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1
According to "Bethlem/Bedlam: Methods of Madness?" Bethlem became "Bedlam," a metaphor for madness, because:
A)it catered to the criminally insane.
B)of what actually went on inside.
C)doctors used it as punishment rather than treatment.
D)of the mystique that madness acquired as a religious and cultural symbol.
2
Mutual aid fraternities, as noted in "Roslyn's Mutual Aid Lodges," performed an essential role in the assimilation of immigrants because:
A)they offered immigrants a collective strategy for surviving within a dominant culture rife with exclusionary social and financial practices.
B)a national immigration service had not yet been formed.
C)they were the only place where immigrants could practice their traditional ethnic and social practices.
D)they were the only institutions where immigrants could feel at ease.
3
According to the author of "Hallelujah, I'm a Bum," the vast increase of "hoboes" riding the rails in 1933 was due to the:
A)growth of railroads.
B)increased need for itinerant workers in the west.
C)loss of jobs during the Great Depression.
D)easy life that riding the rails offered.
4
The author states in "Every Picture Tells a Story" that today's social-work students must:
A)learn how to raise money by taking courses in fund raising.
B)learn how to write more eloquent persuasive essays.
C)learn how to use video images and computers effectively.
D)rely more heavily on tables and statistics.
5
As stated in "When the Laws Were Silent," the ethnic Japanese were removed from the West Coast through the authorization of:
A)the Naturalization Act.
B)the Alien Enemies Act.
C)Executive Order 9066.
D)the Sedition Act.
6
The reality of poverty in the United States, as cited in "Poverty 101: What Liberals and Conservatives Can Learn from Each Other," is that:
A)poverty is more life-threatening than it used to be.
B)charities rarely help the most deserving poor.
C)a few children live in poverty today.
D)poverty is less life-threatening but can still be dark and desperate.
7
Employers of foreign domestic servants, according to "D.C.'s Indentured Servants," often get away with treating the workers poorly because:
A)they follow their own countries' labor laws.
B)they cannot afford more pay.
C)they have diplomatic immunity.
D)the State Department does not check to make sure the employers follow U.S. labor laws.
8
According to the author of "Government Can't Cure Poverty," a major shift in American social policy occurred when:
A)Franklin D. Roosevelt became President.
B)crime rates soared.
C)the federal welfare system took on the roles formerly performed by local communities.
D)Bill Clinton defeated George Bush in the 1992 presidential election.
9
Civil-rights advocates and enforcement agencies, according to "Counting Race and Ethnicity: Options for the 2000 Census," are concerned about the inclusion of a multiracial category on the 2000 Census because:
A)it would hamper the government's antidiscrimination efforts.
B)the effect of including the category is greater on people of other racial mixes.
C)it reinforces a view of racial identity as exclusive and rigid.
D)differences in characteristics between racial or ethnic groups may arise from sources other than racism and discrimination.
10
Patricia J. Williams' bank-loan transaction, according to "Of Race and Risk," came to a screeching halt when:
A)her credit record showed her to be a poor risk.
B)she checked off the box on the fair-housing form indicating that she was black.
C)property values in the neighborhood suddenly fell.
D)loan officials learned that she was living in another state.
11
Chang-Lin Tien, as he explains in his article "In Defense of Affirmative Action," took on the explosive issue of affirmative action because:
A)the United States is the only land of opportunity.
B)of his role in higher education and his experience as an immigrant of Chinese descent.
C)of the harsh realities of racial discrimination.
D)he was hired to do so by a civil-rights group.
12
As explained in "Service Redlining: The Next Jim Crow?" the term "service redlining" refers to the practice of:
A)charging different customers different prices according to their ability to pay.
B)charging customers outrageous prices for delivery of goods to high-crime neighborhoods.
C)refusing services to African Americans in public places.
D)refusing goods and services to low-income, minority neighborhoods.
13
As detailed in "The War Between Men and Women," about half of the imprinted genes in question have something to do with growth of all of the following except:
A)the placenta.
B)the fetus.
C)the newborn.
D)sperm.
14
Mental health professions, according to "Homosexuality across Cultures," have not viewed homosexual orientation as being as natural as heterosexual orientation because:
A)of the prevailing view that homosexual orientation is caused by mental illness.
B)of the concept of AIDS as plague.
C)of the prevalence of youths reporting that they were not comfortable disclosing their sexual orientation to professionals.
D)gay adolescent clients report being unhappier than their heterosexual peers.
15
A poll commissioned by a Democratic party organization concerning public support of Social Security and Medicare, as cited in "Missed Opportunity," found that over 70 percent of the people polled:
A)believed that the Medicare program was basically sound and should not be tampered with.
B)believed that the Social Security program was basically sound and should not be tampered with.
C)would oppose ending the Social Security system and requiring Americans to save for their retirement through individually controlled personal savings accounts.
D)thought that it was a bigger priority to reform Medicare to ensure its long-term financial stability than to protect it from budget cuts.
16
Relative to most industrial nations, according to "A Critique of the Case for Privatizing Social Security," the United States already has a competitive advantage because:
A)the high cost of pension and health benefits is borne by American corporations.
B)of the economy's unmatched rate of growth.
C)it spends so little on public benefits for workers.
D)of its partially privatized Social Security system.
17
As detailed in "Don't Go It Alone," the economy has been growing annually at about 3.5 percent for the last seventy-five years, and in the next seventy-five years the Social Security trustees estimate the growth will be:
A)negative.
B)about the same.
C)approximately 1.5 percent.
D)approximately 7 percent.
18
According to "Don't Go It Alone," diverting FICA taxes into personal mini-IRAs and riding the stock market is the brainchild of:
A)President Clinton.
B)Steven Forbes,presidential candidate and CEO of Forbes, Inc.
C)Martin Feldman, chairman of the Council of Economic Advisors under President Reagan.
D)Allan Greenspan, head of the Federal Reserve Board.
19
As described in "Don't Go It Alone," studies analyzed by the Securities and Exchange Commission indicated that diverting FICA wages into personal mini-IRAs would not be feasible because:
A)most people do not make enough money.
B)most people fear the stock market.
C)most people are satisfied with Social Security and do not want things to change.
D)there is a disturbing level of financial illiteracy.
20
The gains of promoting work among welfare recipients, according to "Welfare Reform Legislation," will be best realized if:
A)the federal budget is reduced.
B)potential workers are properly trained.
C)work lifts families out of poverty.
D)the share of children who live in two-parent worker families increases.
21
According to "Why Welfare Reform Is Working," the Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act of 1996 effectively:
A)eliminated food stamps.
B)eliminated public housing.
C)repealed Aid to Families with Dependent Children and replaced it with a new program named Temporary Assistance for Needy Families.
D)eliminated the Earned Income Tax Credit.
22
According to "Welfare to Work," in 1996, Congress converted four federal welfare entitlements into Temporary Assistance for Needy Families, which limits recipients to a lifetime entitlement of:
A)20 years.
B)10 years.
C)5 years.
D)1 year.
23
In "Welfare's Fatal Attraction," the author describes the "incapacitation effect" of welfare programs as:
A)giving aid to compensate recipients for dysfunctional behavior.
B)forcing poor taxpayers to pay benefits to irresponsible claimants.
C)undermining the recipients' need and desire to work for compensation.
D)undermining the necessity for more private charities to help the poor.
24
According to "Beyond the Welfare Clock," the dramatic driver that has welfare rolls tumbling is:
A)new work programs.
B)clients voluntarily leaving welfare rolls upon learning about the strict work-for-benefits requirements.
C)physical restraints.
D)a cut in cash entitlements.
25
In "Welfare and the 'Third Way,'" the author defines the "Third Way," championed by Pres. Bill Clinton and Britain's Prime Min. Tony Blair, as a partnership between the:
A)government and the political sector.
B)corporate sector and the private sector.
C)corporate sector, the government sector, and civil society.
D)government and welfare reformers.
26
As stated in "Left Behind," the welfare rolls have declined 40 percent in the last five years and those who have left are primarily:
A)Hispanics.
B)African Americans.
C)white women.
D)Asian Americans.
27
In "Welfare to Work: A Sequel," the author writes about Mary Ann Moore, once an example of a successful welfare-to-work mother, who is now:
A)head of Project Match.
B)a famous welfare reformer.
C)back in the welfare system and an intermittent drug user.
D)a college graduate.
28
According to "Now, the Hard Part of Welfare Reform," reform efforts have helped cut welfare rolls nationally during the last three years, but:
A)more women have become prostitutes.
B)many public work programs have been formed.
C)demand for emergency food services and for shelters has increased.
D)more babies have been born to unwed mothers.
29
According to author Stephanie Coontz in "Q: Are Single-Parent Families a Major Cause of Social Dysfunction?" never-married, single parenthood often is more problematic than divorced parenthood because:
A)there is a social stigma.
B)there is no family support.
C)there is no father figure.
D)it so frequently occurs in the context of poverty.
30
In "Father's Day Every Day," California Gov. Pete Wilson is quoted as saying, "the most destructive thing welfare did was to:
A)encourage welfare recipients to use food stamps."
B)encourage abused women to go to shelters."
C)form free child-care programs."
D)encourage 15 year-old girls that they could be viable economic units by getting pregnant."
31
According to "Youth at Risk: Saving the World's Most Precious Resource," society must commit to helping children become self-sufficient adults because:
A)of the expanding gap between the rich and poor.
B)39 million children now under age 10 will swell the ranks of teenagers in the twenty-first century.
C)to do otherwise would be a violation of its obligations to future generations.
D)there is a recent increase in negative attitudes about children.
32
Many schools and communities throughout the United States, according to "Weapon-Carrying and Youth Violence," have identified weapons-carrying among adolescents as a huge substantial health, educational, and social problem because:
A)weapons, and firearms in particular, are at the center of youth violence.
B)of the increase in both parents working outside the home.
C)most senior high school students carry a firearm.
D)people who carry weapons nearly always use them eventually against another human being.
33
According to "Measuring and Monitoring Children's Well-Being across the World," current knowledge about children's well-being tends to be deficit-based, meaning that:
A)it emphasizes lack of knowledge about children's lives.
B)it tends to lack certain information as to a child's material status.
C)it tends to emphasize children's problems instead of strengths.
D)there is a lack of funds to finance studies about children's lives.
34
According to "Beyond the Boundaries of Child Welfare," abused children have an increased risk of all of the following problems except increased:
A)drug use.
B)teen pregnancy.
C)emotional and mental problems.
D)physical abnormalities.
35
Universal health care coverage, according to "Universal Health Care Coverage in the United States," has disappeared from national debate because:
A)comprehensive health benefits can never be taken away.
B)polls showed little support for health care reform.
C)voters pushed Democrats from Congress and handed control to the Republicans.
D)universal coverage is not a concern for social workers.
36
A woman who has an abortion, according to "Safe to Talk: Abortion Narratives as a Rite of Return," conceals her actions and may never find a safe venue for mourning because:
A)she does not perceive her abortion as important.
B)she just wants to get on with the business of life as usual.
C)of the harsh societal stigma.
D)feminist culture has not produced realistic identities for the childless.
37
According to "The Chasm in Care," more than 30 million people are now infected with HIV, and almost 90 percent of them live in:
A)North Africa and the Middle East.
B)Latin America.
C)North America and the Caribbean.
D)South and Southeast Asia and sub-Saharan Africa.
38
The significance of the cultural dimension in aging, according to "Religion/Spirituality and Health among Elderly African Americans and Hispanics," is extremely important for the psychiatric nurse, primarily because:
A)it is important to view elders in a multicultural sense.
B)the myth of the melting pot is not valid.
C)of the religion in which spirituality is expressed.
D)religion buffers psychological stressors.
39
According to "The Managed Care Experience," the data of the survey drawn from the NASW Clinical Social Worker Registry showed that the use of brief treatment (5-10 sessions), when managed care was involved:
A)increased with more than half the respondents.
B)decreased with more than half the respondents.
C)increased with more than 90 percent of the respondents.
D)stayed the same.
40
A form of lobotomy, according to "Lobotomy's Back," has returned to the mental health arena because:
A)a number of victims of mental illness could benefit from it.
B)it is the best of the neurosurgical technologies offered today.
C)society pays to house and care for great numbers of the mentally infirm.
D)psychosurgery was and is what it can be.
41
According to "Cultural Diversity and Mental Health: The Haudenosaunee of New York State," the American Indians dealt with problems of adjustment or serious mental disorders within their own society by the use of:
A)medicinal herbs.
B)hallucinogenic drugs.
C)healing rites by their medicine men.
D)the practice of banishment from the tribe.
42
Some public-defender offices, according to "Pay per Plea: Public Defenders Come at a Price," have embraced the idea of charging clients for their services due to:
A)eligibility limitations.
B)minimum wage increases.
C)shrinking budgets.
D)increases in felony cases.
43
Mentally retarded people, according to "Unequal Justice: Preserving the Rights of the Mentally Retarded in the Criminal Justice System," often admit to crimes they did not commit because:
A)there is strong evidence to convict them.
B)the police want an easy target to throw in jail.
C)they are generally not taught to stand up for their rights.
D)there is no death penalty for the mentally retarded.
44
Private prisons, according to "Private Prisons," have lobbied lawmakers for harsher prison sentences and other "get tough" measures, because:
A)a layer of bureaucracy can reduce accountability.
B)governments remain legally responsible for inmates guarded by public companies.
C)locking people up is good for business.
D)the crime rate has dramatically increased over the past 25 years.







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