May SAT II US History 2012

<p>^^naval conference</p>

<p>I think I put the voting acts were effective now, the other two were both wrong</p>

<p>Edit: Nvm wrong one, for the three years one I said the greatest increase came before the depression.</p>

<p>The graph didnt show 3/4th voted in the any of the states. I looked at it more than once. It was the asnwer with the voting rights act and its effect.</p>

<p>For the one where it talked about characteristics of the 20s EXCEPT… I put “car culture that led to suburbia” because it seems that cars were too expensive to be popular in the roaring twenties. Anyone want to back me up on this?</p>

<p>First time taking a subject test. How long does it take for scores to come out?</p>

<p>Whitman is correct for the graph question</p>

<p>Haeeunjee - no, car’s did actually lead to more people living in suburbia. I don’t remember the answer to that question though.</p>

<p>Cars (Ford’s Model-T) began to be mass produced through the assembly line and became available to most people by the 1920s.</p>

<p>Cars were definitely ubiquitous during the 1920s, and they did lead to more people living in the suburbs; as the car prices went down, wages went up, and in effect, more people bought cars and moved to the suburbs and farther areas from the cities.</p>

<p>suburbanization and commonness of cars occurs in the 1950s not 1920s</p>

<p>If I remember correctly, the answer choice didn’t link car production with suburbia. Cars became available during the 1920s, and suburbia during the 1950s.</p>

<p>From my textbook (American Pageant)
“Other social by-products of the automobile were visible. Autobuses made possible the consolidation of schools and to some extent churches. The sprawling suburbs spread out still farther than the urban core, as America became a nation of commuters”</p>

<p>“Roadsters” were popular in the youth culture of the 1920s (alongside flappers, swing/jazz, etc).</p>

<p>19 days until scores are out! Good luck to y’all :)</p>

<p>No idea who Walter Wait guy was, nor understood his poem.</p>

<p>So glad my English teacher forced us to read Whitman and other Transcendentalists. Also, she forced us to read The Great Gatsby by Fitzgerald (Lost Generation).</p>

<p>Also, Henry Ford did the assembly line in the 20s. Ford mass produced cars.</p>

<p>Lol I read all the books in listed as choices for that question except A Farewell to Arms, and that’s how I figured that AFA had to be the answer. Thank you high school for the American Literature curriculum that dragged us through hell to finish the great works of Americans. My class literally averages to about 5 days per novel, but my teacher is so awesome that we still understand the stuff very well.</p>

<p>I distinctly recall choosing something other than automobiles for that question, since there wasn’t a clear link to suburbanization in that answer choice.</p>

<p>i remember my english teacher make the class read that exact poem last year.</p>

<p>oh jeez… 5 omitted and 3-4 wrong… with 4 that Im not too sure of if i put the right answer or not. oh man. its going to be close</p>

<p>wait so was it women’s clothing or textiles that moved from homes to factories in the 1820’s?</p>

<p>Characteristics of 20’s EXCEPT question: I said “trade with europe started again after WWI and benefited farmers” or something like that.
Anybody else agree with that?</p>

<p>@notnow textiles</p>