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AP African American Studies: Civil Rights Organizations and Grassroots Leadership (Drill 26)

Drill 26 ยท Multiple Choice ยท Unit 4: Movements and Debates

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About This Drill

AP African American Studies: Civil Rights Organizations and Grassroots Leadership (Drill 26) is a Multiple Choice practice drill covering Unit 4: Movements and Debates. 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 exam questions on the NAACP, SCLC, SNCC, CORE, and the grassroots leaders who powered the Civil Rights Movement. These AP exam prep questions cover Rosa Parks, Fannie Lou Hamer, Ella Baker, and key campaigns from Montgomery to the March on Washington.

Passage

The following is from Ella Baker's article “Bigger Than a Hamburger,” published in the Southern Patriot in May 1960. Baker wrote the article to summarize her address at the founding conference of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC), held at Shaw University in Raleigh, North Carolina, over Easter weekend 1960.

“The Student Leadership Conference made it crystal clear that current sit-ins and other demonstrations are concerned with something much bigger than a hamburger or even a giant-sized Coke. […] By and large, this feeling that they have a destined date with freedom, was not limited to a drive for personal freedom, or even freedom for the Negro in the South. Repeatedly it was emphasized that the movement was concerned with the moral implications of racial discrimination for the 'whole world' and the 'Human Race.'

[…] This inclination toward group-centered leadership, rather than toward a leader-centered group pattern of organization, was refreshing indeed to those of the older group who bear the scars of the battle, the frustrations and the disillusionment that come when the prophetic leader turns out to have heavy feet of clay.”

Source: Ella Baker, “Bigger Than a Hamburger,” Southern Patriot, May 1960.

Questions & Explanations

Question 1. Ella Baker’s remarks at the founding of SNCC most directly reflect which principle she championed throughout her career in Civil Rights organizing?

  • A) Coalition-building between Black and white religious institutions as the primary vehicle for change
  • B) Legal litigation through the courts as the most effective strategy for achieving racial equality
  • C) Grassroots, youth-centered organizing rather than top-down leadership by established figures ✓
  • D) Economic boycotts as the primary tool for dismantling racial segregation

Explanation: Ella Baker was a consistent advocate for grassroots, bottom-up organizing and was skeptical of charismatic top-down leadership models. She played a foundational role in the NAACP as a traveling organizer, served as executive director of the SCLC, and then helped launch SNCC precisely because she believed young people and local communities should lead the movement from the ground up. (A) describes an approach associated more with the SCLC’s church networks than with Baker’s specific organizational philosophy. (B) describes the NAACP’s primary strategy, a true statement about another organization, not Baker’s distinctive contribution. (D) describes the Montgomery Bus Boycott strategy; economic boycotts were one tool in the movement but not Baker’s defining approach. [Skill 2A, Identifying source claims]

Question 2. Which of the following best explains how the founding of SNCC, reflected in the source, represented a significant development within the Civil Rights Movement?

  • A) SNCC replaced the NAACP as the primary legal advocacy organization for African American civil rights.
  • B) SNCC provided the first formal organizational structure for African American political activism, replacing earlier informal networks.
  • C) SNCC’s founding marked the first time Black women held formal leadership roles within a Civil Rights organization.
  • D) SNCC introduced a model of direct-action protest led by young people that operated with greater autonomy than established organizations like the SCLC. ✓

Explanation: SNCC’s founding in 1960 represented a shift toward youth-led, direct-action protest organizationally distinct from, and sometimes in tension with, the adult-led, church-based SCLC. SNCC prioritized local organizing, participatory democracy, and willingness to face arrest. (A) mischaracterizes SNCC’s role entirely; SNCC was never primarily a legal advocacy organization. (B) is historically false: the NAACP was founded in 1909, the Urban League in 1910, formal Black political organizations long predated SNCC. (C) is incorrect; Black women held leadership roles in Civil Rights organizations well before SNCC, Ida B. Wells and Mary Church Terrell in earlier decades, and Ella Baker herself in the NAACP and SCLC. [Skill 2A, Identifying source claims]

Question 3. The Montgomery Bus Boycott of 1955–1956, compared to the sit-in campaigns organized by SNCC beginning in 1960, was similar in that both

  • A) relied primarily on legal challenges filed through the NAACP Legal Defense Fund
  • B) were initiated by spontaneous acts of individual resistance that organizations then mobilized around
  • C) employed nonviolent direct action to challenge racial segregation in public accommodations ✓
  • D) focused specifically on desegregating public transportation as the movement’s central demand

Explanation: Both the Montgomery Bus Boycott and the SNCC-organized sit-in campaigns used nonviolent direct action, a deliberate, principled refusal to comply with segregation, to challenge racial inequality in public accommodations. Both also exposed the violence of the Jim Crow system and generated national attention. (A) is incorrect; while the NAACP supported both campaigns legally, neither was primarily a legal strategy. (B) contains a partial truth about Rosa Parks but mischaracterizes the sit-ins, which were coordinated, training-based actions. (D) is incorrect because the sit-in campaigns targeted lunch counters and other public accommodations broadly, not transportation specifically, a “true of one but not both” trap. [Skill 1C, Patterns, continuity, and change]

Question 4. Fannie Lou Hamer’s testimony at the 1964 Democratic National Convention is significant primarily because it

  • A) secured the passage of the Voting Rights Act by persuading President Johnson to include stronger enforcement provisions
  • B) exposed the violent intimidation used to prevent Black Mississippians from registering to vote, bringing national attention to voting rights ✓
  • C) resulted in the immediate seating of the Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party delegation at the convention
  • D) established the precedent for diverse representation requirements in future Democratic Party conventions

Explanation: Fannie Lou Hamer’s televised testimony described in unflinching detail the economic retaliation and physical violence she suffered after attempting to register to vote in Mississippi. President Johnson called an impromptu press conference to preempt live coverage, but networks broadcast her speech in full that evening, galvanizing public understanding of voting rights suppression in the South. (A) is inaccurate; the Voting Rights Act passed through congressional action and the Selma to Montgomery marches, not directly through Hamer’s DNC testimony. (C) is factually wrong; the MFDP was not seated, a bitter outcome that radicalized many activists. (D) describes a longer-term consequence that is speculative and secondary to the testimony’s primary significance. [Skill 1A, Applying disciplinary knowledge]

Question 5. Which of the following best explains why the tactical diversity within the Civil Rights Movement, encompassing legal challenges, economic boycotts, direct-action sit-ins, and marches, strengthened rather than fragmented the overall effort?

  • A) Different tactics targeted different pressure points simultaneously, making it more difficult for segregationist authorities to contain or neutralize the movement. ✓
  • B) The federal government required Civil Rights organizations to coordinate their tactics in order to qualify for legal protection under existing civil rights statutes.
  • C) Tactical diversity reflected the unified ideological agreement among all major Civil Rights organizations on both the goals and methods of the movement.
  • D) Tactical disagreements among Civil Rights organizations were ultimately resolved through SNCC’s emergence as the movement’s coordinating body.

Explanation: Multi-front pressure forced segregationist governments, businesses, and federal officials to respond on multiple fronts at once. Legal challenges, economic boycotts, marches, and voter registration drives targeted different levers of power simultaneously, making the movement harder to contain than any single strategy would have been. (B) is false; no federal civil rights statute required organizational coordination, federal protection for protesters was often absent or delayed. (C) is historically inaccurate and the most dangerous distractor: there were significant ideological and tactical disagreements among the NAACP, SCLC, SNCC, CORE, and the Urban League over pace, strategy, militancy, and coalition partners. (D) is false; SNCC never became a coordinating body for the broader movement, and tactical disagreements among organizations persisted throughout the Civil Rights era and beyond. [Skill 3B, Supporting a claim with evidence]