<p>O yea that was a tough one xyleopeach. i put self-determinatino but then i changed it to individualism cause free trade and no alliances and stuff. I dont thiink it was self-det becuase they did punish Germany and some of the other loosers. Anyone??</p>
<p>Wilsons underlay of 14 points was in fact self determination. He was against the rest.
How is it individualism...self-det umbrellas that anyways...AND it was one of his 14 points</p>
<p>Gah! Nader was consumer rights! lol... i skipped it cuz i didnt study anything past 1980.</p>
<p>^ Yeah, I put individualism, but I was debating between self-determination and individualism.</p>
<p>Alright, so I'm crazy. </p>
<p>You guys are apparently right, but I just wanted to say that this is why I had soap in my head:</p>
<p>"Women were also sucked into the clanging mechanism of factory production. Farm women and girls had an important place in the preindustrial economy, spinning yarn, weaving cloth, and making candles, soap, butter, and cheese. New factories such as the textile mills of New England undermined these activities, cranking out manufactured goods much fastger than they could be made by hand at home." </p>
<p>What did you guys put for Calhoun/War of 1812?</p>
<p>u guys are right it is s-d.</p>
<p>Marcella i was only kidding lol.</p>
<p>lol, I know, don't worry.</p>
<p>-What was the exact wording of the Henry Clay & War of 1812 question?</p>
<p>-Also For the colonial city one...it was an except question and choices were like most colonial cities had populations under 25,000, canals connecting all the cities..</p>
<p>-Hudson River school displayed what type of art?</p>
<p>What would be the score if the raw score is around 72-73</p>
<ul>
<li><p>I'm not sure about the exact wording :(</p></li>
<li><p>I put the 25,000 answer</p></li>
<li><p>Hudson was about landscape</p></li>
<li><p>the CB book says 750 for 72/73</p></li>
</ul>
<p>I was actually REALLY happy with the History Test... I thought it was much easier than the AP Test... Anyone else feel that way?</p>
<p>the hudson river school was idealistic landscape. the question earlier even told u that haha</p>
<p>good. I put that.</p>
<p>I'm guessing the correct answers for the anti-feminism was Young and home to factory work was textile?</p>
<p>The thing about the Henry Clay/War of 1812 question was that (I believe) the answer with the invasion of Canada had some more wording (which I forget) that made me immediately cross out that choice. I put the one about the westerners wanting to remove the Indians and British from the Western frontier, which I know was true. The westerners wanted to expand, but some Indian tribes presented a threat to doing so.</p>
<p>Here's wiki on the causes of the War:</p>
<p>Americans declared war on Britain on June 18, 1812, for a combination of reasons—outrage at the impressment (seizure) of thousands of American sailors, frustration at British restrictions on neutral trade while Britain warred with France, and anger at British military support for tribes in the Ohio-Indiana-Michigan area. After war was declared Britain offered to withdraw the trade restrictions, but it was too late for the American "War Hawks", who turned the conflict into what they called a "second war for independence."</p>
<p>That's just me though...</p>
<p>In CollegeBoard's SATII prep book, the curve is like a raw score of 79/90 for an 800. Does that seem a little too generous?
Although I would love for a curve like that to be applied to this test, it's a bit too good..</p>
<p>nope. it's usually like that (take or give a few), so it's all good.</p>
<p>I actually thought this was harder than the APs, but probably because my school curriculum covers up to JFK's administration, so I really didn't know the modern history ones at all.</p>
<p>Can anyone post the scale of all the raw scores and its corresponding scores from the blue book here?</p>
<p>Maybe not all, but just up to the raw score of 700.</p>
<p>whatd you guys get for the one where they asked why the blacks turned democratic?
i think there were 2 questions about that... one with the chart and one without.</p>
<p>^ I only remember the one about blacks' changing views in the 1930s..the answer was something about how the majority changed from republicans to democrats..but there's a chance I misread the question..</p>
<p>I remember there being one question which had an answer that said that blacks' votes were evenly distributed between the two parties. Anybody remember choosing that? Or was the answer that they voted mainly Democratic?</p>
<p>It is indeed a switch from the republican party to the democratic. Blacks, either farmers or industrial workers, benefited from the New Deal, and therefore abandoned the business-friendly republican party. </p>
<p>The wording in Kaplan is along the lines of "abandoning Lincoln's party," which stuck out in my mind when I answered the question.</p>