<p>waitwaitwait what? Main Street? Was that a question on the test?</p>
<p>yea, i remember some quesiton about like: in teh early 20th century, what book offered a critique on the middle class.. i'm 99% sure it was "main street"</p>
<p>ooooohhh I remember now. I guessed Main Street for that one. Yay!</p>
<p>did the spanish american war give the u.s. its first colony or w/e?</p>
<p>oh yea, what did that immigraiton act of like 1964 do?</p>
<p>I don't remember that one on the test... mm not sure. The US tried to colonize the Philippines after the Spanish-American War but failed. I don't know if they got control over any other areas.</p>
<p>Immigration Act repealed the National Origins Act (AKA Immigration Act of 1924, national origins quotas <--- how it was worded on test, Johnson-Reed Act), I think.</p>
<p>it eliminated quotas.</p>
<p>hey, btw, wikipedia is your friend.</p>
<p>@ slimsquall: Oneida, New Harmony, etc., were utopianism communities, not feminist ones.</p>
<p>Albany Plan? i thought I had an idea...hmm...can't remember what I put. And I was deciding between sugarcane and help for South Carolina...dang.</p>
<p>ohhh yeah Oneida = utopia, though it's also known for something else <em>cough</em>
Albany Plan = unity against French and Indian threat.</p>
<p>OHHHH
NEW QUESTION
Where was that poem from? Something about Africa, sand, land, chains
and the answer choices were:
New England primer
speech in Congress
poem from Ben Franklin's Poor Richard's Almanac
mission/views of Protestant/Christians ????</p>
<p>lol i put the protestant hymn answer....since it rhymed so i was like K HYMN
...someone with actual knowledge of this question should give input</p>
<p>what was the answer to teh political machine one? (what is incorrect about political machines?)was it that they turned over power quickly?</p>
<p>and</p>
<p>which act showed a strict constitutionalist view? (was it the veto answer?)</p>
<p>oh dang hymn would kinda make sense... but I hesitated on that 'cause 1) I don't know why they'd be signing about foreign countries and 2) I wasn't sure what a primer was and 3) didn't know what Poor Richard's Almanac was about.</p>
<p>What were the other answer choices for the political machine question?</p>
<p>I put veto for that question too, but I was debating between that and another answer (which I forgot... it was NOT the one with Hamilton or Jefferson though, they were wrong for sure)</p>
<p>i'm gonna bug in and say this. i didn't think it was that easy. APUSH was easier (a lot actually) for me b/c it was based more on broader concepts.</p>
<p>the SAT USH, however, based more on tiny details. there was one where all the answer choices were like corn, wheat, indigo, blah blah blah. i was like *** is indigo? honestly i dunno what it is. and then there was another one with all the cities and another one w/all the colonies like delaware, virginia, new york, etc....grrrr i hate it.
i don't feel like it's even NECESSARY to remember all the details like that in order to show that you know history. i can tell you a lot about what happened. but i'm not gonna be able to tell you all the names of the specific places, specific dates, and specific persons, + specific treaties (and their sub-parts) at the SAME time. </p>
<p>plus stupid me...thought there were only 50 Qs when there were 90!!!! that's somethin i'll never get over. total idiot</p>
<p>hah yeah, I think a good number of AP exams are easier than their SAT II counterpart. I got a 5 on AP Bio and I didn't know a LOT of the MCs. I'm pretty sure I garnered most of my points through the essays.
oh man that sucks. Did you read through all the questions at least?</p>
<p>@slim "2.What does the constitution say about the slavery?
I wrote it avoided the problem..."</p>
<p>Yea same. We went over this in Gov Ap/I had to read a copy of the constitution for that class...they did nothing to mention it and kinda let it float there in a limbo. </p>
<p>Prohibition (18th amendment) = only amendment repealed. (Gov class again. :])</p>
<p>@Pishy: I put Poor Richards b/c of these reasons
-New Englanders = puritans. Puritans preach about hellfire and damnation. Taught their kids to be virtuous in the primers (like primitive textbooks) and about not sinning. (Read some in Am Lit) Basic stuff learned too.
-Poor Richards Almanac = a book about weather, poems, recipes, a collection of practical/non practical things for the olden times. I've seen one before and they're totally cool. I had a psuedo version when I was little.
-At that time it wasn't until McKinley that they really started seeing things on a global scale.</p>
<p>Pretty sure Veto was right -- he thought the road was unconstitutional/unfair for certain states to have better advantages.</p>
<p>For APUSH -- the class is tie for hardest AP class at my school. MC SUPER easy on that AP test. DBQ, I did the best essay of my APUSH career right there. And the two FRQ's I totally had to bs.</p>
<p>bump bump bump</p>
<p>Did anyone know the answer to the one about plantation owners and had a lot of answers about the Piedmont area? I had no idea...</p>
<p>i too had NO idea.. anyone?</p>
<p>aw man, guess I should've put down Poor Richard's Almanac then. I don't remember if I answered or skipped that one...</p>
<p>I vaguely remember the Piedmont thing, what were the other answer choices/question?</p>
<p>oh for the plantation one i vaguely remember saying that like there were more poor farmers then rich ones.. or was that the antebellum quesiton?</p>