This Grade 2 challenge sheet uses multiple choice and fill-in items together. Students pick the best answer from four choices about Congress, the President, and judges, then complete fill-in sentences about the three branches. Each Grade 2 question has a hint and a short why note. The sheet pushes students to think more carefully while the friendly wording keeps hard ideas about government reachable and fun to learn.
Style:
Government Basics
Part A: Multiple Choice
Circle the best answer for each question.
1. Which branch of government writes new laws?
A) The President's branch
B) Congress
C) The judges' branch
D) The army
2. Who enforces the laws to make sure people follow them?
A) A librarian
B) The mail carrier
C) The President and police
D) A pet store owner
3. Who decides if a law is fair or if someone broke a law?
A) A judge
B) A cashier
C) A bus driver
D) A teacher
4. How many branches does our country's government have?
A) One
B) Two
C) Three
D) Ten
Part B: Fill in the Blank
Write the correct answer on each line.
1. The branch that makes the laws is called Congress.
2. The President leads the executive branch.
3. Judges and courts are part of the judicial branch.
4. A new rule for the whole country is called a law.
5. The three branches keep each other in balance so no one has too much power.
Government Basics
★ Part A: Multiple Choice
Circle the best answer for each question.
1. Which branch of government writes new laws?
A) The President's branch
B) Congress
C) The judges' branch
D) The army
2. Who enforces the laws to make sure people follow them?
A) A librarian
B) The mail carrier
C) The President and police
D) A pet store owner
3. Who decides if a law is fair or if someone broke a law?
A) A judge
B) A cashier
C) A bus driver
D) A teacher
4. How many branches does our country's government have?
A) One
B) Two
C) Three
D) Ten
★ Part B: Fill in the Blank
Write the correct answer on each line.
1) The branch that makes the laws is called Congress.
2) The President leads the executive branch.
3) Judges and courts are part of the judicial branch.
4) A new rule for the whole country is called a law.
5) The three branches keep each other in balance so no one has too much power.
Ready to Practice?
Complete each section carefully.
9 Questions
12-18 minutes
Auto-graded
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