Are you taking the U.S. History I CLEP exam? Are you curious as to what’s on the CLEP exam for U.S. History I? Here’s a look at the areas of U.S. History I that you’ll be tested on.
On the U.S. History I CLEP test you’ll need to answer 120 multiple choice questions about topics from the beginning of U.S. History up to the year 1877. These topics include:
- Public policy, political institutions and behavior (35% of the CLEP exam)
- Societal developments (25% of the CLEP exam)
- Financial developments (10% of the CLEP exam)
- Intellectual and Cultural developments (15% of the CLEP exam)
- International relations and diplomacy (15% of the CLEP exam)
Here are some of the topics you’ll be tested in each of the above areas:
- Public policy, political institutions and behavior – the Constitution, its amendments, and their interpretation by the Supreme Court, the changing role of government in American life, early political parties, and intellectual and political nationalism
- Societal developments – the history of women and the family in early America, the colonial society
- Financial developments – economic growth and development, long-term demographic trends
- Intellectual and cultural developments – Early American arts and letters, immigration and the history of racial and ethnic minorities
- International relations and Diplomacy – The relationship between Britain and the American colonies, agrarianism and abolitionism, the major wars in early American history, American expansionism, slavery in America
The test gives you ninety minutes to answer all 120 multiple choice questions and if there are questions you are undecided on, make sure to guess because blank answers are calculated the same as incorrect answers. You’ll get to see your unofficial score immediately after taking the CLEP exam and when you see your score, you’ll notice that it’s a number between 20 and 80. You need to score at least a 50 to pass the U.S. History I CLEP exam.
Getting a passing score means you’ll get CLEP credit for your undergraduate U.S. History I requirement without taking a single U.S. History I class.