<p>NAFTA – mexico, u.s, canada
Nader= consumer rights
Worchester v Georgia led to removal of indians
Brigham young
self-determination
panama canal
mexico and peru don’t have silver
dust bowl – picture
Fulbright
election of 1824 – decided by house of rep
Americans study less
trail of tears
landscape art – Hudson
"Silent majority" = support of the war in Vietnam
henry clay - canada
loss of zeal – halfway covenant
Monroe Doctrine - unilateral declaration of values</p>
<p>are these the rights answers...please add to them and correct</p>
<p>That Test SUCKD
but I pray
and most of my guesses seem right
Im feeling 720ish on this one</p>
<p>It's funny because I read Baron's World History book in one week to study for World History while read Amco's today and yesterday and took one Lit practice test and did better on the latter 2 I feel better about than the world History</p>
<p>I agree- this test too me does not accurately measure knowledge of US history</p>
<p>I READ ALL THE THINGS IN AMCO ABOUT THE RAILROADS AND UNIONS AND THE GILDED AGE AND NONE OF THAT WAS ON IT GRRRRRRRRRRR</p>
<p>I loved the AP essays, but some of the questions on the AP were art related which I never bother with.</p>
<p>One I forgot was the whole Fullbright one. Then I remembered the Fullbright hearings, then it was like "Oh!" lol.</p>
<p>What was the one about the decline of Senator Mccathy's popularity?</p>
<p>E something about involvement with communists as a child</p>
<ul>
<li>The whole statement including the answer was a question
lol</li>
</ul>
<p>NAFTA – mexico, u.s, canada
Nader= consumer rights
Worchester v Georgia led to removal of indians
Brigham young
self-determination
panama canal
***mexico and peru don’t have silver OR rich nobility
dust bowl – picture
Fulbright
election of 1824 – decided by house of rep
Americans study less
trail of tears
landscape art – Hudson
"Silent majority" = support of the war in Vietnam
henry clay - canada (A)
loss of zeal – halfway covenant
Monroe Doctrine - unilateral declaration of values
Rachel Carson's Silent Spring - pesticides
Muckrakers/Reform - The Jungle/Meat Inspection Act
Lyndon B Johnson (what did he NOT do) - Social Security
zoot-suit riots - mexican americans v. soldiers in Los Angeles during WWII
Early colonial cities (all of the following EXCEPT) - less than 25,000 people
Chinese Exclusion Act - supported by West Coasters (?)
African Americans 1930s - republican to democrat
frontierman - Frederick Jackson Turner (B)
FDR New Deal - employment for youths (?)
WWII - what was NOT true - racial integration within troops (E)
Women's Christian Temperance Union - moral obligations to improve society (E)
slave/cotton graph - slave prices increased, cotton was stable
1980s expenditure/deficit - deficits were affected by more than just expenditures (B)
Teddy R - conservation
factories 1800s - textile
Revolution of 1800 - Fed to Anti-Fed
Jefferson- strict interpretation, Hamilton- loose
LBJ - Gulf of Tonkin
Nixon/JFK/McCarthy - anti-communists post WWII
In late 1800s, women were NOT physicians
Virginia - least religious of early colonies
John Marshall - judicial review
passage - Plessy v. Ferguson (separate but equal facilities): reversed by Brown v. Board of Education
passage- women (virtuous and intellgient) and rights - moral/political character
decline of McCarthy - accused people within army of unamerican activity
Victory gardens- NOT characteristic of 1950s society</p>
<p>Please contribute =)</p>
<p>By the 16th century, Spanish conquistadores had discovered and developed silver mines in Mexico, Bolivia, and Peru. </p>
<p><a href="http://www.goldandsilvermines.com/abtsilver.htm%5B/url%5D">http://www.goldandsilvermines.com/abtsilver.htm</a></p>
<p>Gotta be the wealthy/nobility one.</p>
<p>As for the Chinese Exclusion Act, it was passed by Congress so it had to have widespread support. I forget the other choices...</p>
<p>Those all seem right except... I thought CC reached consensus that the Henry Clay answer was A. Something like removal of Indians and British from western frontier.</p>
<p>"What was the one about the decline of Senator Mccathy's popularity?</p>
<p>E something about involvement with communists as a child"</p>
<p>No, his decline was a result of his televised hearings (something to do with the army) in which Americans saw his bullying tactics. His popularity quickly dwindled.</p>
<p>My daughter took it today, along with lit and latin, thought she did the best on this of all, she was worried about too much "current history", but only found several questions regarding Nader, LBJ, Nixon and Reagan. Said it was harder than the AP exam alson</p>
<p>was the chinese exclusion act "widespread support among working class" or "stemmed chinese immigration"?</p>
<p>i'm asking for a friend: what was the question about which of these jobs would late ninteenth century women least likely have? she put physicans.</p>
<p>^ see my thread of consolidated answers on the previous page</p>
<p>It is physicians.</p>
<p>"It's definitely the cities < 25K one (unfortunately for me). I checked, and only Philadelphia had more than 25000 inhabitants prior to 1776 (colonial times)."</p>
<p>I'm pretty sure this was an except question. So wouldn't the 25,000 answer not be the correct choice?</p>
<p>"was the chinese exclusion act "widespread support among working class" or "stemmed chinese immigration"?"</p>
<p>^ I put stemmed, there was anti-chinese sentiment around then, but I'm not 100% sure.
For the FDR new deal one, it is the the youths one.</p>
<p>Also, the women one, I put physicians, I mean, they only accepted nurses for a very long time.</p>
<p>I mean really, coming into this test I didn't even think we allowed women to be doctors. Is it not a problem that the woman have a smaller brain than a man? </p>
<p>[ducks from uber-feminist English teacher]</p>
<p>what were the choices for the Monroe Doctrine??</p>
<p>for the mccarthy one, i put choice C i think, it said something about personal liberty or something...</p>
<p>if you skipped like 20, what is the highest you can get?</p>
<p>Brain size doesn't intelligence though, it's the amount of curves if I remember correctly, and females do have more curves than men. :]</p>
<p>Now I'm doubting myself on the whole judicial review one. Which Madison did the SAT have in the answer choices? Because isn't that based off the whole Marbury v. Madison thing?</p>
<p>For the monro one I put Uni. I remember my teacher grinding is with uni, because Britian at first wanted bi.</p>