<p>Are all the answers on the last page definitely right? </p>
<p>On Coolridge’s second question . . his speech seemed really clear to be advocating against distinguishing between the classes economically, so one would infer that he assumed (accurately) that there were sharp class differences, but that isn’t the answer on the last page. </p>
<p>On Nixon’s question, I realize that his visit to China was monumental, but it said “since 1949” or somewhere around then, so I said Vietnamization because in the long run it had the larger effect on the United States’ policies. </p>
<p>I thought William Jennings Bryant did oppose Roosevelt-- I put Gerald or something.</p>
<p>Weren’t most of the slaves shipped to the southern colonies-- not islands? Like South Carolina?</p>
<p>I thought American troops were exposed to serious guerrilla warfare during the Korean War-- tactics that led American citizens (veterans) to have increased rates of PTSD after the war.</p>
<p>I was really close on the Treaty of Paris question; I thought that it was a little risky to assume they affirmed the western border of the United States as the Mississippi River because the US had already established methods of expanding westward (or shortly after with the Land Ordinance-- which I put as an effective method of surveying land, not territories). I said they removed troops from North America.</p>
<p>I said Jackson suspended habeas corpus-- careless mistake. </p>
<p>The subjects of amendments was REALLY tricky to me because the answers were EXTREMELY subjective. I am almost positive there is an amendment protecting certain rights of workers, so in a way it does involve child labor. </p>
<p>The Eastern Woodlands? Seriously?</p>
<p>So there’s about 13 I’ve missed so far (I was seriously hoping to get an 800-- this blows), and I will assume I missed 2 of the remaining ones-- for a total of 15. That is really depressing :'(</p>
<p>after a google search, yeah it does seem like there was some guerrilla warfare. but i still think that’s the answer. the wording of the question, if i recall correctly from a previous post on this thread, was “bogged down in guerrilla warfare” or something. 3 or so years probably isn’t “bogged down”, and there was constant pushing back and forth…my gut feeling just doesn’t say they were bogged down. lol.</p>
<p>Well, the US had refused to recognize the Chinese mainland as “China” ever since the Communist takeover in 1949. So Ping Pong/Nixon’s visit was definitely the most significant change.</p>
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<p>Just checked Wikipedia; Smith opposed FDR. Also, Bryan was kinda dead by the time Roosevelt took office.</p>
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<p>Guerrilla warfare is more commonly associated with Vietnam. If you think about it, Korea was a pretty well-organized invasion under MacArthur; the Chinese were the only reason the UN forces got pushed back.</p>
<p>Yeah. Inuit is Alaska. Iriquoi is New York area. The other 2 were just not it. The three or four tribes listed were from the Southeast, which is best described as Eastern Woodland.</p>
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<p>Interesting bit of trivia: most slaves were sent to Brazil/Carribean where their lives were so so much worse than their counterparts’ lives in the colonies.</p>
<p>^Because Vietnam started in about 1964. The policy of Vietnamization only changed 4 years of policy in Vietnam. Nixon’s recognizing of China broke America’s 3-decade-long refusal to recognize Red China as “China.”</p>
<p>EDIT: By saying that Vietnam started in 1964, I’m referring to Johnson getting his blank check to really escalate the war.</p>
<p>^theres no amendment specifically protecting the rights of workers
But yeah, some of those were just bad questions, although I think this test had fewer badly written questions than the practice test I took.</p>
<p>Well, overall I made about 5 careless mistakes and about 8 I just didn’t know because of randomness. Oh well-- not the end of the world, but still sad :'(</p>
<p>Does anyone remember the exact question with the whistle blowing? I remember the question was like “the following encouraged workers to do what?” or maybe im completely delusional</p>
<p>Could someone also try to counteract my argument about the second Coolridge question (see last page); I didn’t even hesitate on that one because I was so confident.</p>
<p>^^To be completely honest, I’m not sure CC has a confident consensus on that question. Majority was stratified economically/otherwise harmonious, but that was a really weird question.</p>
<p>Guys, do you know if we’ll be able to check what we missed when we get the result - for both AP and SAT II? Do we get to see what scores we got for each sections (mc, DBQ, FRQ) of AP? This is my first year taking them, so I have no idea…</p>
<p>it was really more of an SAT I critical reading question than a us history question in my opinion. nowhere in his speech does coolidge sound FURIOUS about the state of affairs. that’s the type of tone collegeboard has in mind when it puts something like “the disarray of the economy” as an answer choice. coolidge is calm and cool and even directly says the interests of the economy can be balanced (harmonized).</p>
<p>@ confused: nope, i think they will remain hidden forever</p>
<ol>
<li> Haymarket Riot: 8 hour day</li>
<li> Nixon’s administration change from 1949: trip to China</li>
<li> Roosevelt’s New Deal: William Jennings Bryan</li>
<li> Mining in the West: They were mostly controlled by corporations and banks</li>
<li> Revenue Chart: tariffs (?)</li>
<li> South Carolina slaves growing rice: because they already knew how</li>
<li> slaves in the 1600s and 1700s were shipped to ? Brazil and Caribbean</li>
<li> gag rule: abolitionism</li>
<li> 2nd Coolidge Questions -- stratified economy but harmonious country</li>
<li>14th amendment: citizenship rights</li>
<li>Quote about police policy: Theodore Roosevelt</li>
<li>Impeachment: Bill Clinton and Andrew Johnson</li>
<li>Social Gospel: duty to help the poor</li>
<li>No Baby Boom association: The Sun Also Rises by Hemingway</li>
<li>Korea Question: guerilla warfare</li>
<li>Treaty of Paris: Mississippi River</li>
<li>Colombian Exchange: animals, diseases, plants</li>
<li>Social Darwinism: laws of natural selection applied to society or city life</li>
<li>Dixiecrats left Truman because of civil rights</li>
<li>Monroe Doctrine: unilateral decision</li>
<li>Map with arrows: removal of Indians</li>
<li>Watergate scandal: Nixon claims executive privilege</li>
<li>Calvin Coolidge quote: wanted to remove taxes for the wealthy</li>
<li>Population chart: population approx doubles every 20 years</li>
<li>Turner: Frontier thesis</li>
<li>Mercantilism: protected agriculture trade</li>
<li>Quote about increasing national debt: Hamilton</li>
<li>Long term New Deal reform: Tennessee Valley Authority</li>
<li>Difference between FDR & LBJ and New Deal and Great Society: civil rights</li>
<li>Which did not help women?: Equal Rights Amendment… ratified</li>
<li>Weakness before 1929: inflation of agriculture prices</li>
<li>Poem with lunch, whistles, working: Taylorism</li>
<li>Coinage of silver: Populism</li>
<li>Land Ordinance of 1785: distributing territory orderly</li>
<li>slaves against oppressive owners?: developed their own culture</li>
<li>Tammany quote justification thing: spoils system</li>
<li>Connecticut Compromise: representation in Congress</li>
<li>Roger Williams: religious freedom </li>
<li>Democrat Voting Chart: Minorities dramatically switched to the Democratic Party in 1928.</li>
<li>Quote suspending habeas Corpus: Lincoln</li>
<li>Going to sermons, emotions and stuff: Great Awakening</li>
<li>Taft Hartley: unions</li>
<li>Main crop in Chesapeake region: Tobacco</li>
<li>4th amendment: writs of assistance</li>
<li>Not included in the amendments: child labor</li>
<li>the event in civil war that displayed racial, economic, and social tensions? Riots </li>
<li>Booker T. Washington? Economic integration self-efficiency</li>
<li>Population of cities exceed population in rural/villages</li>
<li>Cherokee, Chikasaw…: Eastern Woodlands</li>
<li>advantage of British during the French and Indian War: permanent settlers</li>
<li>all contributed to rise of slavery in the 1800s except? British slave trade</li>
<li>Chinese Immigrants: Gold rush</li>
<li>picture of housing in Georgia before and after the Civil War: freed slaves did not move far from the plantations they used to work on</li>
<li>sharecropping: planters rented out land and took a percentage of the crop each year</li>
<li>Brown v. Board of Education: did not reaffirm Plessy V. Ferguson</li>
<li>Why did America enter WWI?: Germans attacking American ships</li>
<li>Quote about women: cult of domesticity</li>
<li>African Americans in WWI and WWII: segregated armies</li>
<li>Embargo: hurts us more than hurts Europe</li>
<li>Nullification, Calhoun and Jackson: tariff of abominations</li>
<li>Wars Powers Act: stop president from using troops</li>
<li>Not part of the allied powers: Italy</li>
<li>Cuban missile crisis: ended with USSR taking its missiles away</li>
<li>Majority of gross capital in the second half of the 1800s?: railroads</li>
<li>urban trends in 1900s: majority lived in cities by 1920</li>
<li>which one was not a slave related rebellion: Pontiac’s Rebellion</li>
<li>Kent State protests: against the invasion of Cambodia</li>
<li>Black Codes: segregate blacks</li>
<li>Criticizing stuff during progressivism: muckrakers</li>
<li>Carpetbaggers: northerners who moved south during reconstruction</li>
<li>Carter’s popularity declined by his second campaign for the presidency: Iran Hostage Crisis and high inflation</li>
<li>Reagan using money from Iran scandal: contras</li>
<li>Vietnam falling and over taking Hawaii or something: Domino Theory</li>
<li>Transcendentalists: Person must look into nature to find self.</li>
<li>Bacon’s Rebellion: some Virginia backcountry farmers that were angry</li>
<li>MLKs Birmingham Letter in Jail: not being patient (answer clarification?)</li>
<li>Truman Doctrine: affirmed the US’ commitment to containing Communism</li>
<li>The GI Bill of 1944 provided for which of the following?: education</li>
<li>Women after WWII: returned home so men could take up jobs</li>
<li>African Americans moving north for jobs</li>
</ol>
<p>lol 10 more… maybe they were the really easy ones that everyone just flew by</p>
<p>Wasn’t there a question about what led to the Great Depression? I said something about agriculture or farmers… I don’t remember the other choices, though.</p>