By The People: Debating American Government, Fifth Edition, presents essential content in a compelling story geared for today's students. Through each edition, this text has built on this successful approach to engage students in the rich and important debates of our times. Now powered by the Oxford Insight� Study Guide and additional digitals learning tools, this book helps students to become thoughtful and informed citizens.
The accompanying Oxford Insight� Study Guide works with the text to optimize learning. This powerful tool engages students in an active and highly dynamic review of chapter content, empowering them to critically assess their own understanding of American government. Real-time, actionable data generated by activity in the guide helps instructors ensure that each student is best supported along their unique learning path.
read for school and I'm getting the goodreads credit on my reading challenge, dangnabbit.
Pretty basic overview of the branches and history of the U.S. Government. Not too boring. I might have liked the textbook more if my teacher this term had actually taught, ya know?
Pretty good for a textbook. It did a decent job of presenting different perspectives on the various topics (civil liberties, the federal bureaucracy, the three branches of government, etc.). The authors seem to write from center-left assumptions (especially evident in the material on the various civil rights issues).
DNF. Started for a class which i had my final for last week; if I did well it was not at all thanks to this book. Don't care for it at all. Centrist bullshit, ie evilly phrasing sports discouse as "trans rights vs womans rights", and clearly has little interest in actual history as regards its whitewashing of most recent history of the past decades
Spent an entire semester reading about the entire system of American government and The Goldfinch is still the longest book I've read this year. Donna Tartt knew her impact was more important than our trade deficit, and who am I to deny it?
Wonderful textbook. It even has a phone number and a website link. Wonderful discussion of elections and campaigns especially discussing the 2016 Trump Election and the 2016 Trump Administration. Here are some who were in the pictures Christopher Lee Simmons Rep. Joe Wilson (R-S.C.) David Perdue
Edit: It was bizarre that in my intro to American politics course in university that the professor assigned a textbook of American government intro - there's a big difference between a American politics course and an American government course. A government course relies less on intuition and less on theory and less on abstraction, which means you have to deeply understand a small number of topics chosen like a free response exam/test, rather than a "inch deep, mile wide" approach of government course that uses multiple choice. However, I took a government course in high school, and though the politics course in university was 99% similar, I admit, I understand why this book was chosen over (a intro to politics) textbook. I think it is a big textbook, and could be shortened. I'm not saying it is better to cover less material, but I have read prep books (like AP US Government, Barrons, Princeton Review, Kaplan, Crash course, 5) and they tend to summarize it so you don't waste time.
As far as required text books, not mad at it. I’ll give it a 4 stars for not being completely dry, good and fairly objective. There was some dry humor tucked in to decipher too. I’ve been reading ahead to get up on my school and I’m not sure if this same company is supplying testing materials or if my professors stuff isn’t going well with this in the way of test translation. That is my biggest qualm and I can’t say it’s this book is the cause for that issue, it could very well be me. Out of all my text books I’m reading, or have read this year, this was the best.