Drill 2 ยท Multiple Choice ยท Unit 1: Origins of the African Diaspora
AP African American Studies: African Societies (Drill 2) is a Multiple Choice practice drill covering Unit 1: Origins of the African Diaspora. It contains 5 original questions created by Brian Stewart, a Barron's test prep author with over 20 years of tutoring experience.
Test your knowledge with AP African American Studies practice questions on African population diversity, ethnolinguistic traditions, and the role of griots in oral learning. Aligned to Unit 1 of the AP course.
Question 1. According to the source, which of the following best describes the primary function of a griot in West African societies?
Explanation: The source is explicit: the griot is a “living archive” transmitting genealogies, histories, proverbs, and praise songs through performance, not writing. (A) describes a religious specialist, students sometimes conflate these roles, but the source makes no mention of ceremonies or spiritual welfare. (B) contradicts the source, which specifically contrasts the griot tradition with written-text-based knowledge. (C) is plausible because griots did sometimes have close relationships with rulers, but the source defines their primary role as archival and performative, not political advisory. [Skill 2A, Identify source claims]
Question 2. A historian argues that the griot tradition demonstrates that “the absence of writing does not indicate the absence of intellectual sophistication.” Which of the following, drawn from the source, most directly supports this argument?
Explanation: The historian’s claim requires evidence of intellectual sophistication specifically, not skill, prestige, or simply the absence of writing. (B) directly supports the claim by establishing that griots held and transmitted complex, multi-domain knowledge through structured training. (A) names a real griot function but “musical skill and memorization” undersells the intellectual content. (C) is logically circular, confirming that writing isn’t universal doesn’t prove intellectual sophistication exists without it. (D) addresses social standing, not intellectual content. [Skill 3B, Support a claim using evidence]
Question 3. Which of the following best describes the ethnolinguistic landscape of the African continent?
Explanation: Africa contains over two thousand languages often grouped into several major families, including Niger-Congo and Afroasiatic, along with other language groupings. (A) is the sharpest distractor: the Bantu family is indeed enormous and widely distributed, and students who know this fact may select it, but Bantu is one branch of Niger-Congo, which is itself only one of several major families. (C) drastically understates Africa’s linguistic diversity. (D) is regionally accurate in certain areas but describes colonial-era and trade languages, not the indigenous ethnolinguistic reality. [Skill 1A, Identify and explain course concepts]
Question 4. Compared to European educational traditions of the same era, which of the following most accurately describes indigenous African learning traditions as represented in West African societies?
Explanation: Indigenous African learning, through griots, apprenticeships, initiation rites, and community elders, was structured, intentional, and capable of transmitting complex knowledge across generations. (A) is true for Islamic scholarly centers like Timbuktu but reflects one specific tradition, not indigenous learning broadly. (B) is the stereotyping distractor: oral transmission was not “informal”; it was carefully structured through trained specialists. (D) is historically false, African traditions included cosmology, political history, genealogy, and philosophy. [Skill 1C, Patterns and connections; comparison]
Question 5. Which of the following best identifies a continuity in the role of oral tradition in African societies from the pre-colonial period through the era of the African diaspora?
Explanation: The continuity is functional: oral tradition as a system for transmitting identity, memory, and values persisted across the diaspora even as specific forms evolved. African American preaching, storytelling, blues, and call-and-response traditions all carry this continuity. (A) overstates the case, the forms were adapted and transformed, not “transmitted unchanged.” (B) is the most tempting wrong answer: literacy did spread, but that did not displace oral tradition, which communities maintained alongside written forms. (D) is too literal: griots as a specific institution did not transplant directly to the United States; the continuity is in function, not exact form. [Skill 1A, Patterns and continuity/change]