Quiz: The Evolution of Legal Education
Due Aug 24 at 11:59pm
Points 50
Questions 16
Time Limit 30 Minutes
Instructions
The quiz:
Covers the Learn material from Module 1: Week 1.
Contains 16 multiple-choice, true/false, and essay questions.
Is limited to 30 minutes.
Allows 1 attempt.
Is worth 50 points.
You may refer to your notes and textbooks at any time during the assessment.
Submit this assignment by 11:59 p.m. (ET) on Sunday of Module 1: Week 1.
Attempt History
Attempt Time Score
LATEST Attempt 1 15 minutes 42 out of 50 *
* Some questions not yet graded
Correct answers are hidden. Score
for this quiz: 42 out of 50 *
* Some questions not yet graded
Submitted Aug 24 at 1:19pm
This attempt took 15 minutes.
Question 1
Not yet graded / 5 pts
In Pierce v. Society of Sisters, what did the Supreme Court hold regarding a state law requiring
all children between the ages of 8 and 16 to attend public school?
Your Answer:
The Court held the Oregon law unconstitutional because it violated the 14th Amendment’s Due Process
Clause, protecting parents’ right to direct their children’s education.
, 8/24/25, 1:20 PM Quiz: The Evolution of Legal Education: JURI600: Foundations of Law (B03)
Question 2
pts
The belief in evolution instead of creation and the belief in man instead of God has dominated
the teaching of America law since when?
The early 1900s
The mid-1800s
The early 1800s
The late 1700s
Question 3
pts
What standard does the Supreme Court use to determine whether the Eighth Amendment to the
United States Constitution has been violated?
Substantial justice
Evolving standards of decency
Animus
Actual malice
Question 4
pts
What principle(s) in the U.S. Constitution reflects the Biblical worldview that man is sinful?
Separation of powers
Federalism
Democratic form of government
Power to coin money
Both a and b
Question 5
pts
The Bill of Rights (the first ten amendments in the U.S. Constitution) most clearly reflects which
principle of the nature of man?
Man is entitled to dignity as a being created in God’s image
Man is perfectible
Man ultimately makes law
Man is the creator of rights