All AP US Government Resources
Example Questions
Example Question #21 : Civil Rights
Lyndon B. Johnson signed Executive Order 11375 that extended employment discrimination protections to women in which specific sector?
The federal workforce and government contractors
The military
Farmworkers
Education
The federal workforce and government contractors
The federal workforce and government contractors were forced to end gender discrimination in hiring and employment after XO 11375. Government contractors like rubber companies and aircraft companies faced many court battles after the passage of this order.
Example Question #6 : Women's Rights
Besides Roe v. Wade, what other historic victory did women achieve in 1973?
Full integration in the military
None of the other answers are correct
The right to free childcare
Protection from discrimination based on pregnancy
Full integration in the military
In 1973, the male-only armed forces draft ended. Women were integrated into the military, representing all branches of the new volunteer corps. Women still faced discrimination, but became increasingly more accepted as soldiers.
Example Question #7 : Women's Rights
What civil right, other than the right to privacy, was legalized in the case Griswold v. Connecticut?
The right to use contraceptives
None of the other answers are correct
The right to take unpaid maternal leave
The right to use contraceptives by married couples
The right to use contraceptives by married couples
Griswold v. Connecticut struck down a Connecticut Comstock law that prohibited citizens from using drugs or medical instruments for contraception. This right was later extended to unmarried couples in Eisenstadt v. Baird.
Example Question #2 : Women's Rights
What organization was founded after 1920 by the suffragette movement to promote women’s right to vote and today lobbies women to engage in politics more frequently?
The League of Women Voters
The Women’s Trade Union League
The National American Woman’s Suffrage Association
The Seneca Falls Activist Group
The League of Women Voters
The League of Women Voters emerged as a new organization in the women’s rights movement after 1920, and set about directing the new female voting bloc. The organization remains active to this day and continue to mobilize politically minded women in the pursuit of women’s rights.
Example Question #9 : Women's Rights
Which of the following statements about the Women’s Rights Movement is TRUE?
The Equal Rights Amendment enjoyed great popularity among women across the nation
The first feminist movement was extremely tight-knit and unanimously united
Presently, female soldiers are not permitted to engage in military combat
Western states showed the most support for women’s suffrage
Western states showed the most support for women’s suffrage
Before the passage of the Nineteenth Amendment in 1920, which gave women the right to vote, many Western states had already extended suffrage to their female residents, some decades previously. Wyoming, in particular, was especially forward-thinking, allowing women to vote since 1869, and had even made the preservation of women’s suffrage a condition of statehood. The successful passage of the Nineteenth Amendment was celebrated by women across the nation, but it would not prove powerful enough to unite all feminists. Indeed, the first feminist movement was quite diverse in opinions, with some women adopting a more traditional patriarchal self-conception, while others believed in the complete equality and immersion of women within society. Confounded by this lack of consensus, the women’s rights movement soon dissolved into separate factions, each pursuing different, and even sometimes conflicting, goals. Perhaps the best example of this reality was illustrated by the defeat of the Equal Rights Amendment (ERA), which was intended to prohibit gender discrimination. Surprisingly, the ERA did not enjoy popularity among most women, many of whom regarded its statements as running counter to traditional familial values. This, of course, helped ensure the ERA’s defeat, both in 1923 and in the case of its short-lived revival in 1972. While women have served in the US military since World War II, federal restrictions banned any female soldier from taking part in direct fighting – until just recently. This prohibition was lifted on January 24th, 2013, opening both combat zones and up the highest ranks of the military, including the Navy Seals and Marines, to qualified women.
Example Question #1 : Other Civil Rights
The Sherbert test, which is derived from the 1963 Supreme Court decision in Sherbert v. Verner, deals with the part of the First Amendment which guarantees
the free exercise of religion.
freedom of the press.
freedom to assemble.
freedom of speech.
congress shall not establish a religion.
the free exercise of religion.
Adell Sherbert was a Seventh Day Adventist who refused to work on Saturday, as it was her religion's sabbath. When her employer fired her, she sued her employer, arguing she had a constitutional right to not be fired for freely exercising her religion. After her case made it all the way to the Supreme Court, the court found in her favor, and established the so-called Sherbert test. The Sherbert test was used to determine whether someone's ability to freely exercise his or her religion was being limited by the government.
Example Question #2 : Other Civil Rights
Eminent Domain __________.
allows the Federal Government to prohibit freedom of speech in specific, dangerous instances.
allows the Federal Government to seize private property
prohibits the President from declaring war without the consent of Congress.
prohibits the Federal Government from seizing private property
allows the Federal Government to prohibit freedom of religion in specific, dangerous instances
allows the Federal Government to seize private property
Eminent Domain has been a policy of the US Government since independence from the British Empire. It allows the Federal government to seize private property for public use. Due to the fact that it inherently violates the right of an individual to own property it has always been at least somewhat controversial. It reappears as a major public issue from time to time throughout American history.
Example Question #3 : Other Civil Rights
Which President arranged the desegregation of the armed forces?
Harry Truman
Abraham Lincoln
Franklin D. Roosevelt
Dwight Eisenhower
Ulysses S. Grant
Harry Truman
Desegregation of the armed forces took place in 1948 and was ordered by President Harry Truman. Roosevelt had recently banned racial discrimination and segregation in government offices.
Example Question #31 : Civil Rights
What constitutional amendment formed the basis of the 1954 Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka Supreme Court decision?
The First Amendment
The Fourteenth Amendment
The Nineteenth Amendment
The Tenth Amendment
The Eighth Amendment
The Fourteenth Amendment
The Warren Court cited the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment as justification for striking down racial segregation. Students should be able to recall critical civil rights amendments (such as the First, Fourteenth, Fifteenth, and Nineteenth Amendments).
Example Question #32 : Civil Rights
How does de facto segregation differ from de jure segregation?
The former exists without being enshrined in law, whereas the latter is segregation created by law.
The latter is segregation that is enshrined by the legislature, whereas the former is segregation that is established by the Judiciary.
The former is discrimination against minorities, whereas the latter is discrimination against the majority.
The latter attempts to undo previous discrimination through affirmative action, whereas the former seeks to further entrench racial divisions.
The former has been illegal since the Civil Rights Act of 1964, whereas the latter is technically still constitutional.
The former exists without being enshrined in law, whereas the latter is segregation created by law.
De facto segregation is the name given to racial segregation that exists, but is not supported by law and may even run counter to contemporary laws. De jure segregation is segregation that is created by and supported by law. De jure segregation has proved much easier to get rid of in American society, whereas de facto segregation has proven much more resilient.