 |
Use these critical thinking questions to test your knowledge of the material. Answers can be found in the textbook. | |
Use these outlines to refresh your memory and review key themes. | |
 |  |
Move your studies from the text to the World Wide Web. |
Listen to politics as it happened through political speeches, interviews, radio broadcasts, and Supreme Court opinion announcements. Each Talking Politics feature is referenced in the text and is accompanied here by a brief description that provides political and historical context. |
 |  |
Fact-filled map of the United States. Click on a state for data regarding population, politics, and more. |
Move your reading from the book to the World Wide Web. Each link is selected to expand your understanding of the subject matter. |
 |  |
A winner of two national awards, this computer program enables students to create and test hypotheses using survey data on the attitudes and behavior of citizens and members of Congress. |
This resource offers materials on 14 topics, including each branch of government, plus primary source documents and Crosstabs 4.0. |
 |  |
An application for analyzing political values created and maintained by authors Kenneth Janda and Jerry Goldman. IDEAlog is designed to stimulate student thinking on issues that underlie contemporary views of political ideology. |
Visit websites created by or recommended by the authors. |
 |  |
Master the content for your course. For each practice test you will find chapter-specific questions and receive your test scores immediately. |
Interactive flashcards help you learn and review important terms and vocabulary in each chapter of the textbook. |
| |