Answer the following statement(s) true (T) or false (F)
1. The Indian Citizenship Act (1924) uses blood levels to determine citizenship status for Native Americans.
2. As a result of the General Allotment Act (1887), the United States acquired more than 100 million acres of Indian land between 1887 and 1934.
3. The Dawes Act was important to Native Americans because it increased their access to land.
4. Native Americans are overrepresented in white-collar occupations and underrepresented in service occupations.
5. The treaties negotiated between Indian tribes and the U.S. government were instrumental in repressing opportunities for Native Americans to secure valued resources.
1. FALSE
2. TRUE
3. FALSE
4. FALSE
5. TRUE
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What, if any, association appears to exist in the data? What is the direction of this relationship?
What will be an ideal response?
Ashley and her partner do not have children. Which of the following is a macro-level factor that may have contributed to their fertility?
a) They don't want to have children. b) Ashley experienced infertility. c) Neither earns very much money and they don't feel that they can afford a child. d) They live in a culture in which children are more of a liability than a benefit. e) They are rebelling against their parents who are pressuring them to give them grandchildren to play with.
What term is used to describe children who are assumed to have been raised by animals in the wilderness and isolated from other children, such as the "wild boy of Aveyron"?
A) mentally challenged B) developmentally disabled C) deprived D) feral
A conflict perspective on education views it as a social problem in what regard?
A. It is ineffective in promoting beliefs and values necessary for holding society together in a unified whole. B. It unintentionally sorts students into social classes that resemble the classes of society as a whole. C. It promotes values, beliefs, and ideologies that ultimately serve to perpetuate the interests of the ruling classes in society. D. It provides a "playground" for school children to "bully" their peers.