<p>i said emotionalism</p>
<p>was the answer to the declaration one something about the bad relationship between britain and america or soemthing like that?</p>
<p>i put emotion and tories</p>
<p>Beatnicks in the 1950s = Babbit???</p>
<p>Did Uncle Tom’s Cabin split the Republican party or have them call for immediate abolition?</p>
<p>uncle tom’s cabin…I forgot the exact answer but something about gaining support in the movement</p>
<p>It wasn’t Babbit, it was On the Road; [On</a> the Road - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia](<a href=“http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/On_the_Road]On”>On the Road - Wikipedia). I was really surprised that the question asked “Which novel showed alienation?” which basically gave away the answer if you didn’t overanalyze it.</p>
<p>really? I thought it split the Republican party?</p>
<p>uncle toms cabin, i put the one about the antislavery movement gaining support from northerners bc they find out about the evils of slavery or something like that</p>
<p>^uncle toms cabin: i put gaining support too</p>
<p>anyone know how many you can get wrong and still get
800?
750?
700?</p>
<p>What was the Congregationalist one?</p>
<p>lol to “on the road”</p>
<p>I put “main street” or whatever. </p>
<p>That was arguably the most random question on the test.</p>
<p>What was the difference between the AFL and the Knights of Labor?? I put the one that dealt with skilled and unskilled workers…I believe. lol I also put emotionalism, on the road, tories, and gained support for abolition in the north.</p>
<p>no it was that the ALF focused on economic stuff not political stuff.</p>
<p>the official practice book says you can miss 9/90 and still get an 800… is that your PREDICTED score for the real thing, or your ACTUAL score on the practice test?</p>
<p>What was the answer to the question “Which best characterizes the time period from 1828-1836”?</p>
<p>a raw score of 65 would guarantee you a 700</p>
<p>oh i remember the 1828-1836.</p>
<p>It was tarrif arguments</p>
<p>What was the Congregationalist one?</p>
<p>How ridiculous was the question about the Wizard of Oz?</p>
<p>I can’t believe that the answer was that the Wizard of Oz was an allegory for the gold and silver standard.</p>
<p>How many questions were on the test? Weren’t there like 90 questions? Wouldn’t put you below the 700?</p>