What happens at the National Party Convention?

Slide 21 - Open question

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02:09
What does the electoral college consist of?

Slide 22 - Open question

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02:20
When is the inauguration?

Slide 23 - Open question

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Read this text on your laptop
The Electoral College
How it works
A. On Election Day in early November, people in every state cast their votes for their preferred candidates. But
American voters are not voting directly for their president. They are actually voting for a group of people called
electors. In the US, only presidential elections use the electoral college system.
B. The electoral college works like this: each state gets a certain number of electors, chosen by their political parties
and based on the state’s Congressional representation. States with larger populations have more electors than
those with smaller populations. The popular vote is counted state by state, rather than nationally. In midDecember, the electors from each state meet to officially select the candidate who won the most votes in that
state. The candidate who has more than 270 electoral votes (out of 538) wins the national election.
C. In most states, it’s winner-takes-all: whichever candidate has the largest share of the vote captures all the electoral
votes for that state. However, in Maine and Nebraska, a proportional system is used, so in these two states,
electors are able to represent the popular vote more accurately.
D. It is possible that a candidate can receive the most votes in the whole country, but still lose the electoral vote.
This happened in 2016. The electoral college system was written into the Constitution more than 200 years ago,
intended as a compromise between a popular vote and a vote in Congress. To change this system, a Constitutional
amendment would be required.
source: usa.gov
The Electoral College and how it works

A. On Election Day in early November, people in every state cast their votes for their preferred candidates. But
American voters are not voting directly for their president. They are actually voting for a group of people called
electors. In the US, only presidential elections use the electoral college system.

B. The electoral college works like this: each state gets a certain number of electors, chosen by their political parties and based on the state’s Congressional representation. States with larger populations have more electors than those with smaller populations. The popular vote is counted state by state, rather than nationally. In mid-December, the electors from each state meet to officially select the candidate who won the most votes in that
state. The candidate who has more than 270 electoral votes (out of 538) wins the national election.

C. In most states, it’s winner-takes-all: whichever candidate has the largest share of the vote captures all the electoral votes for that state. However, in Maine and Nebraska, a proportional system is used, so in these two states,
electors are able to represent the popular vote more accurately.

D. It is possible that a candidate can receive the most votes in the whole country, but still lose the electoral vote.
This happened in 2016. The electoral college system was written into the Constitution more than 200 years ago,
intended as a compromise between a popular vote and a vote in Congress. To change this system, a Constitutional
amendment would be required.

source: usa.gov

Slide 24 - Slide

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most electors
in between
least electors
Alaska
California
Texas

Slide 25 - Drag question

Why are there sometimes confusing results? 
principle of the winner takes it all (importance of the swing states)

Is this system likely to change? 
no, consitutional change necessary

US elections

Slide 26 - Slide

What do you see here? 
Biden, blue, democrat
Trump, red, republican
white house: official residence of the president of the USA in Washington DC
Discuss
  1. Is this system similar to the Belgian system? What differs?
  2. Voting in US starts at 18? Is that a good age? Why/not?
  3. Why do you think the president is limited to 2 terms?
  4. Do you agree that many people worldwide are interested in US elections? Why/not?

Slide 27 - Slide

1. - More than 2 parties
- We choose our representatives for parliament directly, parties decide on the government formation (ministers)
- no president but a prime minister who reports to the king (consitutional monarchy) 
- Gewesten en gemeenschappen: 5 parliaments and governments + Federal 1 chamber + 1 senate

2. Are you 
a republican or a democrat? 

Slide 28 - Slide

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republicans
democrats
higher taxes for the rich
right to have an abortion
restriction on gun possession
stop immigration 
conservative
progressive
smaller government

Slide 29 - Drag question

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Who are you? 
Do the test
https://www.pewresearch.org/politics/quiz/political-typology/  


Slide 30 - Slide

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Slide 31 - Link

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LEFT or RIGHT
Study the information about political polarisation in the US 
 on the website of facinghistory

Slide 32 - Slide

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Formulate answers:
1. What is meant by polarization, explain with an example?
2. Do you recognize this in Belgian society?
3. Explain the 4 causes of polarization in Dutch.
4. What is an upside of polarization in the US? What is a downside? (In Dutch)
5. How can you avoid polarization? (In Dutch)

Slide 33 - Slide

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US elections

Slide 34 - Slide

What do you see here? 
Biden, blue, democrat
Trump, red, republican
white house: official residence of the president of the USA in Washington DC
3. Where do we get our news and why does it matter? 

Slide 35 - Slide

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Where do you mostly get your news from?
newspaper
television news
website
social media
news apps
radio
podcast

Slide 36 - Poll

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memorable or
controversial news
last few months

Slide 37 - Mind map

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Discuss
Do you think the news sources you follow reinforce what you already believe or challenge you with a broader array of perspectives?

Slide 38 - Slide

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4. Healthy media habits

Slide 39 - Slide

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