All GED Social Studies Resources
Example Questions
Example Question #1 : Women's Rights
Why is the Seneca Falls Convention important in US history?
It led to the adoption of the Articles of Confederation.
It was the first organized meeting to promote social equality and justice for minorities.
It was the first organized meeting to promote women's’ rights.
It led to the age of conscription being lowered from twenty-one to eighteen.
It led to prohibition of alcohol.
It was the first organized meeting to promote women's’ rights.
The Seneca Falls Convention took place in 1848. It was the first large-scale organized meeting promoting the advancement of women’s rights.
Example Question #91 : United States History
The Equal Pay Act of 1963 __________.
made it illegal to pay women less than men for working in the same position
made it illegal to pay minorities less than whites for working in the same position
established that the Presidency would not be a salaried position, allowing people other than the extremely wealthy to run for office
made it illegal to fire a woman for taking maternity leave
established that Congress could not make adjustments to its own pay structure
made it illegal to pay women less than men for working in the same position
The Equal Pay Act of 1963 attempted to prohibit the disparity that existed in almost all businesses between the wages given to men and women. It made it illegal to pay a woman less than a man if they did the same amount of work in the same position. It is an important early law of the Civil Rights Era.
Example Question #92 : United States History
Female oral contraception, known as “the Pill” first became available in __________.
The 1960s
The 1850s
The 1990s
The 1920s
The 1700s
The 1960s
The Pill was made widely available for the first time in 1960. The release of a daily oral female contraceptive is perhaps one of the most significant turning points in the movement towards gender equality. For the first time women had near complete control over their own bodies, when they would have children, and their sexual freedom (at least in theory). It allowed women to plan when (and if) they would have children around their careers and life decisions. It led to a dramatic increase in women in the workplace, especially in technical and skilled career paths, and provided much of the impetus for later legal amendments to provide for guaranteed female equality.
Example Question #2 : Women's Rights
The first birth-control clinic in the United States was opened in the __________.
1930s
1910s
1940s
1890s
1960s
1910s
Although the birth-control pill was not legally available to women until 1960, the first birth-control clinic in the United States was opened in New York City in 1916. This was a major development in the improvement of women’s rights and in the autonomy available to women in society as for the first time some women could control if and when they would have children.
Example Question #1 : Civil Rights Movement
The domestic reforms of the Great Society are associated with which United States President?
Franklin D. Roosevelt.
Lyndon B. Johnson.
Harry Truman.
Richard Nixon.
John F. Kennedy.
Lyndon B. Johnson.
The Great Society was a series of domestic programs and reforms instituted under President Lyndon B. Johnson. These are not to be confused with the New Deal programs of Franklin D. Roosevelt, although the two had somewhat similar goals. Part of the Great Society reforms were the extension of Medicare and Medicaid, the Civil Rights Acts, and the War on Poverty.
Example Question #1 : Civil Rights Movement
The Democratic National Convention of 1968 is notable for __________
the assassination of Robert Kennedy, allowing Richard Nixon to claim the Presidency.
The assassination of John F. Kennedy, allowing Lyndon B. Johnson to assume the Presidency.
the delegates voting to pass a resolution to make the prevention of nuclear proliferation the number one foreign-policy goal of their party.
the delegates voting against a resolution to end the war in Vietnam and sparking massive anti-war protests.
the delegates voting to fully abandon America’s policy of stockpiling nuclear weapons and losing the election as a result.
the delegates voting against a resolution to end the war in Vietnam and sparking massive anti-war protests.
The Democratic National Convention of 1968 is notable primarily for the fact that the delegates in attendance voted against a resolution to end the war in Vietnam—refusing to make it part of their electoral platform. This sparked a massive conflagration between protesters and armed police, as well as national guardsmen. Although Robert Kennedy was assassinated in 1968, this did not take place at the Democratic National Convention.
Example Question #94 : United States History
The Kent State Massacre involved the killing of four students who were protesting __________.
the lack of equality for women in American society
American involvement in the Vietnam War
American involvement in World War Two
American involvement in the Gulf War
the lack of equality for African Americans in American society
American involvement in the Vietnam War
The Kent State Massacre took place in 1970. The late 1960s and early 1970s was a period of intense student activism in the United States. Students were protesting for advances in civil rights and equality, but also for an end to American involvement in the Vietnam War. Many students believed that it was absurd and immoral that so many young people should die in a war that did not directly affect American lives. The Kent State Massacre involved the killing of four students by the Ohio National Guard and furthered the divide between the mainstream and the counter-culture in American society.
Example Question #1 : Court Cases And Civil Rights
Who was the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court during the Civil Rights Era?
Thurgood Marshall
John Marshall
Roger Taney
John Jay
Earl Warren
Earl Warren
The Warren Court of the 1950s and 1960s was lead by Chief Justice Earl Warren. During this era, the Supreme Court overturned many laws and precedents that had entrenched racial and gender divides in society. The most famous ruling of this time period is Brown v. Board of Education which ruled that the doctrine in place in much of the South and Midwest “Separate, but equal” was inherently unconstitutional. This overturned decades of precedent which had been established in 1896 with the Supreme Court case, Plessy v. Ferguson.
Example Question #2 : Court Cases And Civil Rights
The Supreme Court case Roe v. Wade __________
legalized abortion.
criminalized same-sex marriage.
legalized same-sex marriage.
criminalized abortion.
overturned the separate but equal precedent established by Plessy v. Ferguson.
legalized abortion.
The Supreme Court case, Roe v. Wade (1973), decided that the right to abortion was a fundamental right of all women in the United States. The court case has ramifications to this day, and despite the issue presumably having been settled in the courts, it remains extremely polarizing in America—dividing many people into pro-life and pro-choice camps, and inspiring a seemingly endless number of grassroots movements and campaigns.
Example Question #1 : Minorities In The United States
Rosa Parks was __________
a leader in the movement for female emancipation.
the first African American on the Supreme Court.
a United States Civil Rights leader.
a famous opera singer during the roaring 20s.
the first female to hold office in the Senate.
a United States Civil Rights leader.
Rosa Parks was a United States Civil Rights leader who famously refused to give up her seat on a bus in Montgomery, Alabama. In the majority of the South at this time blacks and whites were segregated in public, and in refusing to give up her seat Rosa Parks was violating the law. Her refusal helped spark and give momentum to the burgeoning civil rights movement. The first African American on the Supreme Court was Thurgood Marshall.