All AP US Government Resources
Example Questions
Example Question #2 : Rights Of Minority Groups
Korematsu v. US upheld what controversial government action?
Forced internment of Japanese Americans
Disproportionate tariff hikes against Asian imports
Restrictive quotas on Japanese and Chinese immigrants
Revoking citizenship of Japanese Americans during World War II
Forced internment of Japanese Americans
Korematsu v. US upheld the coerced relocation of Japanese Americans into internment camps during World War II. Despite its controversy, a later court has never explicitly overturned it.
Example Question #6 : Rights Of Minority Groups
Which amendment granted African Americans the right to vote?
14th
13th
16th
15th
13th
The 15th Amendment granted African Americans the right to vote, after the 13th Amendment abolishing slavery and the 14th Amendment establishing the equal protection clause.
Example Question #15 : Civil Rights
The 1967 case Loving v. Virginia invalidated all laws prohibiting what?
The employment of immigrants
None of the other answers are correct
Interracial marriage
Sexual relationships in the workplace
Interracial marriage
Loving v. Virginia struck down laws banning interracial marriage. This case was later referenced as an argument in the 2015 case Obergefell v. Hodges that legalized same-sex marriages.
Example Question #2 : Rights Of Minority Groups
Which historic court case ended racial segregation in public schools?
Brown v. Board of Education
Mapp v. Ohio
Grutter v. Bollinger
Plessy v. Ferguson
Brown v. Board of Education
Brown v. Board of Education was a case from Topeka, KS decided in 1954. It struck down separate white and black public schools, overturning Plessy v. Ferguson and the notion of “separate but equal.”
Example Question #17 : Civil Rights
Select the piece of legislation or Constitutional Amendment which MOST effectively protected the right to vote of all African-American citizens.
The Voting Rights Act (1965)
The Twenty-fourth Amendment (1964)
The Civil Rights Act (1964)
The Fifteenth Amendment (1870)
The Voting Rights Act (1965)
Both Congress and the Supreme Court made several attempts to ensure that African-Americans were able to freely exercise, without harassment or burden, their right to vote. But by far, the most effective of these attempts was the Voting Rights Act of 1965. The Voting Rights Act built on the protections already in place (but not always enforced) by other federal acts – including the Fifteenth and Twenty-fourth Amendments and the Civil Rights Act – but expanded these rights decisively and also granted the federal government wide latitude to support to them. In the past, most Southern states, and many in the North as well, had circumvented the Fifteenth Amendment’s requirement that all African-American males be permitted to vote, often through the passage of strict Jim Crow laws, discriminatory literacy tests at the election box, exorbitant poll taxes, and/or by holding so-called white primary elections (in which only white citizens were permitted to vote). The Voting Rights Act outlawed any and all method(s) which any level of government (national, state, or local), on the grounds of race, might use to prevent an individual from exercising their right to vote. To ensure that this Act was carried out to the fullest possible extent, the federal government contacted state and local governments directly, sending voter-registration forms into racially-discriminatory areas and requiring any alterations to the electoral process to first be approved and assessed by the federal government. The Voting Rights Act was a great success; many African-Americans, especially throughout the South, were able to reclaim their right to vote for the very first time.
Example Question #3 : Rights Of Minority Groups
Select the original federal source of the affirmative action policy.
The Education Act of 1972
The Civil Rights Act
A Supreme Court ruling
An Executive Order
An Executive Order
The policy of affirmative action originally derives from an Executive Order passed by President Lyndon B. Johnson in 1965, in which he banned federal institutions and employees from engaging in any discriminatory practices on the basis of race, gender, or religion. Furthermore, President Johnson required these federal bodies to take active measures to prevent and stop discrimination, particularly when it came to employment decisions; simple passive acknowledgement was no longer permitted. President Johnson’s Order is therefore the basis for the affirmative action policy, which strives to ensure that all minorities, particularly those against whom society has historically discriminated, are accorded fair and equal opportunities in the realms of both employment and education. The Supreme Court has heard many cases arguing both for and against affirmative action over the years, but overall the Court has upheld the practice, although it has imposed certain definitions, requirements, and prohibitions.
Example Question #1 : Women's Rights
The Equal Rights Amendment is not a part of the United States Constitution because it failed which step of the process?
Approval by the United States Supreme Court
Ratification by three-fourths of the state legislatures.
Passage by the Senate
Passage by the House of Representatives
Approval by the President of the United States.
Ratification by three-fourths of the state legislatures.
Article Five of the United States Constitution provides a mechanism by which the Constitution can be amended. The process can be undertaken either by Congress or by a national convention, all of which bypass the President and the Supreme Court. In the case of the Equal Rights Amendment, which would have made discrimination on the basis of sex and gender illegal, the process worked through both houses of Congress by 1972, and was given an "expiration date" of 1979. By 1977, 35 of the necessary 38 states (which would constitute a three-fourths majority) had ratified the amendment. No more states would ratify it, and five would eventually repeal their ratification.
Example Question #2 : Women's Rights
After the American Civil War, what controversial topic split the women's suffrage movement?
Breaking into two independent movements: Confederate women's rights and Union women's rights
Ending the movement in the face of increasing discord in civil American society
Pushing for the rights of women to serve in the military
Halting the movement to support wounded men in the Confederate and Union armies
Pausing the movement to focus on the rights of black men
Pausing the movement to focus on the rights of black men
As the American Civil War came to a close and debates over rights of former slaves came to the forefront of national consciousness, the American Women's Rights movement, historically allied with abolitionist movements, began to debate whether the voting rights of black men should take precedence over that of (generally white) women. Many argued that a radical amendment which guaranteed voting rights for both women and black men would not get enough support. Students should consider what major social changes occurred immediately after the Civil War, and thus what the women's rights movement could feasibly split over.
Incorrect answers are either: anachronistic (serving in the military), more likely to occur mid-Civil War (breaking into two movements and preventing civil discord), or not controversial enough (supporting the wounded).
Example Question #3 : Women's Rights
Before the Nineteenth Amendment, American suffragettes pushed for a modification of what developing Amendment?
Fifteenth
Twelfth
Fourteenth
Eighteenth
Fifteenth
Before fighting for their own voting rights amendment, female activists pressured government to add “gender” to the fifteenth amendment. The Fifteenth Amendment prohibited denial of voting rights based on one’s skin color, and American suffragettes unsuccessfully attempted to attach their own cause to its passage.
Example Question #4 : Women's Rights
Roe v. Wade established what right based on the right to privacy?
The right to take nude photography
The right to homeschooling children
Women's right to universal access to contraceptives
Women's right to abortion
Women's right to abortion
Roe v. Wade established the right of women to access abortion as a personal choice, though this ruling was nuanced with the declared need to protect human life and women’s health.