All GED Social Studies Resources
Example Questions
Example Question #1 : Immigration And Emigration
The Native American population most likely arrived in North America __________.
across the Strait of Gibraltar from Africa
via ships and rafts from Hawaii
from Viking Expeditions to Eastern Canada
across the Bering Strait from Asia
through the Panamanian and Belizean rainforests
across the Bering Strait from Asia
The original Native American population is believed to have crossed into North America via a land bridge in the modern-day Bering Strait. So they would have crossed from what is now Northern Russia into Alaska and then rapidly worked there way (over many generations) down throughout modern North and South America.
Example Question #263 : Content Areas
A person who has fled some disaster—natural or political—in his or her home country and now lives abroad is called a(n) __________.
immigrant
refugee
reactionary
diaspora
departee
refugee
A refugee is someone who has either been forced to leave or else has fled some disaster—famine, poverty, genocide, religious warfare, etc. A refugee leaves his or her own country and heads for a willing country believed to be safer. Different countries around the world have widely varied practices when it comes to accepting refugees. The diaspora is the name given to a community of displaced people, e.g. the Jewish Diaspora.
Example Question #2 : Immigration And Emigration
The phrase “God, glory, and gold” is used to describe __________.
the reasons that inspired the Protestant Reformation
the British desire to conquer the Indian subcontinent
the westward migration of American settlers in the nineteenth century
the political beliefs and ideologies of certain elements of the contemporary Republican Party
the motivations behind European conquest and settlement of the Americas
the motivations behind European conquest and settlement of the Americas
The phrase “God, glory, and gold” is often used to describe the motivations behind European conquest and settlement of the Americas. It is most frequently used to describe the first wave of European colonialism under the Spanish. It is a shorthand term to illustrate how the Spanish were motivated to colonize the Americas in order to spread Christianity ("God"), gain personal fame and notoriety ("glory"), and become immensely wealthy by exporting gold and silver back to Europe ("gold").
Example Question #2 : Immigration And Emigration
Xenophobia is the name given to ___________________.
racist discourse
the fear of the government
the fear of foreigners
the fear of disease
anarchist discourse
the fear of foreigners
Xenophobia is an important term and important trend in human and American history. Xenophobia is the fear of foreigners, and it is a motivating factor in many of the worst instances of violence and atrocities in human history. It can also be a primary motivating factor in less dramatic, but no less important, circumstances, like limits on immigration, racism, tariffs, civil unrest and so on.