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AP African American Studies: The Great Migration and Afro-Caribbean Migration โ€” Drill 22

Drill 22 ยท Multiple Choice ยท Unit 3: The Practice of Freedom

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About This Drill

AP African American Studies: The Great Migration and Afro-Caribbean Migration โ€” Drill 22 is a Multiple Choice practice drill covering Unit 3: The Practice of Freedom. It contains 5 original questions created by Brian Stewart, a Barron's test prep author with over 20 years of tutoring experience.

Practice AP African American Studies questions on the Great Migration, push and pull factors, Jacob Lawrence’s Migration Series, Afro-Caribbean migration, and Marcus Garvey’s UNIA — with AP exam prep emphasis on source analysis and historical causation.

Passage

Educational map of the United States showing Great Migration flow arrows from Southern states to Northern, Midwestern, and Western cities including Chicago, Detroit, New York, and Los Angeles, 1910โ€“1970. The image above shows a map of the United States with migration flow arrows representing the Great Migration, approximately 1910–1970. Southern states including Alabama, Mississippi, Georgia, South Carolina, Louisiana, and Texas are shaded in rust/terracotta. Bold arrows flow from the South toward Northern and Midwestern cities (Chicago, Detroit, New York, Philadelphia, Cleveland) and Western cities (Los Angeles, Oakland), marked with star icons. Source: Educational map, “The Great Migration, 1910–1970,” freetestprep.com

Questions in This Drill

  1. Which of the following best describes a push factor that prompted African Americans to leave the South during the Great Migration?
  2. Based on the map, which of the following conclusions is best supported by the migration pattern depicted?
  3. The Great Migration of African Americans from the South was similar to Afro-Caribbean migration to the United States in that both movements
  4. Marcus Garvey’s Universal Negro Improvement Association (UNIA) drew much of its early leadership and membership base from
  5. A historian argues that the Great Migration fundamentally transformed American politics and culture in the twentieth century. Which of the following pieces of evidence most directly supports this claim?