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    Sunday, May 12, 2024

    Could you pass the US citizenship test? Here, try it out

    In this Wednesday, March 8, 2017 photo high school teacher Natalie O'Brien, center, calls on students during a civics class called "We the People," at North Smithfield High School in North Smithfield, R.I. More states are requiring graduating high school students to know at least as much about the U.S. founding documents as immigrants passing a citizenship test. (AP Photo/Steven Senne)

    More states are requiring high school graduates to know at least as much about U.S. founding documents as immigrants passing the citizenship test. Can you ace it? 

    An applicant must correctly answer six of 10 questions, selected from 100 possible questions, to pass the civics portion. A sample test, with the answers at the bottom:

    QUESTIONS

    1. What does the Constitution do?

    2. The idea of self-government is in the first three words of the Constitution. What are these words?

    3. What is an amendment?

    4. What do we call the first 10 amendments to the Constitution?

    5. How many amendments does the Constitution have?

    6. What are two rights in the Declaration of Independence?

    7. Under our Constitution, some powers belong to the federal government. What is one power of the federal government?

    8. The Federalist Papers supported the passage of the Constitution. Name one of the writers.

    9. There are four amendments to the Constitution about who can vote. Describe one of them.

    10. What is one right or freedom from the First Amendment?

    ANSWERS

    1. Sets up the government, defines the government and protects basic rights of Americans

    2. We the People

    3. A change or an addition to the Constitution

    4. The Bill of Rights

    5. 27

    6. Life, liberty, the pursuit of happiness

    7. To print money, to declare war, to create an army or to make treaties

    8. James Madison, Alexander Hamilton, John Jay (under the collective pseudonym Publius)

    9. Citizens 18 and older can vote; you don't have to pay to vote; any citizen can vote, a male citizen of any race can vote

    10. Speech, religion, assembly, press, petition the government

    SOURCE: U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services

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