Drill 19 ยท Multiple Choice ยท Unit 3: The Practice of Freedom
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.
Question 1. According to Mary Church Terrell’s address, the primary purpose of the National Association of Colored Women was to
Explanation: Terrell’s address states the NACW’s goal of elevating Black Americans to “the highest possible plane of moral, intellectual, and material progress”, a direct statement of uplift ideology. (B) is a function more closely associated with the NAACP; linking this text to anti-lynching lobbying misreads the passage’s focus. (C) describes colonization ideology, which Terrell’s uplift framework rejected. (D) is a true statement about HBCUs, but Terrell’s address does not mention educational institutions; this is the “historically true but irrelevant” trap. [Skill 2A, Identifying and describing a source’s main claim]
Question 2. The phrase “Lifting as we climb” in Terrell’s address is best understood as an expression of
Explanation: “Lifting as we climb” encapsulates uplift ideology’s core premise: Black women’s organizations had a collective obligation to elevate the entire race alongside themselves, not merely to achieve individual or class-based advancement. (A) describes Black nationalist separatism, which is conceptually distinct from the NACW’s community-oriented uplift vision. (B) creates a false opposition; Terrell and the NACW embraced institution-building as political action, not instead of it. (C) reduces uplift to individual economic gain, a distortion; the NACW emphasized collective advancement across moral and intellectual dimensions, not just material success. (C) is the most tempting wrong answer because it sounds like Washingtonian self-help, which students may conflate with uplift ideology. [Skill 2B, Source perspective and purpose]
Question 3. 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?
Explanation: Black women’s clubs emerged at the intersection of race and gender, white suffrage organizations like the National American Woman Suffrage Association often marginalized Black women, while male-led Black organizations did not consistently center gender equality. The NACW addressed both simultaneously. (A) is historically accurate as far as it goes, Black women did face structural resistance in mixed organizations, but it frames the NACW as a fallback rather than a purposeful creation, understating the independent vision driving organizations like the NACW. (B) is too narrow; the NACW worked on temperance, education, child welfare, and anti-lynching campaigns alongside suffrage. (D) is factually wrong; the NACW operated independently of HBCUs and BGLOs and predated many of them. (A) is the most dangerous distractor because it contains genuine historical truth but misrepresents the NACW’s founding logic. [Skill 1C, Identifying patterns, connections, and relationships]
Question 4. 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?
Explanation: Du Bois and the NAACP (founded 1909) challenged the racial status quo through legal and political activism, explicitly critiquing Washington’s acceptance of segregation in exchange for economic opportunity. Washington’s “Atlanta Compromise” framed industrial training and accommodation as the road to eventual respect and stability. (A) presents a chronological inversion of their actual positions, Washington was notably reluctant to challenge segregation politically; the NAACP actively pursued anti-lynching legislation. (C) is a complete swap of the two figures’ actual positions, a classic reversal distractor. (D) is false on both counts; Washington did not publicly challenge Plessy v. Ferguson, and the NAACP’s legal strategy against segregation developed over decades. (A) will trap students who recall that both figures were concerned with racial violence but who don’t know the distinct stances each took. [Skill 1C, Comparing developments, movements, and ideas]
Question 5. How did Black Greek-letter organizations (BGLOs) and Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs) function similarly in the early twentieth century?
Explanation: HBCUs and BGLOs both created institutional infrastructure for Black intellectual and civic life at a moment when mainstream American institutions excluded African Americans. BGLOs produced many Civil Rights leaders; HBCUs trained doctors, lawyers, teachers, and activists who drove community advancement. (B) grossly understates the civic role of both, a misconception rooted in failure to recognize how institutions can function as political infrastructure even without explicit political mandates. (C) is historically inaccurate, HBCUs drew on Black community funding, some philanthropists, and Freedmen’s Bureau support, but their missions were shaped by Black educators and community members, not controlled by white donors. (D) describes only the narrow Washingtonian industrial model, which did not define HBCUs broadly, most offered liberal arts curricula alongside vocational training. (C) is the “true but distorted” trap: white philanthropy did play a financial role, but students who know this may incorrectly conclude it meant control. [Skill 1A, Applying disciplinary knowledge to explain a development]