
Questions and Answers for New Pilot Naturalization Exam
On November 30, 2006, U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) Director
Emilio Gonzalez announced the release of 144 questions and answers
for the pilot test of a new naturalization exam. USCIS will
administer the pilot exam to about 5,000 volunteer citizenship
applicants in 10 cities beginning in early 2007.
USCIS included new questions that focus on the concepts of
democracy and the rights and responsibilities of citizenship. In
designing the new exam, USCIS received assistance and worked with
test development contractors, U.S. history and government scholars,
and English as a Second Language experts. USCIS also sought input
from a variety of stakeholders, including immigrant advocacy groups,
citizenship instructors and District Adjudications Officers.
The pilot will allow USCIS to work out any problems and refine
the exam before it is fully implemented nationwide in the spring of
2008.
During the trial period, volunteer applicants who choose to take
the pilot exam can immediately take the current exam if they
incorrectly answer a pilot question. To pass, applicants will have
to correctly answer six of 10 selected questions. The 10 pilot test
sites are: Albany, NY; Boston, MA; Charleston, SC; Denver, CO; El
Paso, TX; Kansas City, MO; Miami, FL; San Antonio, TX; Tucson, AZ;
and Yakima, WA.
Pilot Exam Questions and Answers
1. Name one important idea found in the Declaration
of Independence.
A: People are born with natural rights.
A: The power of government comes from the people.
A: The people can change their government if it hurts their
natural rights.
A: All people are created equal.
2. What is the supreme law of the land?
A: The Constitution
3. What does the Constitution do?
A: It sets up the government.
A: It protects basic rights of Americans.
4. What does “We the People” mean in the
Constitution?
A: The power of government comes from the
people.
5. What do we call changes to the Constitution?
A: Amendments
6. What is an amendment?
A: It is a change to the Constitution.
7. What do we call the first ten amendments to the
Constitution?
A: The Bill of Rights
8. Name one right or freedom from the First
Amendment.
A: Speech
A: Religion
A: Assembly
A: Press
A: Petition the government
9. How many amendments does the Constitution have?
A: Twenty-seven (27)
10. What did the Declaration of Independence do?
A: Announce the independence of the
United States from
Great Britain
A: Say that the U.S. is
free from Great
Britain
11. What does freedom of religion mean?
A: You can practice any religion you want, or
not practice at all.
12. What type of economic system does the
U.S. have?
A: Capitalist economy
A: Free market
A: Market economy
13. What are the three branches or parts of the
government?
A: Executive, legislative, and judicial
A: Congress, the President, the courts
14. Name one branch or part of the government.
A: Congress
A: Legislative
A: President
A: Executive
A: The courts
A: Judicial
15. Who is in charge of the executive branch?
A: The President
16. Who makes federal laws?
A: Congress
A: The Senate and House (of Representatives)
A: The (U.S. or
national) legislature
17. What are the two parts of the United States
Congress?
A: The Senate and House (of Representatives)
18. How many
United States Senators are there?
A: 100
19. We elect a U.S. Senator for how many years?
A: Six (6)
20. Name your state’s two
U.S. Senators.
A: Answers will vary. [For
District of Columbia residents and residents of
U.S. territories, the answer is that DC (or the
territory where the applicant lives) has no
U.S. Senators.]
21. How many
U.S. Senators does each state have?
A: Two (2)
22. The House of Representatives has how many voting
members?
A: 435
23. We elect a U.S. Representative for how many
years?
A: Two (2)
24. Name your U.S. Representative.
A: Answers will vary. [Residents of territories
with nonvoting delegates or resident commissioners may provide the
name of that representative or commissioner. Also acceptable is any
statement that the territory has no (voting) representatives in
Congress.]
25. Who does a U.S. Senator represent?
A: All citizens in that Senator’s state
26. Who does a U.S. Representative represent?
A: All citizens in that Representative’s
district (each state is divided into districts)
27. What decides each state’s number of
U.S. Representatives?
A: The state’s population
28. How is each state’s number of Representatives
decided?
A: The state’s population
29. Why do we have three branches of government?
A: So no branch is too powerful
30. Name one example of checks and balances.
A: The President vetoes a bill.
A: Congress can confirm or not confirm a President’s nomination.
A: Congress approves the President’s budget.
A: The Supreme Court strikes down a law.
31. We elect a President for how many years?
A: Four (4) years
32. How old must a President be?
A: Thirty-five (35) or older
A: At least thirty-five (35)
A: More than thirty-five (35)
33. The President must be born in what country?
A: The
United States
A: America
34. Who is the President now?
A: [Current president] (as of November 20,
2006, George W. Bush)
35. What is the name of the President of the
United States?
A: [Current president] (as of November 20,
2006, George W. Bush)
A: (President) George W. Bush
A: George Bush
A: Bush
36. Who is the Vice President now?
A: [Current vice president] (as of November 20,
2006- Richard (Dick) Cheney)
A: Dick Cheney
A: Cheney
37. What is the name of the Vice President of the
United States?
A: [Current vice president] (as of November 20,
2006- Richard (Dick) Cheney)
A: Dick Cheney
A: Cheney
38. If the President can no longer serve, who becomes
President?
A: The Vice President
39. Who becomes President if both the President and
the Vice President can no longer serve?
A: The Speaker of the House
40. Who is the Commander-in-Chief of the military?
A: The President
41. How many full terms can a President serve?
A: Two (2)
42. Who signs bills to become laws?
A: The President
43. Who vetoes bills?
A: The President
44. What is a veto?
A: The President refuses to sign a bill passed
by Congress.
A: The President says no to a bill.
A: The President rejects a bill.
45. What does the President’s Cabinet do?
A: Advises the President
46. Name two Cabinet-level positions.
A: Secretary of Agriculture
A: Secretary of Commerce
A: Secretary of Defense
A: Secretary of Education
A: Secretary of Energy
A: Secretary of Health and Human Services
A: Secretary of Homeland Security
A: Secretary of Housing and Urban Development
A: Secretary of Interior
A: Secretary of State
A: Secretary of Transportation
A: Secretary of Treasury
A: Secretary of Veterans’ Affairs
A: Attorney General
A: Secretary of Labor
47. What Cabinet-level agency advises the President
on foreign policy?
A: The State Department
48. What does the judicial branch do?
A: Reviews and explains laws
A: Resolves disputes between parties
A: Decides if a law goes against the Constitution
49. Who confirms Supreme Court justices?
A: The Senate
50. Who is the Chief Justice of the
United States?
A: John Roberts (John G. Roberts, Jr.)
51. How many justices are on the Supreme Court?
A: Nine (9)
52. Who nominates justices to the Supreme Court?
A: The President
53. Name one thing only the federal government can
do.
A: Print money
A: Declare war
A: Create an army
A: Make treaties
54. What is one thing only a state government can do?
A: Provide schooling and education
A: Provide protection (police)
A: Provide safety (fire departments)
A: Give a driver’s license
A: Approve zoning and land use
55. What does it mean that the U.S. Constitution is a
constitution of limited powers?
A: The federal government has only the powers
that the Constitution states that it has.
A: The states have all powers that the federal government does
not.
56. Who is the Governor of your state?
A: Answers will vary.
[District of Columbia
and U.S.
Territory residents would answer that they do not have a state
governor or that they do not live in a state. Mentioning the
governor of the territory for Guam
is acceptable. Any answer that mentions one of these facts is
acceptable.]
57. What is the capital (or capital city) of your
state?
A: Answers will vary. [District of Columbia
residents would answer that DC is not a state, and that therefore it
does not have a capital. Any answer that mentions one of these facts
is acceptable.]
58. What are the two major political parties in the
U.S. today?
A: Democrats and Republicans
59. What is the highest court in the
U.S.?
A: The Supreme Court
60. What is the majority political party in the House
of Representatives now?
A: Democrats
A: Democratic Party
61. What is the political party of the majority in
the Senate now?
A: Democrats
A: Democratic Party
62. What is the political party of the President now?
A: Republicans
A: Republican Party
63. Who is the Speaker of the House of
Representatives now?
A: Nancy Pelosi
64. Who is the Senate Majority Leader now?
A: Harry Reid
65. In what month are elections held in the
United States?
A: November
66. What is the current minimum wage in the
U.S.?
A: $5.15
67. When must all males register for the Selective
Service?
A: At age 18
A: At 18
68. Who is the Secretary of State now?
A: Dr. Condoleezza Rice
A: Condoleezza Rice
A: Dr. Rice
69. Who is the Attorney General now?
A: Alberto Gonzales
70. Is the current President in his first or second
term?
A: Second
71. What is self-government?
A: Powers come from the people.
A: Government responds to the people.
72. Who governs the people in a self-governed
country?
A: The people govern themselves.
A: The government elected by the people.
73. What is the “rule of law”?
A: Everyone must obey the law.
A: Leaders must obey the law.
A: Government must obey the law.
74. What are “inalienable rights”?
A: Individual rights that people are born with
75. There are four amendments to the Constitution
about who can vote. Describe one of them.
A: Any citizen over 18 can vote.
A: A citizen of any race can vote.
A: Any male or female citizen can vote. (Women and men can vote.)
A: You don’t have to pay to vote. (You don’t have to pay a poll
tax to vote.)
76. Name one responsibility that is only for
United States citizens.
A: Vote
A: Serve on a jury
77. Name two rights that are only for
United States citizens.
A: The right to apply for a federal job
A: The right to vote
A: The right to run for office
78. Name two rights of everyone living in the
U.S.
A: Freedom of expression
A: Freedom of speech
A: Freedom of assembly
A: Freedom to petition the government
A: Freedom of worship
A: The right to bear arms
79. What is the Pledge of Allegiance?
A: The promise of loyalty to the flag and the
nation
80. Name one promise you make when you say the Oath
of Allegiance.
A: To give up loyalty to other countries (I give
up loyalty to my [old][first][other] country.)
A: To defend the Constitution and laws of the United States
A: To obey the laws of the United States
A: To serve in the United States
military if needed (To fight for the
United States [if needed].)
A: To serve the nation if needed (To do important work for the
United States [if needed].)
A: To be loyal to the United States
81. Who can vote in the
U.S.?
A: All citizens over 18
A: All registered citizens over 18
82. Name two ways that Americans can participate in
their democracy.
A: Vote
A: Join a political party
A: Help out with a campaign
A: Join a civic group
A: Join a community group
A: Tell an elected official your opinion on an issue.
A: Call your Senators and Representatives
A: Publicly support or oppose an issue or policy
A: Run for office
A: Write to a newspaper
83. When is the last day you can send in federal
income tax forms?
A: By April 15th of every year
A: By April 15th
A: April 15
84. Name two of the natural, or inalienable, rights
in the Declaration of Independence.
A: Life
A: Liberty
A: The pursuit of happiness
85. Who wrote the Declaration of Independence?
A: Thomas Jefferson
86. When was the Declaration of Independence adopted?
A: July 4, 1776
87. Name one reason why the colonists came to
America?
A: Freedom
A: Political liberty
A: Religious freedom
A: Economic opportunity
A: To practice their religion
A: To escape persecution
88. What happened at the Constitutional Convention?
A: The Constitution was written.
A: The Founding Fathers wrote the Constitution.
89. Why did the colonists fight the British?
A: They had to pay high taxes but did not have
any say about it. (Taxation without representation.)
A: The British army stayed in their houses. (boarding, quartering)
A: The British denied the colonists self-government.
90. When was the Constitution drafted?
A: 1787
91. There are 13 original states. Name three.
A: Connecticut, Delaware, Georgia, Maryland,
Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina,
Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Carolina, and Virginia.
92. What group of people was taken to
America and sold as slaves?
A: Africans
A: People from Africa
93. Who lived in
America before the Europeans
arrived?
A: The Native Americans
A: American Indians
94. Where did most of
America’s colonists come from
before the Revolution?
A: Europe
95. Why were the colonists upset with the British
government?
A: Stamp Act
A: They had to pay high taxes but did not have any say about it.
(Taxation without representation.)
A: The British army stayed in their houses. (boarding, quartering)
A: Intolerable Acts
96. Name one thing Benjamin Franklin is famous for.
A:
U.S. diplomat
A: Oldest member of the Constitutional Convention
A: First Postmaster General of the
United States
A: Writer of “Poor Richard’s Almanac”
97. Name one famous battle from the Revolutionary
War.
A: Lexington and
Concord
A: Trenton
A: Princeton
A: Saratoga
A: Cowpens
A: Yorktown
A: Bunker Hill
98. Who is called the “Father of Our Country”?
A: George Washington
99. Who was the first President?
A: George Washington
100. Name one of the writers of the Federalist
Papers?
A: James Madison
A: Alexander Hamilton
A: John Jay
101. What group of essays supported passage of the
U.S. Constitution?
A: The Federalist Papers
102. Name one of the major American Indian tribes in
the United States.
A: Cherokee, Seminoles, Creek, Choctaw, Arawak,
Iroquois, Shawnee, Mohegan, Chippewa,
Huron, Oneida, Sioux,
Cheyenne, Lakotas, Crows, Blackfeet, Teton, Navajo,
Apaches, Pueblo,
Hopi, Inuit
[Adjudicators will be supplied with a complete
list.]
103. Name one war fought by the
United States in the 1800s.
A: War of 1812, Mexican American War, Civil
War, or Spanish-American War.
104. What territory did the
United States buy from
France in 1803?
A: The
Louisiana Territory
A: Louisiana
105. What country sold the
Louisiana Territory
to the United
States?
A:
France
106. In 1803, the
United States bought a large amount of land
from France.
Where was that land?
A: West of the
Mississippi
A: The Western U.S.
A: The Louisiana
Territory
107. Name one of the things that Abraham Lincoln
did.
A: Saved (or preserved) the
Union.
A: Freed the slaves
A: Led the U.S.
during the Civil War.
108. Name the
U.S. war between the North and the
South.
A: The Civil War
109. Name one problem that led to the Civil War.
A: Slavery
A: Economic reasons
A: States’ rights
110. What did the Emancipation Proclamation do?
A: Freed slaves in the Confederacy
A: Freed slaves in the Confederate states
A: Freed slaves in most Southern states
111. What did the abolitionists try to end before
the Civil War?
A: Slavery
112. What did Susan B. Anthony do?
A: She fought for women’s rights.
113. Name one war fought by the
United States in the 1900s.
A: World War I, World War II,
Korean War, Vietnam
War, or Gulf (or Persian Gulf) War
114. Who was President during World War I?
A: Woodrow Wilson
115. The United States
fought Japan,
Germany, and
Italy during which war?
A: World War II
116. What was the main concern of the
United States during the Cold War?
A: The spread of communism
A: The Soviet Union [USSR
and Russia
are also acceptable.]
117. What major event happened on September 11,
2001, in the
United States?
A: Terrorists attacked The
United States.
118. What international organization was established
after World War II (WWII) to keep the world at peace?
A: The United Nations
119. What alliance of North
America and European countries was created during the
Cold War?
A: NATO (North Atlantic
Treaty Organization)
120. Who was President during the Great Depression
and World War II?
A: Franklin Roosevelt
121. Which U.S. World War II general later became
President?
A: Dwight Eisenhower
122. What did Martin Luther King, Jr. do?
A: He fought for civil rights.
A: He strove for (worked for, fought for) equality for all
Americans.
123. Martin Luther King, Jr. had a dream for
America. What was his dream?
A: Equality for all Americans
A: Civil rights for all
124. What movement tried to end racial
discrimination?
A: The civil rights movement
125. What is the longest river in the
United States?
A: The Missouri River
126. What ocean is on the west coast of the
United States?
A: The Pacific Ocean
127. What country is on the northern border of the
United States?
A:
Canada
128. Where is the Grand Canyon?
A:
Arizona
A: The Southwest
A: Along/on the Colorado River
129. Where is the Statue of Liberty?
A:
New York Harbor
A: Liberty Island
[Also acceptable are New Jersey,
near New York City, and on the
Hudson (River).]
130. What country is on the southern border of the
United States?
A:
Mexico
131. Name one large mountain range in the
United States.
A: The Rocky Mountains
A: The Appalachians
A: The Sierra Nevada
A: The Cascades
132. What is the tallest mountain in the
United States?
A:
Mt. McKinley
A: Denali
133. Name one
U.S. territory.
A:
American Samoa
A: The Commonwealth
of Northern Mariana Islands
A: Guam
A: Puerto Rico
A: U.S.
Virgin Islands
134. Name the state that is in the middle of the
Pacific Ocean.
A:
Hawaii
135. Name one state that borders
Canada.
A: Alaska, Idaho, Maine, Michigan,
Minnesota, Montana, New Hampshire, New York, North Dakota, Ohio,
Pennsylvania, Vermont, or Washington
136. Name one state that borders on
Mexico.
A: Arizona,
California, New Mexico,
or Texas
137. What is the capital of the
U.S.?
A:
Washington, D.C.
138. Why does the flag have 13 stripes?
A: Because there were 13 original colonies
A: Because the stripes represent the original colonies
139. Why do we have 13 stripes on the flag?
A: Because there were 13 original colonies
A: Because the stripes represent the original colonies
140. Why does the flag have 50 stars?
A: There is one star for each state.
A: Each star represents a state.
A: There are 50 states.
141. What is the name of the National Anthem?
A: The “Star-Spangled Banner”
142. On the Fourth of July we celebrate independence
from what country?
A:
Great Britain
143. When do we celebrate Independence Day?
A: July 4
144. Name two national
U.S. holidays.
A: New Year’s Day
A: Martin Luther King Day
A: Presidents’ Day
A: Memorial Day
A: Independence Day
A: Labor Day
A: Columbus Day
A: Veterans Day
A: Thanksgiving
A: Christmas

|