**2011 APUSH Official Post-Test**

<p>Edit: You saw my response so now I’ll delete it. ;)</p>

<p>MC - not too bad some really specific questions though like one of the last colonial immigration questions about how french & english colonial immigration differed or something. hoping for 60/80</p>

<p>DBQ - Used all the Docs but only had like 5 pieces of outside information ( detente, tet offensive, assasination of mlk & rob kennedy, student-antiwar protests, etc) Btw, how many pieces of outside information do you need to earn points?</p>

<p>FRQ- picked 2 and 5. talked about how the demand for labor brought slaves over and indentured servitude & the headright system was inadequate. Included (tobacco john rolfe, tirangular trade, indigo rice, etc.) FRQ 5 I talked about Booker T. & tuskegee, WEB dubois, ida b wells, garvey, MLK, stokely carmichael, SNCC, SCLC, CORE, etc. </p>

<p>PRAYING FOR A 5.</p>

<p>Thnx, I was curious…</p>

<p>Dunno about you guys but it seemed like many peoples’ favorite numbers today at school were 2 and 5.</p>

<p>

</p>

<p>It was Charles G. Finney. I had read that section of AMSCO about an hour before H-Hour.</p>

<p>Welllllll all I can say is :O</p>

<p>My teacher didn’t even teach us Truman let alone the DBQ topic…
FRQs I picked 2 and 5 which were okay…
MC was kinda hard. I took the 2001 and 2008 both of which I got like 56/80 which I was happy with but I probably got like 35/80 :(</p>

<p>DBQ sucked x 10
Please let me passss lol</p>

<p>alrite 10 char</p>

<p>lol I did 2 & 5 as well. Black History month ftw</p>

<p>Multiple choice was okay. I was screwed for the DBQ. Thank God I knew something about Watergate and Vietnamization. No one in my school got to Nixon, haha…when we all opened our DBQs, there was a collective murmur of cussing…</p>

<p>The FRQs were easy, I thought. I did 2 and 4. Thought I wrote a pretty rockin last essay about the Know-Nothings and Sacco and Vanzetti. Hopefully they’ll make up for my DBQ failure xD</p>

<p>I won’t discuss the actual questions or answers, but:</p>

<p>MC #1 literally word for word was asked on two old released exams we did in class. Probably the only useful thing I ever got out of that class.</p>

<p>MC #79 Funniest thing ever. There was a big joke in our school because my teacher did a call-in radio show on Wednesday night with a panel of students that many kids listened to, and one of the kids accidentally referred to those two women as the same person. When someone pointed it out on Facebook later that night, the big joke amongst everyone was that that question would totally come up on the test (we were completely sarcastic) and anyone who hadn’t read the correction someone posted on FaceBook would surely get that question wrong. The girl jokingly apologized that she’d cause the kids who didn’t see the correction to incorrectly answer that question.</p>

<p>So at the end of the test, it’s about to be over, and of course a question about one of those two women hadn’t come up. Duh. And then we all flipped to the second to last question and saw not just the name of the women, but an answer that defined each of them. I literally laughed out loud, and so did the other kids in the room with me. It was actually helpful that she got it wrong on the radio show, because if I hadn’t seen the FaceBook correction last night I wouldn’t have even known who either of those two women were. ;P</p>

<p>The question was about Ida B. Wells, the strong antilynching activist.</p>

<p>Ida Tarbell was the muckraking author of The History of Standard Oil.</p>

<p>And I’m pretty sure the answer to the first one was white indentured servants.</p>

<p>I literally spent 10 minutes just on that question trying to figure out who was who. There are like 3 people with that same name who were all important in history. Suddenly, i had a miraculous revelation and got it right in the end.</p>

<p>was the first multiple choice indentured servants or english planters?
for the massachusetts question, was it shay’s rebellion?
and, that graph for women’s employment, was it something about decline of men and some baby boom stuff?</p>

<p>Would you say it’s outrageous that I compared Obama’s withdrawl from Iraq with Nixon’s Vietnamization? I just concluded my DBQ by writing how Nixon’s approach to war was similar to the way politicans do today.</p>

<p>@FlamingMango @heyjjjaded Yeah I never would have known the difference if it weren’t for what happened (see my post). Honestly one of the biggest coincidences ever. Almost everyone in my grade who had heard the radio show was talking about it after, with like 95% saying the mess-up was what made them get it right on the test, and the other few saying they realized it was the situation from the radio show, but still couldn’t remember.</p>

<p>@GrailEdmund That exact question, legimately word-for-word, has been asked on two past released APUSH exams. If you Google it the answer should come up.</p>

<p>@grailedmund no idea, i think i got it wrong too… and jeez, i thought the first ones were supposed to be easiest… it’s so embarrassing to get the first one wrong haha</p>

<p>I thought the entire test was extremely easy! I figure that I only got about six wrong, at the most, on my MC, and the essay questions were cake. I probably could have gone further in my analysis of the documents in the DBQ, but other than that, the FRQs were a breeze.</p>

<p>Future APUSH test takers be forewarned: know your black history!</p>

<p>indentured servants, shay’s rebellion, trade routes to asia, programs of poverty, marcus garvey, finney, anti lynching
was panic of 1819 + 1837 something about bank loans?
was something about cabinet level, 1960-1980, something like energy + social sevices?
what were women encouraged to do post world war II?</p>

<p>LOL ^^ totally violates CB honor code</p>