1. According to John Dewey, a teacher's primary goal is to
a. instill rigid discipline and moral character in young people.
b. emphasize training for a particular set of professional skills demanded by the contemporary job market.
c. educate students for the broad range of life's challenges by active, participatory learning methods.
d. undermine students' naive religious beliefs.
e. ensure that his or her students pass all standardized exams by following traditional rote methods of
teaching.
c
2. Immigration restrictions of the 1920s were introduced as a result
of
a. increased migration of Black people to the North.
b.
the nativist belief that northern Europeans were superior to Southern
and Eastern Europeans.
c. a desire to rid the country of the
quota system.
d. the desire to halt immigration from Latin
America.
e. the rampant spread of infectious diseases from
southern and eastern European immigrants to native-born
Americans
across all of America.
b
3. The American radio industry was distinctive from radio in European
nations because it
a. did not carry news programming.
b.
gave preference in station ownership to religious and other nonprofit
groups.
c. practiced censorship against sexually offensive
material.
d. developed nationwide networks of stations
broadcasting the same program.
e. was a commercial business
dependent on advertising.
e
4. The short-term legal outcome of the 1925 Scopes Trial was
that
a. attorney Clarence Darrow got the charges against John
Scopes dropped.
b. the state of Tennessee modified its
anti-evolution law.
c. biology teacher John Scopes was found not
guilty of teaching evolution and returned to the classroom
to
teach only evolution in his classroom.
d. biology teacher
John Scopes was found guilty of teaching evolution and fined.
e.
the jury was deadlocked and unable to reach a verdict.
d
5. The Ku Klux Klan of the 1920s was a reaction against
a.
capitalism.
b. new immigration laws passed in 1924.
c. the
nativist movements that had their origins in the 1850s.
d. race
riots.
e. the forces of diversity and modernity that were
transforming American culture.
e
6. All of the following helped to make the prosperity of the 1920s
possible EXCEPT
a. government stimulation of the economy.
b.
rapid expansion of capital.
c. increased productivity of
workers.
d. perfection of assembly-line production.
e.
advertising and credit buying.
a
7. Although speakeasies and hard liquor flourished, historians argue
that Prohibition wasn't entirely a failure for all
of the
following reasons EXCEPT
a. bank savings increased.
b.
absenteeism in the workplace decreased.
c. people consumed less
alcohol overall.
d. crime levels decreased.
e. more people
lived a sober lifestyle.
d
8. Charles Lindbergh's solo flight across the Atlantic made him an
American hero especially because
a. his political principles were
widely admired.
b. he and his wife Anne Morrow Lindbergh made
such an appealing couple.
c. his wholesome youthfulness
contrasted with the cynicism and debunking of the jazz age.
d.
Americans were impressed by his boastful personality and awed by his
recklessness.
e. Lindbergh's journey opened closer cultural
connections to France.
c
9. The main problem faced by American manufacturers in the 1920s
involved
a. increasing the level of production.
b.
developing mass markets in America and overseas to create sufficient
consumer demand for American
manufactured goods being produced
during that decade at unprecedented production levels.
c.
reducing the level of government involvement in business.
d.
developing technologically innovative products.
e. Americans'
unwillingness to buy on credit and tap their savings for mass consumer goods.
b
10. The first talkie motion picture was
a. The Great Train
Robbery.
b. The Birth of a Nation.
c. The Wizard of
Oz.
d. Gone with the Wind.
e. The Jazz Singer.
e
11. The leading cultural critic of the 1920s, H.L. Mencken, attacked
all of the following EXCEPT
a. the South.
b.
patriotism.
c. technology.
d. prohibition.
e. marriage.
c
12. The influential cultural film during the 1920s, Birth of a Nation
by D.W. Griffith, stirred extensive protest by
African Americans
because
a. the film was heavily financed by white racist
Hollywood film business owners.
b. the film depicted the Black
leader Marcus Garvey in an unfavorable light.
c. African
Americans were not allowed to see the film even in northern movie
theaters.
d. the film glorified the Ku Klux Klan and portrayed
Black men as corrupt politicians or rapists.
e. Griffith failed
to give credit to the civil rights advocacy work and Black
intellectual leadership of W.E.B.
Du Bois.
d
13. Margaret Sanger was most noted for her advocacy of
a.
abortion rights.
b. women's suffrage.
c. birth
control.
d. free love.
e. equal pay for equal work.
c
14. The long-term outcome of the Scopes "Monkey
Trial"
a. represented, at best, a hollow victory for
Fundamentalism because it cast ridicule of the
fundamentalist
cause and highlighted the dubious rationality of a
relying on a literal theological reading of the Bible to
overturn
the findings of modern science.
b. halted the trend of increasing
numbers of Christians reconciling the asserted revelations of
Christianity
with modern science.
c. was an unmitigated
political and religious triumph of the fundamentalist Christian effort
to deny the
increasing influence of modern science in American
educational and cultural life.
d. permitted the gap between
fundamentalist Christian theology and biology to narrow
considerably.
e. reversed Fundamentalism's place as a vibrant
force in American spiritual life.
a
15. Enforcement of the Volstead Act met the strongest resistance
from
a. women.
b. foreign-born peoples who brought European
styles of sociability with them when they emigrated
to
America.
c. westerners and southerners.
d.
businesspeople and labor leaders.
e. evangelical Protestants.
b
16. One of the primary obstacles to working class solidarity and
organization in America was
a. ethnic diversity.
b. the lack
of a reform impulse in America.
c. the generally fair treatment
that workers received from their employers.
d. the hostility of
the Catholic Church to social reform.
e. the growing Communist
influence in the labor movement.
a
17. The cultural offerings of radio programs and motion pictures in
the 1920s
a. were less popular than had been anticipated.
b.
contributed to the standardization of American life.
c. affirmed
and supported the rich diversity of traditional Old Country cultures
and values.
d. were for the most part too expensive for ordinary
working families.
e. strengthened American family life.
b
18. Jazz music was developed by
a. Latinos.
b. Caribbean
immigrants.
c. Caucasian impresarios.
d. American
teenagers.
e. Black Americans.
e
19. All of the following are true of Marcus Garvey, founder of the
United Negro Improvement Association,
EXCEPT he
a. promoted
the resettlement of Black Americans to Africa.
b. advocated the
idea of developing an elite "talented tenth" to lead African
American economic and social
progress and promote racial
integration in the United States.
c. inspired strong feelings of
self-confidence and self-reliance among Black people.
d. was
convicted of mail fraud and deported by the U.S. government.
e.
sponsored Black-owned business enterprises.
b
20. The Scopes "Monkey Trial" represented a tragic,
embarrassing, and final political curtain call for
prosecution
expert
a. Clarence Darrow.
b. William
Jennings Bryan.
c. John Dewey.
d. Andrew Carnegie.
e.
Reinhold Niebuhr.
b
21. During the 1920s and after, many American immigrant ethnic
groups
a. rapidly assimilated into the mainstream of American
life.
b. sought to escape urban poverty by migrating to rural
areas.
c. lived in neighborhoods with their own churches or
synagogues, newspapers, and theaters.
d. maintained a greater
loyalty to the old country than to the United States.
e. sought
political autonomy and official recognition by the U.S. government.
c
22. The religion of almost all Polish immigrants to America
was
a. Eastern Orthodoxy.
b. Lutheranism.
c.
evangelical Protestantism.
d. Roman Catholicism.
e. Judaism.
d
23. Top gangster Al Capone was finally convicted and sent to prison
for the crime of
a. murder.
b. income-tax evasion.
c.
kidnapping.
d. conspiracy to violate the prohibition
laws.
e. running criminal prostitution rings.
b
24. Henry Ford's most distinctive contribution to the automobile
industry was
a. installment credit buying of cars.
b.
voluntarily permitting unions to organize in his auto plants and
agreeing to negotiate a union contract with
the United Auto
Workers (UAW) over wages, benefits, and worker safety issues.
c.
introducing a variety of automobile models with varied colors and
styles.
d. design changes that improved speed.
e. production
of a standardized, relatively inexpensive automobile.
e
25. The 1920 census revealed that, for the first time, most
a.
men worked in manufacturing.
b. adult women were employed outside
the home.
c. Americans lived in cities.
d. Americans lived
in the trans-Mississippi West.
e. families had fewer than four children.
c
26. The post-World War I Ku Klux Klan advocated all of the following
EXCEPT
a. immigration restrictions against "non-native"
Americans.
b. anti-Semitism.
c. opposition to
Prohibition.
d. repression of pacifists.
e. anti-Catholicism.
c
27. Among the major figures promoted by mass media image makers and
the new sports industry in the 1920s were
a. John L. Sullivan and
William Cody.
b. Henry Ford and Charles Lindbergh.
c. Babe
Ruth and Jack Dempsey.
d. Al Jolson and Margaret Sanger.
e.
Mickey Mantle and Rocky Marciano.
c
28. Car advertisements in the 1920s reached out to the mass market of
American female consumers in all of the
following ways
EXCEPT
a. showing them cars were respectable for women.
b.
illustrating how automobiles could permit women to ignore their
traditional duties as household managers
and advance their
professional career goals and ambitions.
c. linking modern,
independent women to automobiles.
d. noting that cars enabled
women to better fulfill their roles as household managers.
e.
demonstrating that women could indeed learn to drive.
b
29. The Ku Klux Klan nearly collapsed in the late 1920s when
a.
the immigration restriction laws of the early 1920s were
repealed.
b. the organization was publicly exposed as a corrupt
and cynical racket.
c. the advent of radio led to a new level of
public knowledge and tolerance.
d. the Klan proved unable to
implement its program.
e. both political parties sharply
criticized the Klan as un-American.
b
30. The Immigration Act of 1924 discriminated directly
against
a. Canadians and West Indians.
b. northern and
western Europeans.
c. Latin Americans.
d. Jews and
Muslims.
e. Southern and Eastern Europeans and Japanese people.
e
31. Besides controlling the illegal liquor industry, American
gangsters in the 1920s earned rich profits from which of
the
following illegal enterprise(s)?
a. prostitution
b. gambling
and loan sharking
c. labor racketeering
d. illegal
drugs
e. All of these choices are correct.
e
32. The prosperity that developed in the 1920s
a. was
accompanied by a foreboding cloud of consumer debt.
b. led to a
growing level of savings by the American public.
c. enabled labor
unions to gain strength.
d. was based on a steady and moderate
rate of healthy economic growth that did not rely on
excessive
consumer spending to sustain the prosperity during this
decade.
e. closed the gap between rich and poor.
a
33. The American airline industry in the 1920s made most of its early
profits through
a. mail contracts with the federal
government.
b. passenger fares.
c. air freight and bulk
cargo.
d. subsidies from state and local governments.
e.
crop dusting and cloud seeding.
a
34. In response to the need to develop greater and greater mass
markets for their products, American business in
the 1920s relied
especially on the new techniques of
a. developing a large range
of product variation.
b. price competition.
c. direct
selling through catalogs and door-to-door solicitation.
d.
consumer advertising.
e. government-backed guarantees of product performance.
d
35. To justify their new sexual frankness, many Americans pointed
to
a. increased consumption of alcohol.
b. the decline of
fundamentalism.
c. the rise of the women's movement.
d. the
theories of Sigmund Freud.
e. the influence of erotically
explicit movies.
d
36. Match each literary figure below with the correct work.
A.
Ernest Hemingway 1. The Sun Also Rises
B. F. Scott Fitzgerald 2.
Main Street
C. Sinclair Lewis 3. The Sound and the Fury
D.
William Faulkner 4. The Great Gatsby
a. A-3, B-2, C-4,
D-1
b. A-1, B-3, C-2, D-4
c. A-2, B-1, C-3, D-4
d. A-1,
B-4, C-2, D-3
e. A-4, B-3, C-1, D-2
d
37. Job opportunities for women in the 1920s
a. expanded
dramatically.
b. offered higher-paying positions than
before.
c. were virtually nonexistent in cities, even in
traditional women's fields such as teaching, secretarial
work,
and nursing.
d. existed mainly in the area of
education.
e. tended to cluster in a few low-paying fields.
e
38. John Dewey can rightly be called the "father of
____."
a. Social Darwinism
b. progressive
education
c. evolutionary science
d. psychoanalysis
e.
Hegelian philosophy
b
39. Which of the following people was NOT among prominent African
American cultural figures of the 1920s?
a. Joseph
"King" Oliver
b. Ralph Ellison
c. "Jelly
Roll" Morton
d. Langston Hughes
e. W.C. Handy
b
40. The most tenacious pursuer of radical elements during the red
scare of the early 1920s was
a. Frederick W. Taylor.
b.
William Jennings Bryan.
c. Eugene Debs.
d. Robert La
Follette.
e. A. Mitchell Palmer.
e
41. During the 1920s, the new system of buying on credit resulted in
all of the following EXCEPT
a. transforming once frugal Americans
into consumers of cars, radios, and other durable goods.
b.
leading many Americans to exemplify the slogan "possess today and
pay tomorrow" in their consumer
spending habits.
c.
stimulating of economic growth in the country.
d. creating
massive amounts of consumer debt.
e. providing a fundamental and
solid basis for sustainable long-term prosperity in the nation.
e
42. Many Polish peasants learned about America from all of the
following sources EXCEPT
a. agents from U.S. railroads.
b.
letters from friends and relatives.
c. agents from steamship
lines.
d. Protestant missionaries.
e. Polish-American businesspeople.
d
43. The zeal of federal agents in enforcing prohibition laws against
liquor smugglers strained U.S. diplomatic
relations with
a.
Canada.
b. Mexico.
c. the Dominican Republic.
d.
Spain.
e. Ireland.
a
44. Businesspeople used the red scare to
a. oppose enactment of
the American plan.
b. break the backs of fledgling
unions.
c. campaign for the enactment of the "closed"
shop.
d. secure passage of laws making unions legal.
e.
reduce prices on consumer goods for Americans.
b
45. With 5 million members at its peak in the 1920s, the Ku Klux Klan
was known for all of the following EXCEPT
a. secret
rituals.
b. lack of support in the Midwest and the Bible
Belt.
c. flag-waving parades.
d. the blazing cross.
e.
the bloodied lash.
b
46. Which of the following was NOT among the industries that
prospered mightily with widespread use of the
automobile?
a.
rubber
b. highway construction
c. oil
d.
railroads
e. glass
d
47. Cultural pluralists like Horace Kallen and Randolph Bourne
generally advocated that
a. Spanish and German should be
recognized as official languages of the United States along with
English.
b. "one hundred percent Americanization" of
all Southern and Eastern European immigrants was necessary
for
America to retain its democratic and cosmopolitan culture.
c.
immigrants to the United States could and should remain politically
loyal to their original nations.
d. immigrants should be able to
retain their traditional cultures rather than blend into a single
American
melting pot.
e. the full-fledged preservation of
ethnic identity and cross-fertilization among immigrants were
both
unhealthy and dangerous cultural trends that threatened to
the long-term health and democratic nature of
America.
d
48. Disillusioned by war and peace, Americans in the 1920s did all of
the following EXCEPT
a. denounce radical foreign ideas.
b.
condemn un-American lifestyles.
c. struggle to achieve economic
prosperity.
d. shun diplomatic commitments to foreign
countries.
e. restrict immigration.
c
49. The automobile revolution resulted in all of the following
EXCEPT
a. the consolidation of schools.
b. the increased
dependence of women on men.
c. the spread of suburbs.
d. a
loss of population in less attractive states.
e. altered youthful
sexual behavior.
b
50. The “red scare” of 1919-1920 was provoked by
a. the wartime
migration of rural Blacks to northern cities.
b. urban
immigrants' resistance to prohibition.
c. public anger at
evolutionary science's challenge to the biblical story of the
Creation.
d. the public's fear that labor troubles were sparked
by communist and anarchist revolutionaries.
e. Russian
Communism's threat to American security.
d
51. The Harlem Renaissance can best be described as
a. a
celebration of Black culture and creative expression of a prominent
and vibrant Black community in the
North.
b. the migration
of Southern Blacks to northern sections of New York City.
c. the
movement led by Marcus Garvey.
d. the effort to resist racism and
segregation in the North.
e. None of these choices are correct.
a
52. The most spectacular and deadly example of lawlessness and
gangsterism in the 1920s was in
a. San Francisco.
b. New
Orleans.
c. Boston.
d. Chicago.
e. Las Vegas.
d