iWriteGigs

Fresh Grad Lands Job as Real Estate Agent With Help from Professional Writers

People go to websites to get the information they desperately need.  They could be looking for an answer to a nagging question.  They might be looking for help in completing an important task.  For recent graduates, they might be looking for ways on how to prepare a comprehensive resume that can capture the attention of the hiring manager

Manush is a recent graduate from a prestigious university in California who is looking for a job opportunity as a real estate agent.  While he already has samples provided by his friends, he still feels something lacking in his resume.  Specifically, the he believes that his professional objective statement lacks focus and clarity. 

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Manush’s story shows the importance of using powerful keywords to his resume in landing the job he wanted.

Chapter 2 Post Test

Navigation   » List of Schools  »  College of Southern Nevada  »  Political Science  »  Political Science 101- Introduction to American Politics  »  Spring 2021  »  Chapter 2 Post Test

Need help with your exam preparation?

Below are the questions for the exam with the choices of answers:

Question #1
A  royal land-, office-, and patent holders began to exert control over a number of state governments.
B  a flu pandemic killed over 10,000 Americans in the spring of 1784.
C  “radical” forces representing small farmers, artisans, and shopkeepers began to exert control over a number of state governments.
D  a series of slave revolts swept through the southern states and overthrew a number of local governments in the summer of 1783.
Question #2
A  prohibited from coining money but are allowed to enter into treaties with other nations.
B  prohibited from entering into treaties with other nations but allowed to coin money.
C  prohibited from coining money or entering into treaties with other nations.
D  allowed to coin money and enter into treaties with other nations.
Question #3
A  Slavery is an evil institution that should be abolished.
B  Citizens should vote directly on the laws.
C  The federal government must be much more powerful than state governments.
D  Power must be used to balance power.
Question #4
A  opposed the Constitution because it did not create a strong enough central government.
B  believed that the United States should enter into a confederation with Britain and Canada.
C  opposed the Constitution because they wanted a weaker central government.
D  supported the Constitution because it created a strong national government.
Question #5
A  amendments to the Constitution must be ratified within ten years of being proposed.
B  amendments to the Constitution must be ratified within four years of being proposed.
C  amendments to the Constitution must be ratified within twenty years of being proposed.
D  amendments to the Constitution can be ratified many decades after being proposed.
Question #6
A  Government promotes liberty by maintaining order.
B    
C  Liberty is the absence of government.
D  Liberty is less important than social and economic equality.
E  The framers feared that democracy and equality could undermine individual liberty.
Question #7
A  37
B  10
C  20
D  27
Question #9
A  decreasing the powers of the executive branch, especially those of the vice president.
B  preventing government from collecting revenue through taxation.
C  adding a bill of rights to the Constitution.
D  providing Congress with a larger grant of powers.
Question #10
A  James Madison, John Adams, and Thomas Jefferson
B  James Madison, John Jay, and Alexander Hamilton
C  John Adams, Benjamin Franklin, and Thomas Jefferson
D  Charles Beard, Daniel Shays, and Paul Revere
Question #11
A  opposed the Constitution because it did not create a strong enough central government.
B  supported the Constitution because it contained a strong national government.
C  opposed the Constitution because they wanted a weaker national government.
D  opposed the Constitution because it did not provide women with the right to vote.
Question #12
A  determined by the president.
B  set at nine in Article III of the Constitution.
C  set at seven in Article III of the Constitution.
D  determined by Congress.
Question #13
A  appoint the Speaker of the House of Representatives
B  veto congressional enactments
C  grant pardons and reprieves
D  convene Congress in special session
Question #14
A  end the slave trade.
B  prevent the new government from abusing its power.
C  promote economic equality among all citizens.
D  create a replica of the British political system.
Question #15
A  the Solicitor General
B  the Supreme Court
C  the Department of Commerce
D  the Department of Justice
Question #16
A  since the federal government was already limited to its expressed powers, further protection of citizens was not needed.
B  citizens should vote directly on which rights should be protected.
C  such a list would make government too weak to protect national security.
D  such a list would limit economic development.
Question #17
A  end slavery in the United States.
B  guarantee economic equality for all citizens.
C  eliminate state and local governments.
D  promote economic development and protect property from radical state legislatures.
Question #18
A  the courts to decide on the constitutionality of actions taken by the other branches of government.
B  the courts to review and edit pieces of legislation before they are voted on in Congress.
C  Congress to review the decisions of the federal courts.
D  the states to review the constitutionality of federal actions and laws.
Question #19
A  the Senate
B  the House of Representatives
C  the president
D  the Treasury Department
Question #20
A  The president under the Articles of Confederation could appoint judges for the federal judiciary without approval from Congress.
B  The president under the Articles of Confederation could veto any laws passed by the Congress.
C  The president under the Articles of Confederation was the official chosen by the Congress to preside over its sessions, not the chief executive of the national government.
D  The president under the Articles of Confederation could declare war without approval from the Congress.
Question #21
A  reinforce the unity of the New England merchants and the southern planters.
B  exacerbate tensions between the New England merchants and the southern planters.
C  transfer power from the Senate majority leader to the vice president.
D  increase public support for the establishment of a national bank.
Question #22
A  90% of the country’s enslaved population lived in in Georgia, Maryland, North Carolina, South Carolina, and Virginia.
B  90% of the country’s enslaved population lived in New York, Connecticut, New Hampshire, and Delaware.
C  the country’s enslaved population was evenly distribution across the 13 states.
D  90% of the country’s enslaved population lived in Texas, Louisiana, Arkansas, and Florida.
Question #23
A  Catholics; Protestants
B  northern states; southern states
C  the wealthy; the poor
D  large states; small states
Question #24
A  Representation would be equal for each state.
B  Representation would be proportionate to the share of taxes paid by each state to the federal government.
C  Representatives to Congress would be appointed by the state legislatures.
D  Representation would be based on population.
Question #27
A  More than half of the states sent delegates.
B  None of the states sent delegates.
C  All of the states sent delegates.
D  Less than half of the states sent delegates.
Question #28
A  passed a law making all such future redistributions illegal.
B  filed a lawsuit against the state in the Supreme Court.
C  issued an injunction to return the land to the original owners.
D  did nothing because the government had no powers allowing them to intervene.
Question #29
A  could be amended only with a unanimous vote of the Congress.
B  included no provisions allowing for the addition of amendments.
C  could be amended only through a national constitutional convention in which three-fourths of state governors approved of all changes.
D  could be amended only with a majority vote of the Congress.
Question #31
A  the Magna Carta
B  the Articles of Confederation
C  the Emancipation Proclamation
D  the United States Constitution
Question #32
A  a group of colonial delegates assembled in 1774 that called for a total boycott of all British goods.
B  the meeting arranged between British and colonial forces to negotiate the end of the Revolutionary War.
C  the British government’s lawmaking body for the colonies prior to 1776.
D  a loose affiliation of small farmers and artisans that organized protests against British rule between 1770 and 1774.
Question #33
A  Paul Revere
B  Samuel Adams
C  John Adams
D  John Hancock
Question #34
A  five colonists were killed by British soldiers outside of the seat of the colonial government in Boston.
B  50 colonists were killed by British soldiers outside of the seat of the colonial government in Boston.
C  50 British soldiers were killed by an angry mob of colonists protesting outside of the seat of the colonial government in Boston.
D  five British soldiers were killed by an angry mob of colonists protesting outside of the seat of the colonial government in Boston.
Question #35
A  The British ruled with a light hand and exerted almost no influence at all in any colonial town or city.
B  The British ruled with a heavy hand and exerted a strong influence in every colonial town and city.
C  The British ruled with a light hand and exerted a strong influence only in the largest colonial cities.
D  The British ruled with a heavy hand in small towns but exerted no influence at all in the largest cities.
Question #36
A  all White male inhabitants of the state that owned property were allowed to vote.
B  all White inhabitants of the state were allowed to vote.
C  all inhabitants of the state were allowed to vote.
D  all White male inhabitants of the state were allowed to vote.
Question #37
A  I.
B  V.
C  II.
D  X.
Question #38
A  There has never been a successful attempt to amend the Constitution through the formal procedure spelled out in Article V.
B  While most amendment efforts failed because they attempted to address a specific public problem, successful amendments changed the structure or composition of government.
C  All of the successful amendments address voting rights.
D  While most amendment efforts have failed because they attempted to change the structure or composition of government, successful amendments addressed specific public policy problems.
Question #39
A  individual liberty.
B  political equality.
C  economic equality.
D  democracy.
Question #40
A  more than 11,000
B  between 1,000 and 1,500
C  fewer than 100
D  fewer than 50
Question #41
A  the Tenth Amendment and the supremacy clause
B  the Ninth Amendment and the supremacy clause
C  the Tenth Amendment and the elastic clause
D  the supremacy clause and the elastic clause
Question #42
A  king of Great Britain.
B  popular majority.
C  northern merchants.
D  landowning elite.
Question #43
A  a series of pamphlets written by Thomas Paine in 1775 and 1776 advocating independence from Great
B  a series of essays that argued for the ratification of the Constitution.
C  the collected essays of French political philosopher Baron de La Brède et de Montesquieu that argued for the separation of powers.
D  a series of essays that argued against the ratification of the Constitution.
Question #44
A  Congress has the power to create a system of federal courts below the Supreme Court.
B  Congress has the power to eliminate the Supreme Court.
C  Congress has the power to nominate and appoint judges to federal appellate courts.
D  Congress has the power to nominate and appoint the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court.
Question #45
A  Senators have shorter terms than members of the House of Representatives.
B  Senators are the only officials immune from impeachment.
C  Senators were originally appointed by state legislatures.
D  Senators are directly elected by the people.
Question #46
A  claiming that powers not explicitly delegated to the federal government were reserved for the states.
B  asserting that the federal Constitution, and federal law generally, take precedence over state laws, and even state constitutions.
C  outlawing government discrimination on the basis of race, ethnicity, and gender.
D  prohibiting state governments from discriminating against citizens of other states in favor of their own citizens.
Question #47
A  too many elections would be difficult for the states to run.
B  this was a way to make the Senate resistant to popular pressure.
C  this would make members of the Senate more responsive to the preferences of their constituents.
D  the state legislatures would conspire with each other to elect a Senate dominated by a single party.
Question #48
A  a mixed regime
B  democracy
C  tyranny
D  a republic
Question #49
A  U.S. representative
B  U.S. president
C  U.S. senator
D  U.S. vice president
Question #50
A  There was no federal court system under the Articles of Confederation but there is a federal court system headed by the Supreme Court under the Constitution.
B  There was no president under the Articles of Confederation but there is a president placed in charge of the executive branch under the Constitution.
C  Constitutional amendments had to be approved by three-quarters of state governments under the Articles of Confederation but only have to be approved by two-thirds of state governments under the Constitution.
D  There was a unicameral legislature under the Articles of Confederation but there is a bicameral legislature under the Constitution.
Question #51
A  bring a Georgian slave revolt to Virginia.
B  prevent the state of Massachusetts from foreclosing on the lands of debt-ridden farmers.
C  force the British government to rescind the Tea Act.
D  invade New England by royalists from Canada.
Question #52
A  southern
B  free
C  less-populous
D  slaveowning
Question #53
A  This form of ratification was thought to be the only approach consistent with the founders’ definition of democracy.
B  This form of ratification was the only one allowed by the existing provisions in the Articles of Confederation.
C  This form of ratification was designed to win approval for the new government from the international community.
D  This form of ratification was intended to make it clear that the new government would be a national government and not a compact between the states.
Question #54
A  the primary architect of the New Jersey Plan.
B  the primary architect of the Virginia Plan.
C  one of the authors of the Federalist Papers.
D  a former army captain who led a mob of farmers in a rebellion against the Massachusetts government.
Question #55
A  redistributed the property of British loyalists to small farmers who supported the revolution.
B  established the principles of land surveying and landownership that governed America’s westward expansion.
C  provided 40 acres of free land to all immigrants from western and northern European countries.
D  imposed large tariffs on luxury goods arriving on American lands through East Coast ports.
Question #56
A  laissez-faire capitalism would be the “supreme law of the land” in America.
B  slavery was a “morally unjust” institution that should be outlawed.
C  there were “unalienable rights” that could not be abridged by governments.
D  America was “first and foremost, a Christian nation.”
Question #57
A  1781
B  1791
C  1777
D  1763
Question #58
A  elimination of the British monarchy
B  the end of the French and Indian War
C  complete independence from Britain
D  revocation of the Tea Act
Question #59
A  Thomas Jefferson
B  John Adams
C  Samuel Adams
D  John Hancock
Question #60
A  royal office and patent holders.
B  shopkeepers, artisans, laborers, and small farmers.
C  New England merchants.
D  southern planters.