US History Social Studies

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GED Test Overview

The previous GED© test emphasized both World History and U.S. History. Instead, the new test focuses 20% on U.S. History, with no World History. The closest element includes “key historical documents that have shaped American constitutional government,” but I’m not sure how many documents from World History would be included on that list.

In addition to understanding major historical documents, GED© Test Takers should prepare with a general grounding in the following historical periods:

Want a little more detail? The following are the subcategories contained in the Assessment Guide for Educators, last updated in July 2014. The notes in parentheses are my own summaries of each point:

Revolutionary and Early Republic Periods

Civil War and Reconstruction

Civil Rights

World War I

World War II

The Cold War

American Foreign Policy since 9/11

The GED Testing Service has no subcategories here, so I guess this is still up for debate. I would create the following categories (there’s a lot one could say here, so I will try to focus on highlights):

  • Taliban’s attacks on September 11th, 2001
  • Al-Qaida’s international network and leader Osama Bin Laden still working on it...
  • U.S. support of Israel and international disputes over Israeli blockade of Palestinian territories still working on it...
  • U.S. and NATO Invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq under George W. Bush still working on it...
  • Arab Spring: grassroots protest and military movements for democracy from Tunisia to Syria still working on it...
  • Nation-building strategies: promoting education and economic development to reduce influence of terrorist groups still working on it...
  • Guantanamo Bay and enhanced interrogation techniques still working on it...
  • Unmanned drones and air strikes under Barack Obama still working on it...

All content is created by the respective tutors and researchers, in collaboration with publicly available AI systems.

Source:
blog.mustseed.org

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