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Question
- when having a constitutional conversation, you should: a. ask only \yes or no\ questions b. always use scholarly work c. ask constitutional - not political - questions d. both a and c 13. which of these is good practice in a constitutional conversation? a. use vague ideas b. talk about scholarly ideas without citing them c. explain what the information you cite means d. forget to connect evidence to the essential question
For question 12, in a constitutional conversation, one should ask constitutional - not political - questions to stay on the relevant topic. Using only "yes or no" questions limits the depth of conversation and always using scholarly work is not a strict requirement. For question 13, explaining what the cited information means is a good practice as it helps in clear communication, while using vague ideas, talking about scholarly ideas without citing, and forgetting to connect evidence to the essential question are bad practices.
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- c. Ask constitutional—not political—questions
- c. Explain what the information you cite means