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About This Drill
AP African American Studies: Uplift Ideologies, Black Women’s Leadership, and Black Organizations — Drill 19 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 exam questions on uplift ideology, Black women's leadership, and organizations like the NAACP and NACW with this AP exam prep drill covering Unit 3 topics.
Passage
“We, the colored women of America, stand before the country today with a sense of profound responsibility… We ask not for sympathy, but for justice. Lifting as we climb, we propose to gather the members of our race into the highest possible plane of moral, intellectual, and material progress.”
— Mary Church Terrell, address to the National Association of Colored Women, 1896
Questions in This Drill
- According to Mary Church Terrell’s address, the primary purpose of the National Association of Colored Women was to
- The phrase “Lifting as we climb” in Terrell’s address is best understood as an expression of
- Which of the following best explains why Black women formed their own organizations, such as the National Association of Colored Women (NACW), in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries?
- Which of the following best describes a key difference between the NAACP’s approach to racial progress and Booker T. Washington’s approach in the early 1900s–1915 period?
- How did Black Greek-letter organizations (BGLOs) and Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs) function similarly in the early twentieth century?