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. 

Thus, he sought our assistance in improving editing and proofreading his resume. 

In revising his resume, iwritegigs highlighted his soft skills such as his communication skills, ability to negotiate, patience and tactfulness.  In the professional experience part, our team added some skills that are aligned with the position he is applying for.

When he was chosen for the real estate agent position, he sent us this thank you note:

“Kudos to the team for a job well done.  I am sincerely appreciative of the time and effort you gave on my resume.  You did not only help me land the job I had always been dreaming of but you also made me realize how important adding those specific keywords to my resume!  Cheers!

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

Chapter 10 Post Test

Navigation   » List of Schools  »  College of Southern Nevada  »  Political Science  »  Political Science 101- Introduction to American Politics  »  Spring 2021  »  Chapter 10 Post Test

Need help with your exam preparation?

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

Question #1
A  spend as little money as possible on advertising and, instead, to maximize “free media” coverage.
B  raise money through thousands of small donations rather than a small number of large donations.
C  send different campaign messages to different demographic groups of voters.
D  send hundreds of very short messages to the largest possible number of voters.
Question #2
A  may spend no more than $10 million advocating support for its own presidential candidate.
B  may spend no more than $1 million advocating support for its own presidential candidate.
C  may make unlimited “independent expenditures” supporting its own presidential candidate.
D  cannot spend any money advocating support for its own presidential candidate.
Question #3
A  voters tend to prefer candidates who are closer to themselves in terms of race, ethnicity, religion, gender, geography, and social background.
B  the Constitution requires at least minimal levels of representation in election campaigns.
C  interest groups frequently engage in direct lobbying to enhance diversity in campaigns.
D  affirmative action legislation from the 1960s requires proportional representation in all elections.
Question #4
A  prospective; retrospective
B  partisan; issue
C  issue; partisan
D  retrospective; prospective
Question #5
A  a U.S. senator.
B  a state legislator.
C  the president.
D  a governor.
Question #6
A  is protected only if the candidate can match every personal dollar with a dollar from outside donations.
B  is protected absolutely by the First Amendment according to the Supreme Court.
C  was forbidden by the Campaign Reform Act of 1974.
D  is limited by a cap of $50 million.
Question #8
A  run as a major party candidate and raise at least $5,000 in individual contributions of $250 or less in each of 20 states.
B  run as a major party candidate and raise at least $1 million in individual contributions of $250 or less in each of 40 states.
C  gather signatures from at least 100,000 people in each of 40 states.
D  gather signatures from at least 50,000 people in each of 20 states.
Question #10
A  Hard money donations
B  Independent expenditures
C  Seed money donations
D  Soft money donations
Question #11
A  working-class and poor people.
B  leaders of the Republican and Democratic parties.
C  environmental groups and religious organizations.
D  business and professional groups.
Question #12
A  guided by campaign consultants.
B  media driven.
C  capital intensive.
D  labor intensive.
Question #14
A  Incumbents and challengers are legally limited to spending only $2 million.
B  Incumbents generally spend more money than challengers.
C  Incumbents and challengers generally spend the same amount of money.
D  Incumbents generally spend less money than challengers.
Question #15
A  increasing social media ads
B  using robocalls to reach potential voters.
C  sending direct mail to all potential supporters
D  events that allow for face-to-face contact
Question #16
A  whoever is leading in the polls on the day of the election
B  a candidate who is running against a current officeholder in an election
C  the candidate who raises the most money during the campaign
D  the current officeholder running for re-election
Question #17
A  The Republican Party requires a two-thirds majority vote in a state to secure delegates, while the Democratic Party does not.
B  The Democratic Party requires that state presidential primaries allocate delegates on the basis of a winner-take-all system, while the Republican Party does not.
C  The Republican Party requires that state presidential primaries allocate delegates on the basis of proportional representation, while the Democratic Party does not.
D  The Democratic Party requires that state presidential primaries allocate delegates on the basis of proportional representation, while the Republican Party does not.
Question #18
A  President Warren Harding (1921)
B  President Richard Nixon (1972)
C  Wisconsin governor Scott Walker (2012)
D  California governor Gray Davis (2003)
Question #20
A  the individual state-level caucus and primary elections during the nomination stage would be replaced with a national primary to be held on the first Tuesday of March during a presidential election year.
B  a state’s electoral college votes would go to the candidate who won the national popular vote, not the candidate with a plurality of votes in that specific state.
C  members of the Senate would be elected by the country on the whole instead of by individual states.
D  the electoral college would be abolished and the candidate with the most votes in the country overall would become president.
Question #21
A  at least 26 state-level presidential elections.
B  at least 270 electoral votes.
C  a majority of the popular vote.
D  at least 300 electoral votes.
Question #22
A  policy entrepreneurs.
B  ombudsmen.
C  superdelegates.
D  whips.
Question #23
A  the significance of Iowa as the first caucus of the presidential campaign.
B  Daniel Webster, who had unrivaled influence over the presidential nominating process during the 1820s and 1830s.
C  the use of each party’s congressional caucus to nominate presidential candidates during the early nineteenth century.
D  the fact that caucuses are inherently undemocratic methods of selecting nominees for national political office.
Question #25
A  Partisan gerrymandering
B  Proportional representation
C  Straight-ticketing
D  Redistricting
Question #26
A  No one could be denied suffrage on the basis of race or gender.
B  Voters may only vote once in an election.
C  Voting was an individual right, not a group right.
D  Within a state, electoral districts must have roughly equal populations.
Question #27
A  are constitutionally required to include no more than 500,000 people.
B    
C  are drawn to include a minimum of 100,000 people in all states.
D  are constitutionally required to include no more than 1 million people.
E  vary from a few thousand people in some states to nearly a million in California.
Question #28
A  authorized $1 billion for civic education in order to increase voter turnout in national elections.
B  eliminated state-level voter registration requirements.
C  financed the creation of 2,000 additional polling places across the country for midterm and presidential elections.
D  required state governments to use computerized voter registration databases.
Question #29
A  state governments
B  the federal government
C  political parties
D  voters
Question #30
A  closed primary system.
B  blanket primary system.
C  majority system.
D  proportional representation system.
Question #32
A  win the election in either a majority or plurality system.
B  not win the election under any set of democratic electoral rules.
C  win the election only if the election were held in a majority system.
D  win the election only if the election were held in a plurality system.
Question #33
A  a proportional representation system
B  a plurality system
C  a closed primary system
D  a majority system
Question #34
A  an open primary system.
B  a ranked-choice vote primary system.
C  a proportional representation system.
D  a closed primary system.
Question #35
A  political parties.
B  the candidates running for office.
C  state and local governments.
D  the federal government.
Question #36
A  the practice of legislators trading their votes on legislation for campaign contributions.
B  political campaigns that operate at the local level and use face-to-face communication to generate interest and momentum among voters.
C  the campaigning and lobbying in which private corporations engage around business regulation and trade policy.
D  the fact that politicians often adopt marketing strategies that attempt to “sell” their candidacies to potential voters.
Question #38
A  are limited to spending $100,000 per candidate per election.
B  are not required to disclose where they get their funds so long as they place hard limits on both the amount of money they raise and their total number of donors.
C  can spend unlimited amounts on political advocacy as long as their efforts are not coordinated with those of any candidate’s campaign.
D  are required to disclose where they get their funds if they intend on coordinating their message with a particular political campaign.
Question #39
A  the unemployment rate in each state.
B  surveys asking voters how optimistic they are about the future of the economy.
C  the size of the national debt.
D  the growth rate of gross domestic product (GDP).
Question #41
A  matches, on a dollar-for-dollar basis, all contributions of $250 or less.
B  is determined by a formula that weighs a presidential candidate’s previous fund-raising and number of votes received in previous elections.
C  provides $200 million for all candidates meeting the minimum requirements specified by law
D  provides $500 million for all candidates meeting the minimum requirements specified by law
Question #42
A  527s.
B  501(c)(4)s.
C  Super PACs.
D  PACs.
Question #43
A  SpeechNow v. FEC (2010)
B  Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission (2010)
C  Bush v. Gore (2000)
D  Buckley v. Valeo (1976)
Question #44
A  Unlike the United States, most democratic countries provide public financing for their elections.
B  The United States prohibits candidates from raising unlimited sums of money to spend on their campaigns.
C  There is no democratic country in the world that currently provides public financing for its elections.
D  Similar to the United States, most democratic countries allow candidates to raise unlimited sums of money to spend on their campaigns with no restrictions on when the money can be spent.
Question #45
A  negative ads tend to focus on important policy differences, while positive ads tend to focus on candidates’ personal characteristics.
B  both positive and negative ads focus almost entirely on important policy differences.
C  both positive and negative ads focus almost entirely on candidates’ personal characteristics.
D  negative ads tend to focus on candidates’ personal characteristics, while positive ads tend to focus on important policy differences.
Question #46
A  that Kennedy had a much stronger performance than Nixon during televised debates.
B  the fact that, unlike Nixon, Kennedy had hired a professional political consultant.
C  Nixon’s failure to develop infomercials.
D  Kennedy’s aggressive use of push polls, especially in the Northeast.
Question #47
A  gerrymandering
B  prospective voting
C  initiative
D  retrospective voting
Question #48
A  provided voters with the ability to write in candidates who did not have their names printed on the ballot.
B  removed all party labels from the voting process.
C  enabled voters to make their choices on the basis of the individual candidate rather than the list of a party’s candidates.
D  allowed voters to rank order each of the candidates running for a given office.
Question #49
A  people’s compact.
B  popular directive.
C  ballot initiative.
D  grassroots amendment.
Question #51
A  assign current members of the U.S. House of Representatives and U.S. Senate to congressional committee positions.
B  make rules concerning delegate selection for future primaries and draft the party’s platform.
C  write the bills that will be introduced in state legislatures around the country.
D  nominate candidates for other important elections, including the U.S. House of Representatives and U.S. Senate.
Question #53
A  legislative districts are redrawn in a way that disperses members of a particular party across multiple districts, thereby reducing that party’s chances of winning any seats.
B  legislative districts are redrawn in a way that concentrates members of a particular party in as few districts as possible, thereby limiting the overall number of seats that party might win.
C  a legislative district votes to elect a member of one party to serve in the House of Representatives but also elects a member of a different party to serve in the state legislature.
D  a legislative candidate wins election with less than 50% of the vote in a three-candidate race.
Question #54
A  Elbridge Gerry.
B  Alexander Hamilton.
C  James Madison.
D  Thomas Jefferson.
Question #58
A  exploratory committee.
B  midterm election.
C  primary election.
D  referendum.
Question #59
A  About half of the countries in the world hold primary elections.
B  Approximately three-quarters of the countries in the world hold primary elections.
C  Every country in the world holds primary elections.
D  The United States is one of the few nations in the world to hold primary elections.
Question #60
A  every
B  every four
C  every three
D  every other