1 ADVANCED PLACEMENT UNITED STATES HISTORY THE MULTIPLE- CHOICE SECTION.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
AP US History: Secrets of the AP Exam Orwhat you need to know to get through the next 32 weeks and pass the exam.
Advertisements

TEST-TAKING STRATEGIES FOR THE OHIO ACHIEVEMENT READING ASSESSMENT
GETTING TO KNOW THE SAT TIPS AND TRICKS TO IMPROVE YOUR SAT SCORE MR. TORRES 10/02/2013.
Bellringer Do you believe the U.S. Constitution should be followed word for word? OR Do you think that the U.S. Constitution should be interpreted to.
2014 CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTION Setting up speeches Write each speech on a separate sheet of paper. Put your delegate name and state as your heading.
Welcome to the Advanced Placement Essay A.P. U.S. History I Mr. Clark.
SAT Strategy …so you don’t get pwnd.
Test Preparation Strategies
AP World History Multiple Choice Exam.
GHSGT in Social Studies
Test Taking Tips How to help yourself with multiple choice and short answer questions for reading selections A. Caldwell.
Test Taking Advice.
ACT: The Reading Test.
1 ADVANCED PLACEMENT UNITED STATES HISTORY THE MULTIPLE- CHOICE SECTION.
SAT Prep- Reading Comprehension Strategies- Short Passages
HW #20 AIM: HOW EFFECTIVELY DID EARLY POLITICAL LEADERS GOVERN THE NEW NATION? P. 190 (WASHINGTON’S) TO P. 200 Aim: Was the United States able to avoid.
The AP US History Exam What should a student expect?
General Review Tips Prioritize - Focus on topics/areas of weakness first Avoid trying to memorize too much - Review “big picture” concepts first, specific.
How to do Quality Research for Your Research Paper
General Review Tips Prioritize - Focus on topics/areas of weakness first Avoid trying to memorize too much - Review “big picture” concepts first, specific.
The Era of Good Feelings  This is a period of time in our History where life for Americans was good and getting better.  For so many years in the United.
APUSH Exam Question Breakdown Multiple Choice, DBQ’s, and FRQ’s.
General Review Tips Prioritize - Focus on topics/areas of weakness first Avoid trying to memorize too much - Review “big picture” concepts first, specific.
WHAT IT IS, HOW TO UNDERSTAND IT, & WHAT IT TAKES TO BEAT IT. The SAT 3 rd Quarter Tips.
Three Essential Questions What is U.S. History? Why do we study U.S. History? How do we study U.S. History?
General Review Tips Prioritize - Focus on topics/areas of weakness first Avoid trying to memorize too much - Review “big picture” concepts first, specific.
Levels of Questions fact recall analyze or explain apply what you know 20% 60%
Writing Essays for the AP World History Exam Document Based Question.
Test Taking Tips Test Prep  Preparation for your first test should begin on the first day of class; this includes paying attention.
1 ADVANCED PLACEMENT UNITED STATES HISTORY THE MULTIPLE- CHOICE SECTION.
AP US Government & Politics Exam Review Test Strategy.
1.What does “ograbme” spell when written backwards? 2.What other clues tell you this cartoon is about the embargo against England?
Agenda Multiple Choice Background Info Practice Multiple Choice Exam Grade the Exam and Determine where you should focus your study HW: Create a detailed.
Economic Terms Documents Economic Systems Eras of Change Principles of the Constitution American Civil War $200 $400 $600 $800 $200 $400 $600 $800 $200.
8 Strategies for the Multiple Choice Portion of the AP Literature and Composition Exam.
Test Taking Strategies MR. AVERY. Multiple Choice Questions Multiple choice exams ask a student to recognize a correct answer among a set of options that.
Vs.. Why Political Parties? -Provide a label (party identification) -Organization, recruiting, campaigning of politicians -Set of leaders to organize.
FROM CONFEDERATION TO UNION: The Articles of Confederation and the Constitution.
Constitutional Powers. Constitutional Provisions Expressed powers: the legislative powers of Congress as described in Article 1 of the Constitution Necessary.
Ch. 8 1a. Define and Fears 1 st government of the United States. Congress did not want a strong Central Government. Feared it would take the rights of.
Key Events of James Madison’s and James Monroe’s Administrations.
ACT Reading Test The ACT Reading test is 40 questions long. There are four passages of ten questions. 52 seconds a question 8 minutes a passage 35 minutes.
Section 10.3: More Problems With Europe. Besides the trouble in Florida and the issue of Missouri’s admission as a slave state, James Monroe faced another.
Political Parties of Early America: The Yin &Yang of Human Belief By Ryan Fan.
The Constitutional Convention How did the American colonists attempt to fix the problems of the Articles of Confederation?
1 ADVANCED PLACEMENT UNITED STATES HISTORY THE MULTIPLE- CHOICE SECTION.
AP US History: Secrets of the AP Exam Reasons to take the AP course and try really hard to pass the exam…  Colleges and universities see AP experience.
Establishing a New Government
Review Part 2 Constitutional Development. 1) Which statement(s) best reflects what the United States Constitution represents? I. The Constitution is a.
STRATEGIES FOR THE MULTIPLE-CHOICE SECTION. The Test ► The test itself is 3 hours and 15 minutes. ► One hour for multiple choice questions on 4-5.
AP US Govt. and Politics.  There are four MANDATORY free-response questions on the exam  At least one question will require interpretation of a chart,
Chapter 1: Creating a Nation: Lesson 2
Unit 2 – Creation of a New Nation U3 MYP Title: Building the Rule Book (Constitution) Unit Question: How can one system Empower all? Key Concepts: Systems.
The Constitutional Convention
From Colonies to Countries Mr. Hernandez Multi-Level ESL
SAT Prep Lesson # 1 EQ: What do I need know about time management to be successful on the SAT?
THE MULTIPLE-CHOICE SECTION
THE MULTIPLE-CHOICE SECTION
EOC PRACTICE TEST CATEGORY 1.
AP US History: Secrets of the AP Exam
AP US History: Secrets of the AP Exam
Political Parties (3.5.2).
The Early U.S. Presidents
AP World History Multiple Choice Exam.
Chapter 10 Learning Topics
CHAPTER 3-INFORMATION “THE CONSTITUTION”
Origins of American Government Chapter 2.
CRACKING THE MULTIPLE-CHOICE SECTION
Flipped Learning TASK: For this lesson you need to:
Presentation transcript:

1 ADVANCED PLACEMENT UNITED STATES HISTORY THE MULTIPLE- CHOICE SECTION

2 THE BASICS THE DIRECTIONS FOR THE MULTIPLE CHOICE SECTION ARE PRETTY SIMPLE ESSENTIALLY YOU WILL SELECT THE BEST ANSWER THAT FITS THE QUESTION AND RECORD ON YOUR ANSWER SHEET

3 BREAKDOWN BY ERA

4 BREAK DOWN BY GENERAL SUBJECT MATTER

5 EXPLANATION OF CHARTS A BIAS TOWARD THE CONSTITUTION THROUGH WWI POLITICAL AND SOCIAL ACTIVITIES EMPHASIZED LITTLE ABOUT ECONOMIC AND CULTURAL TRENDS AT MOST TWO OR THREE QUESTIONS PAST 1975

6 TYPES OF QUESTIONS THE MAJORITY OF QUESTIONS ARE PRETTY STRAIGHT FORWARD. Roger Williams was exiled from the Salem Bay settlement because he a. endangered the colony by negotiating with Native Americans’ b. championed the abolition of private property c. questioned Parliament’s authority to tax the colonists d. disputed the authenticity of the Mayflower compact e. argued for the separation of church and state

7 THE ANSWER IS E THE ANSWER IS E

8 SOMETIMES QUESTIONS HAVE 4 CORRECT ANSWERS AND 1 INCORRECT ANSWER. THESE ARE CALLED “NOT/EXCEPT” QUESTIONS The New deal included programs for achieving all of the following goals EXCEPT a. developing an interstate highway system b. stabilizing agricultural prices c. insuring bank deposits d. eliminating industrial overproduction e. providing employment for the unemployed

9 THE ANSWER IS A

10 ONCE OR TWICE DURING THE M/C SECTION, YOU WILL BE ASKED TO INTERPRET AN ILLUSTRATION, OFTEN A MAP OR A POLITICAL CARTOON. THE KEY IS NOT TO TRY TO READ TOO MUCH BETWEEN THE LINES.

11 THERE WILL BE ONE OR TWO QUESTIONS ASKING TO INTERPRET A GRAPH OR CHART. DO NOT OVERINTERPRET THE DATA. THE CORRECT ANSWER WILL BE INDISPUTABLY SUPPORTED BY THE INFORMATION IN THE CHART

12 Average, Highest, and Lowest Approval Ratings, by percentage of all eligible voters, for American Presidents, 1953 to 1974 AverageHighLow Eisenhower Kennedy Johnson Nixon Which of the following conclusions can be drawn from the information presented in the chart above? a. Eisenhower was the most consistently popular president in the nation’s history b. Kennedy received greater Congressional support for his programs than did any other president during the period in question. c. Nixon’s lowest approval rating was the result of the Watergate scandal d.The difference between Johnson’s highest and lowest approval ratings was the greatest for any president during the period in question e. Eisenhower and Johnson were equally well liked by all Americans.

13 THE ANSWER IS D

14 NO MILITARY HISTORY AND TRIVIAL PURSUIT THE APUSH EXAM DOESN’T ASK ABOUT MILITARY HISTORY WHEN IT ASKS ABOUT WAR, THE QUESTIONS CONCERNS THE POLITICAL OR SOCIAL IMPLICATIONS OF A WAR RATHER THAN THE DETAILS OF WARFARE APUSH QUESTIONS NEVER TEST ROTE MEMORIZATION ONLY. WHILE YOU HAVE TO KNOW YOUR FACTS TO DO WELL ON THIS TEST, THE QUESTIONS ALWAYS ASK FOR INFORMATION IN THE CONTEXT OF LARGER HISTORICAL TRENDS.

15 CHRONOLOGICAL ORDER AND THE ORDER OF DIFFICULTY THE APUSH EXAM IS ORGANIZED SO THAT THE M.C. SECTION IN A PREDICTABLE WAY. HERE ARE TWO THINGS YOU CAN COUNT ON: QUESTIONS WILL BE ORGANIZED IN GROUPS OF 8 TO 12. EACH GROUP OF QUESTIONS IN A GROUP WILL BE PRESENTED IN CHRONOLOGICAL ORDER. THE FIRST QUESTION IN A GROUP, FOR EXAMPLE, MAY ASK ABOUT THE TOWNSHEND ACTS (1767) THE SECOND, ABOUT THE FUED BETWEEN HAMILTON AND JEFFERSON; THE THIRD ABOUT THE WAR OF 1812; AND SO ON.

16 YOU WILL NOTICE A SHARP BREAK IN CHRONOLGY WHEN YOU MOVE FROM ONE GROUP TO ANOTHER. WHEN YOU SEE A QUESTION ABOUT MLK JR. FOLLOWED BY A QUESTION ABOUT THE CHESAPEAKE BAY COLONIES, FOR EXAMPLE, YOU WILL KNOW THAT YOU HAVE MOVED TO A NEW GROUPING. CHRONOLOGICAL ORDER CONT.

17 CHRONOLOGICAL ORDER CONT. Each group of questions will be a little bit more difficult than the group that preceded it. The questions generally go in order of difficulty, with the easiest questions appearing at the beginning of the multiple-choice test and the most difficult appearing at the end. Think of the first 20 questions as easy, questions 21 through 60 as being medium difficulty, and 61 through 80 as difficult.

18 CHRONOLOGICAL ORDER CONT. Easy questions have easy answers. Do not choose an obscure or trivial answers for an easy question. Remember also that all the questions are worth an equal amount toward your final score. Go slowly enough at the beginning to avoid careless mistakes on the easier questions. The points you lose early in the test will be much harder to make up later on.

19 THE BIG PICTURE Questions are designed to illustrate the basic principles of American History. M/C questions will NOT ask about exceptions to historical trends; the test ignores these, because the test makers are trying to find out whether you have mastered the important generalizations that can be drawn from history. Keep the big picture in mind when you take the exam. Even if you cannot remember the specific event or concept being tested, you should be able to answer the question by remembering the general social and political trends of the era.

20 THE BIG PICTURE CON’T 53. During the Harding and Coolidge administrations, the Federal Trade Commission a. greatly increased the number of court cases it brought against unethical businesses. b. controlled the rationing of food, rubber, and gasoline c. generally worked to assist businesses, rather than to regulate them d. was permanently eliminated e. saw its regulatory powers expanded

21 Here’s how to crack it At first glance, this question appears to require you to remember the history of the FTC. But, to answer all you need is the BIG PICTURE. What was the attitude of the 1920s presidents towards business? They pursued policies favorable to business. Since pro-business governments weaken regulations, you should be able to eliminate answer choices A and E Rationing did not occur until WWII, so eliminate B FTC is still around today so eliminate D The correct answer is C, which illustrates a BIG PICTURE principle, the 1920s were a pro-business era

22 Try This Question 68. “[This legislative body declares] that it views the power of the Federal Government as resulting from the compact to which the states are parties, as limited by plain sense and intention of the instrument constituting that compact…and that, in case of deliberate, palpable, and dangerous exercise of other powers, not granted by the said compact, the states…have the right, and are duty bound, to interpose, for arresting the progress of the evil, and maintaining…the authorities rights, and liberties, pertaining to them.” The quotation above appears in a. the Halfway Covenant b. The Wealth of Nations c. Common Sense d. Virginia Resolutions of 1798 e. The Liberator

23 Here’s how to crack it Question 68 - therefore difficult If you key on the big picture the question is not that hard if you have done some preparing for the test The central concept of the quotation is nullification (states have the right try and stop the federal gov’t when it tries exercise too much power) You can eliminate answers by knowing what each answer represents the Halfway Covenant - baptism of Puritans Wealth of Nations - treatise on capitalism Common Sense - written before there were states The Liberator - an abolitionist newspaper That leaves Virginia Resolutions of 1798

24 THE GUESSING PENALTY AND PROCESS OF ELIMINATION Each wrong answer is worth -.25 points Each blank answer is worth 0 points Each correct answer is worth points The question is, “Does guessing have any value towards your score?” The answer is YES Why is the answer yes??

25 THE GUESSING PENALTY AND PROCESS OF ELIMINATION con’t Statistically speaking, once you eliminate at least one or more incorrect answers choices, guessing will improve your final score. For example, take five questions of which you guessed. The probability is that you will get at least one right (+1), 4 wrong 4 x.25 (-1) netting a total of zero. That’s the same if you left all of them blank and skipped them. Random guesses cancel each other out in the long run

26 THE GUESSING PENALTY AND PROCESS OF ELIMINATION con’t You will be rarely faced with a question on which you can’t eliminate at least one of the answers. In many cases you will be able to eliminate at least two if not three answers. Whenever you get this far, you must guess from the remaining answers. Does this mean you should take a guess on every question on the test? No. Because you only have a limited amount of time to spend on the m/c section.

27 THE GUESSING PENALTY AND PROCESS OF ELIMINATION con’t The first thing you want to do is answer all the questions to which you know the answer. Then go through a process of elimination to whittle down your answer choices to one on the (easy section), the the (medium section) and finally (difficult section) This strategy will help you find the correct answer and improve your overall score.

28 COMMON SENSE CAN HELP Sometimes an answer on the m/c section contradicts common sense. Eliminate those answers. Common sense works on the APUSH exam 26. Which of the following best explains the most important effect tobacco cultivation had on the development of the Chesapeake Bay settlements during the 17th century? A. Because tobacco cultivation requires large tracts of fertile land, it led to rapid expansionism in the region. B. The immediate commercial success of tobacco forced the settlers to defend against attacks by Spanish and French settlers, who wanted to take control of the tobacco trade. C. Tobacco provided the settlers a lucrative crop to trade with nearby native American tribes. D. Dependence on tobacco as their only cash crop brought the settlements to financial ruin in the early 1600s. E. British customs houses established in the region to regulate tobacco trade led to widespread resentment of the British by the colonists.

29 How to apply common sense. What would the first answer choice to be eliminated? C - Because why would the Indians trade for something they could easily grow? Was there ever an attack by the French or Spanish during the 17th century? If there was that would have been big news. It didn’t happen, so eliminate that answer. If tobacco was the main crop, wouldn’t that help the finances of the settlement rather than ruin it. Eliminate D The period of colonial resistance was still a hundred years away. Eliminate E That leaves us with the correct answer of A

30 Context Clues Some questions contain clues or vocabulary words that will either lead you to the correct answer or at least help you eliminate an incorrect answer. 60) The confiscation act of 1861 authorized the Union to a. divert commercial production toward the war effort b. negotiate a settlement to the Civil war with ambassadors from the Confederacy c. liberate those slaves used by the Confederacy “for insurrectionary purposes” d. stop merchant ships headed for Europe and seize their cargo e. arrest those advocating secession and hold them without a writ of habeas corpus

31 Context Clues If you don’t remember the confiscation act of 1861, the word confiscation might give you enough of a context clue to answer the this question correctly anyway. Which answers don’t deal with confiscation? b - negotiate e - arrest a - diverting commercial production d - does not mention WHOSE ships are to be seized c - this is correct because slaves are considered private property. In order to liberate them they had to confiscate private property.

32 OVERALL VIEW OF QUESTIONS Medium difficulty Chronological order »these questions begin in the middle of one grouping »and that question 37 started a new group »question 36 ended at the first decade of the 1900s »not every set will end in modern times and begin with the colonial era

33 SUMMARY §Familiarize yourself with the different types of questions that will appear on the m/c section. §Be aware that you will see many questions about political and social history, some questions about international relations, and relatively few about economic and cultural trends. Tailor your studies accordingly. §Look for “big picture” answers. Correct answers on the m/c section confirm important trends in American History

34 SUMMARY - con’t §The test will not ask you about weird exceptions that contradict those trends. §It also will not ask you about military history. §You will not be required to perform miraculous feats of memorization. §However, you still must study and become familiar with all the basics of American History. (There’s a lot of basics to know though) §Use the chronological ordering of questions to figure out which time period you are being asked about.

35 SUMMARY - con’t §Be aware these questions are presented in groups of §That each group maintains chronological order. §Each group is a little more difficult than the one that precedes it. §Use process of elimination on all but the easiest questions. §Once you have worked on a question, eliminate some answers, and convinced yourself that you cannot eliminate any other incorrect answers, you should guess and move on the next question §Use common sense. Look for context clues.

36 Final Conclusion It is your responsibility to prepare for the test. Studying the night before for a few hours will not do any justice. You have spent an entire year in this class to prepare you for this test. Don’t blow it! Seize the opportunity to earn college credit and demonstrate success.

37 Hanna: That man Clay was an ASS. It’s better to be president than to be right! The political cartoon implies that a. Mckinley was the first president to favor big business interests openly b. by the 1890s, Henry Clay’s political approach had lost favor with the electorate c. McKinley’s presidential campaign was masterminded by Marcus Hanna d. Marcus Hanna single-handedly controlled all three branches of the federal government e. McKinley was too young to be an effective president

38 THE ANSWER IS C

39 CHRONOLOGICAL ORDER CONT. You can use this information to your advantage. Ask yourself how you can use this information as you look at the following three questions: [PASS OUT COPY OF QUESTIONS] What information can you ascertain from these questions? Part of first 20 questions - easy XYZ affair took place between 1764 and 1803 which should help you narrow down the correct answer

40 The Answers Are A 18. B 19. A

41 PRACTICE Here is a group of five questions that could have come from the m/c section of the APUSH exam. As you work through them, try to apply everything you have learned in this review. Use –chronological thinking, –the big picture –process of elimination –common sense –context clues

42 QUESTION 33 Context clue “gag order” Big picture - what are the important issues to this era? Common sense tells you that Congress did not stop admitting states, deny itself the ability to make war or override a presidential veto (both are privileges grant to Congress by the Constitution) Slavery was the big picture at that time. Therefore E is the correct answer

43 QUESTION 34 Chronological ordering - question 33 earliest year is 1836 question 35 is Reconstruction You can conclude that the Wilmot Proviso had to do with something leading up to the Civil War Process of elimination takes out the Federalists and the Populists Whigs were split on slavery Know-Nothings were anti-immigration That leaves the Free-Soilers who were strictly anti- slavery The answer is C

44 QUESTION 35 Asking you to find out which one of these answers is not like the other Even if you don’t know what the black codes were you should be able to conclude that a, c, d and e are all similar in that they all indicated a punitive approach toward the South. Through process of elimination, the answer is b

45 QUESTION 36 This one is a big picture question regarding Teddy Roosevelt and his foreign policy T.R.’s administration is associated with imperialism and interventionism particularly in Latin America. A is the obvious answer based on the big idea B,C and D does not fit T.R.’s foreign policy E refers to the Roosevelt Corollary and makes it look like a potential answer. But T.R. wanted to improve the Monroe Doctrine and not discarded.

46 QUESTION 37 Asks about English mercantilism Indicates test is starting a new group of questions Big Picture - What did the British want form the Colonies? Wealth That make the correct answer B Remember about 95% of the actions of people and nations are attributed to their desire to acquire wealth.