Ohio Graduation Test Practice
Go to:
http://ogt.success-ode-state-oh-us.info/studentsOGT.htm
Click on “Practice for the Tests”
On the bottom right side,
select “Take a Test without Logging In”
Click the + sign by Social Studies, and select 2005,
then "Start Test"
http://ogt.success-ode-state-oh-us.info/studentsOGT.htm
Click on “Practice for the Tests”
On the bottom right side,
select “Take a Test without Logging In”
Click the + sign by Social Studies, and select 2005,
then "Start Test"
OGT Buzz Words!
Absolute location
The location of a point on the Earth's surface, which can be expressed by a grid reference (e.g., latitude and longitude).
Absolute monarchy
A system of government headed by a monarch as the only source of power controlling all functions of the state.
Artifact
A material object of a culture such as a tool, an article of clothing or a prepared food.
B.C.E.
Before the Common Era (also referred to as B.C.).
Barter
The trade of goods and services for other goods and services without the use of money.
Benefit
That which is received as an improvement or advantage as the result of a decision.
Bicameral
Composed of two legislative chambers.
Bill of attainder:
A legislative act that inflicts punishment upon a person or group without a judicial trial.
C.E.
In the Common Era (also referred to as A.D.).
Capital good
A productive resource consisting of human-made materials needed to produce goods and services; capital goods include buildings, machinery, equipment and tools.
Cardinal directions
The four main points of the compass (north, east, south and west).
Circular flow model
A diagram that shows the flow of economic activity among sectors of the economy.
Colonialism
A system where one country extends its control over foreign dependencies, especially for economic benefit.
Command economy
An economic system in which all decisions on production and consumption are made by a central government.
Comparative advantage
The ability to produce goods or services at a lower opportunity cost than other individuals or countries.
Compass rose
An element of a map used to show direction, usually showing cardinal directions and frequently intermediate direction.
Constitutional monarchy
A system of government headed by a monarch whose powers are delineated in the fundamental law of the state.
Consumer
A person whose wants are satisfied by using goods and services.
Consumer price index
A number used to measure changes in the cost of a standard group of goods and services bought by a typical urban consumer.
Consumption
The purchase and/or use of goods and services.
Coordinate
One of a set of numbers that determines the location of a point in a space.
Cost
An alternative given up as the result of a decision.
Country
A unit of political space, the entire land area of a nation or state.
Credibility
The quality or state of offering reasonable grounds for being believed.
Cultural institution
An established custom, practice or relationship of importance in a society.
Cultural perspective
The complex set of meanings, attitudes, values and ideas belonging to a cultural group.
Cultural practice
A pattern of behavior accepted by a society.
Cultural product
A tangible (e.g., a painting, a cathedral, a mosque, a piece of literature, a pair of chopsticks) or intangible (e.g., an oral tale, a dance, a sacred ritual, a system of education) aspect produced by a cultural group.
Culture
Learned behavior of a group of people, which includes their belief systems and languages, their social relationships, their institutions and organizations, and their material goods such as food, clothing, buildings, tools and machines.
Deforestation
The destruction and removal of forest and its undergrowth by natural or human forces.
Demand
The quantities of a good or service that consumers are willing and able to buy at various prices during a given time period.
Democracy
A system of government in which political control is exercised by all the people, either directly or through their elected representatives.
Desertification
The spread of desert conditions in arid and semiarid regions resulting from a combination of climatic changes and increasing human pressures, such as overgrazing, removal of vegetation and cultivation of marginal land.
Dictatorship
A system of government in which those who rule usually acquire and maintain authority by force and cannot be held responsible to the will of the people.
Diffusion
The spread of people, ideas, technology and products among places.
Direct democracy
A democratic system of government in which the people exercise political control and participate directly in decision-making.
Direction indicator
An element of a map used to show direction, usually labeling north and frequently all cardinal directions.
Discrimination
Unfair treatment of a person or group based on a variety of prejudices.
Division of labor
The separation of the total work required to produce a good or service into individual interrelated tasks.
Due process of law
The right of every citizen to be protected against arbitrary action by the government.
Earth-sun relationship
The position of the earth relative to the sun that helps to determine day and night, seasons and time zones.
Economic growth
An increase in an economy's ability to produce goods and services over time.
Entrepreneur
An individual who organizes the use of productive resources to produce goods or services.
Entrepreneurship
The organization of productive resources by a person willing to take risks to start a business.
Ex post facto law
A legislative act that retroactively makes an act a crime, makes a crime a more serious crime, makes a criminal punishment more severe, or changes trial rules to make conviction easier.
Federalism
A form of political organization in which governmental power is divided between a central government and territorial subdivisions - under the U.S. Constitution, between the national and state governments.
Flow resource
A resource that is neither renewable nor nonrenewable, but must be used when or where it occurs (e.g., running water, wind, sunlight).
Globalization
The act, process or policy of making something worldwide in scope or application.
Goods
Objects that are capable of satisfying people's wants.
Graphic organizers
Written or pictorial representations used to organize information (e.g., flow charts, webs, Venn diagrams, T-charts).
Gross domestic product
The value of all final goods and services produced within a country's borders in a given year.
Habeas corpus (writ of )
A court order demanding that the individual in custody be brought into court and shown the cause for detention. The U.S guarantees habeas corpus. Constitution and can be suspended only in cases of rebellion or invasion.
Human characteristic/feature
An aspect of a place or a quality of the Earth's surface constructed by people including cities, parks, buildings and roads.
Human resource
A productive resource consisting of the talents and skills of human beings that contribute to the production of goods and services.
Imperialism
A policy used by strong countries to gain social, political and economic control over foreign territories.
Initiative
A petition process by which a certain percentage of voters (electors) can put a proposed constitutional amendment or statute on the ballot for popular approval or rejection or submit a proposed statute to a legislative assembly for approval (e.g., Ohio).
Institutionalized discrimination
Unfair treatment of a group based on prejudice and carried out by governments, organizations and companies that limit freedoms in political, economic, social, cultural or any other field of public life.
Institutionalized racism
The use of institutional policies, practices and/or procedures to withhold rights, privileges and opportunities from the race that is believed to be inferior.
Intermediate directions
The points of the compass that fall between north and east, north and west, south and east, south and west (e.g., NE, NW, SE, and SW).
Location
The position of a point on the Earth's surface expressed by means of a grid (absolute) or in relation to the position of other places (relative).
Map element
One of the components usually found on a map (e.g., direction indicator, key,scale).
Marginal benefit
The change in total benefit resulting from an action.
Marginal cost
The change in total cost resulting from an action.
Market
The interaction of buyers and sellers exchanging goods or services.
Market clearing price
The one price at which quantity supplied equals quantity demanded (alsoreferred to as equilibrium price).
Market economy
An economic system in which decisions on production and consumption are made by individuals acting as buyers and sellers.
Mixed economy
An economic system that combines features of more than one of the traditional, command and market systems.
Monarchy
A system of government headed by a monarch, such as king, queen, shah or sultan whose position is usually inherited.
Multinational corporation
A large corporation that produces and sells its goods and services throughout the world.
Multiple-tier timeline
A timeline that utilizes two or more rows of events, with each row representing a different subject or perspective occurring during the period under study (e.g., a timeline of the 19thcentury with separate rows for political, social, military and technological developments).
Nation
A group of people bound together by a strong sense of shared values and cultural characteristics, including language, religion and common history.
Natural resource
A productive resource supplied by nature (e.g., ores, trees, arable land).
Natural rights
A belief that individuals are naturally endowed with basic human rights that cannot be taken away or given up.
Nonrenewable resource
A finite natural resource that cannot be replaced once it is used (e.g., petroleum, minerals).
Opportunity cost
The value of the next best alternative given up when a choice is made.
Parliamentary democracy
A system of government in which the executive leaders (usually a prime minister and a cabinet) are chosen by and responsible to the legislature (parliament), as well as being members of the legislature, as in Great Britain.
Perspective
A specific point of view in understanding or judging things or events.
Physical characteristic/feature
A natural aspect or quality of the Earth's surface that includes land formations and vegetation zones.
Physical map
A portrayal on a flat surface of the physical features of the Earth (e.g., landforms, elevations).
Pictograph
A diagram or graph using pictured objects to convey ideas or information.
Place
A location having distinctive characteristics that give it meaning and character and distinguish it from other locations.
Political map
A portrayal on a flat surface of the political features of the Earth (e.g., international boundaries, capitals, political subdivisions).
Prejudice
An adverse opinion or judgment formed beforehand or without full knowledge or complete examination of the facts; a preconceived idea or preference.
Presidential democracy
A system of government characterized by a separation of powers between independent and coequal executive and legislative branches such as the United States.
Primary source
An account of an event by someone who was present at the event.
Private sector
The part of the economy that involves transactions of individuals and businesses.
Producer
A person who makes goods and services.
Product
Something produced by human or mechanical effort or by a natural process.
Production
The act of combining natural resources, human resources, capital goods and entrepreneurship to make goods and services.
Productive capacity
The maximum output that an economy can produce without big increases in inflation.
Productive resources
The resources used to make goods and services (i.e., natural resources, human resources, capital goods).
Progressive tax
A tax for which the percentage of income paid in taxes increases as income increases.
Proportional tax
A tax for which the percentage of income paid in taxes remains the same for all income levels.
Public sector
The part of the economy that involves the transactions of the government.
Pull factor
A social, political, economic or environmental attraction of a new area that drew people away from their previous location.
Push factor
A social, political, economic or environmental force that drove people from their previous location to search for a new one.
Racism
The belief that members of one's own race are superior physically, mentally, culturally and morally to members of other races.
Referendum
The process in which a measure passed by a legislature is submitted (referred) to the voters for final approval or rejection or a petition process by which a certain percentage of electors (voters) can order recently passed legislation be submitted to the electors (voters) for approval or rejection.
Region
An area with one or more common characteristics or features, which give it a measure of homogeneity and make it different from surrounding areas.
Regressive tax
A tax for which the percentage of income paid in taxes decreases as income increases.
Relative location
The location of a place in relation to other places (e.g., northwest, downstream).
Reliability
The degree to which something is trustworthy or is suitable to be depended upon.
Renewable resource
A natural resource that can be regenerated if used carefully (e.g., fish, timber).
Representative democracy (republic)
A democratic system of government in which the people exercise political control and participate through elected representatives responsible for promoting the common welfare.
Responsibilities
The conditions or tasks for which a person is accountable or answerable.
Rights
Just claims that belong to a person by law, nature or tradition.
Scale
The relationship or ratio between a linear measurement on a map and the corresponding distance on the Earth's surface.
Scarcity
The lack of sufficient resources to produce all the goods and services that people desire.
Secondary source
An account of an event by someone who was not present at the event.
Services
Actions that are capable of satisfying people's wants.
Specialization
The concentration of production on fewer kinds of goods and services than are consumed.
Standard of living
A person's or group's level of material well-being, as measured by education, housing, health care and nutrition.
Supply
The quantities of a good or service that producers are willing and able to provide at various prices during a given time period.
Territory
An area of land; the land and waters under the jurisdiction of a state, nation or sovereign.
Thematic map
A portrayal on a flat surface of geographic topic (e.g., migration routes, resource locations, population densities).
Theocracy
A system of government headed by one or more religious leaders who claim to rule by divine authority.
Trade-off
The sacrifice of one option for another when a decision is made.
Traditional economy
An economic system in which decisions on production and consumption are based upon customs, beliefs, rituals and habits.
Want
A psychological or physical desire that can be fulfilled through the consumption of goods and services.
Absolute location
The location of a point on the Earth's surface, which can be expressed by a grid reference (e.g., latitude and longitude).
Absolute monarchy
A system of government headed by a monarch as the only source of power controlling all functions of the state.
Artifact
A material object of a culture such as a tool, an article of clothing or a prepared food.
B.C.E.
Before the Common Era (also referred to as B.C.).
Barter
The trade of goods and services for other goods and services without the use of money.
Benefit
That which is received as an improvement or advantage as the result of a decision.
Bicameral
Composed of two legislative chambers.
Bill of attainder:
A legislative act that inflicts punishment upon a person or group without a judicial trial.
C.E.
In the Common Era (also referred to as A.D.).
Capital good
A productive resource consisting of human-made materials needed to produce goods and services; capital goods include buildings, machinery, equipment and tools.
Cardinal directions
The four main points of the compass (north, east, south and west).
Circular flow model
A diagram that shows the flow of economic activity among sectors of the economy.
Colonialism
A system where one country extends its control over foreign dependencies, especially for economic benefit.
Command economy
An economic system in which all decisions on production and consumption are made by a central government.
Comparative advantage
The ability to produce goods or services at a lower opportunity cost than other individuals or countries.
Compass rose
An element of a map used to show direction, usually showing cardinal directions and frequently intermediate direction.
Constitutional monarchy
A system of government headed by a monarch whose powers are delineated in the fundamental law of the state.
Consumer
A person whose wants are satisfied by using goods and services.
Consumer price index
A number used to measure changes in the cost of a standard group of goods and services bought by a typical urban consumer.
Consumption
The purchase and/or use of goods and services.
Coordinate
One of a set of numbers that determines the location of a point in a space.
Cost
An alternative given up as the result of a decision.
Country
A unit of political space, the entire land area of a nation or state.
Credibility
The quality or state of offering reasonable grounds for being believed.
Cultural institution
An established custom, practice or relationship of importance in a society.
Cultural perspective
The complex set of meanings, attitudes, values and ideas belonging to a cultural group.
Cultural practice
A pattern of behavior accepted by a society.
Cultural product
A tangible (e.g., a painting, a cathedral, a mosque, a piece of literature, a pair of chopsticks) or intangible (e.g., an oral tale, a dance, a sacred ritual, a system of education) aspect produced by a cultural group.
Culture
Learned behavior of a group of people, which includes their belief systems and languages, their social relationships, their institutions and organizations, and their material goods such as food, clothing, buildings, tools and machines.
Deforestation
The destruction and removal of forest and its undergrowth by natural or human forces.
Demand
The quantities of a good or service that consumers are willing and able to buy at various prices during a given time period.
Democracy
A system of government in which political control is exercised by all the people, either directly or through their elected representatives.
Desertification
The spread of desert conditions in arid and semiarid regions resulting from a combination of climatic changes and increasing human pressures, such as overgrazing, removal of vegetation and cultivation of marginal land.
Dictatorship
A system of government in which those who rule usually acquire and maintain authority by force and cannot be held responsible to the will of the people.
Diffusion
The spread of people, ideas, technology and products among places.
Direct democracy
A democratic system of government in which the people exercise political control and participate directly in decision-making.
Direction indicator
An element of a map used to show direction, usually labeling north and frequently all cardinal directions.
Discrimination
Unfair treatment of a person or group based on a variety of prejudices.
Division of labor
The separation of the total work required to produce a good or service into individual interrelated tasks.
Due process of law
The right of every citizen to be protected against arbitrary action by the government.
Earth-sun relationship
The position of the earth relative to the sun that helps to determine day and night, seasons and time zones.
Economic growth
An increase in an economy's ability to produce goods and services over time.
Entrepreneur
An individual who organizes the use of productive resources to produce goods or services.
Entrepreneurship
The organization of productive resources by a person willing to take risks to start a business.
Ex post facto law
A legislative act that retroactively makes an act a crime, makes a crime a more serious crime, makes a criminal punishment more severe, or changes trial rules to make conviction easier.
Federalism
A form of political organization in which governmental power is divided between a central government and territorial subdivisions - under the U.S. Constitution, between the national and state governments.
Flow resource
A resource that is neither renewable nor nonrenewable, but must be used when or where it occurs (e.g., running water, wind, sunlight).
Globalization
The act, process or policy of making something worldwide in scope or application.
Goods
Objects that are capable of satisfying people's wants.
Graphic organizers
Written or pictorial representations used to organize information (e.g., flow charts, webs, Venn diagrams, T-charts).
Gross domestic product
The value of all final goods and services produced within a country's borders in a given year.
Habeas corpus (writ of )
A court order demanding that the individual in custody be brought into court and shown the cause for detention. The U.S guarantees habeas corpus. Constitution and can be suspended only in cases of rebellion or invasion.
Human characteristic/feature
An aspect of a place or a quality of the Earth's surface constructed by people including cities, parks, buildings and roads.
Human resource
A productive resource consisting of the talents and skills of human beings that contribute to the production of goods and services.
Imperialism
A policy used by strong countries to gain social, political and economic control over foreign territories.
Initiative
A petition process by which a certain percentage of voters (electors) can put a proposed constitutional amendment or statute on the ballot for popular approval or rejection or submit a proposed statute to a legislative assembly for approval (e.g., Ohio).
Institutionalized discrimination
Unfair treatment of a group based on prejudice and carried out by governments, organizations and companies that limit freedoms in political, economic, social, cultural or any other field of public life.
Institutionalized racism
The use of institutional policies, practices and/or procedures to withhold rights, privileges and opportunities from the race that is believed to be inferior.
Intermediate directions
The points of the compass that fall between north and east, north and west, south and east, south and west (e.g., NE, NW, SE, and SW).
Location
The position of a point on the Earth's surface expressed by means of a grid (absolute) or in relation to the position of other places (relative).
Map element
One of the components usually found on a map (e.g., direction indicator, key,scale).
Marginal benefit
The change in total benefit resulting from an action.
Marginal cost
The change in total cost resulting from an action.
Market
The interaction of buyers and sellers exchanging goods or services.
Market clearing price
The one price at which quantity supplied equals quantity demanded (alsoreferred to as equilibrium price).
Market economy
An economic system in which decisions on production and consumption are made by individuals acting as buyers and sellers.
Mixed economy
An economic system that combines features of more than one of the traditional, command and market systems.
Monarchy
A system of government headed by a monarch, such as king, queen, shah or sultan whose position is usually inherited.
Multinational corporation
A large corporation that produces and sells its goods and services throughout the world.
Multiple-tier timeline
A timeline that utilizes two or more rows of events, with each row representing a different subject or perspective occurring during the period under study (e.g., a timeline of the 19thcentury with separate rows for political, social, military and technological developments).
Nation
A group of people bound together by a strong sense of shared values and cultural characteristics, including language, religion and common history.
Natural resource
A productive resource supplied by nature (e.g., ores, trees, arable land).
Natural rights
A belief that individuals are naturally endowed with basic human rights that cannot be taken away or given up.
Nonrenewable resource
A finite natural resource that cannot be replaced once it is used (e.g., petroleum, minerals).
Opportunity cost
The value of the next best alternative given up when a choice is made.
Parliamentary democracy
A system of government in which the executive leaders (usually a prime minister and a cabinet) are chosen by and responsible to the legislature (parliament), as well as being members of the legislature, as in Great Britain.
Perspective
A specific point of view in understanding or judging things or events.
Physical characteristic/feature
A natural aspect or quality of the Earth's surface that includes land formations and vegetation zones.
Physical map
A portrayal on a flat surface of the physical features of the Earth (e.g., landforms, elevations).
Pictograph
A diagram or graph using pictured objects to convey ideas or information.
Place
A location having distinctive characteristics that give it meaning and character and distinguish it from other locations.
Political map
A portrayal on a flat surface of the political features of the Earth (e.g., international boundaries, capitals, political subdivisions).
Prejudice
An adverse opinion or judgment formed beforehand or without full knowledge or complete examination of the facts; a preconceived idea or preference.
Presidential democracy
A system of government characterized by a separation of powers between independent and coequal executive and legislative branches such as the United States.
Primary source
An account of an event by someone who was present at the event.
Private sector
The part of the economy that involves transactions of individuals and businesses.
Producer
A person who makes goods and services.
Product
Something produced by human or mechanical effort or by a natural process.
Production
The act of combining natural resources, human resources, capital goods and entrepreneurship to make goods and services.
Productive capacity
The maximum output that an economy can produce without big increases in inflation.
Productive resources
The resources used to make goods and services (i.e., natural resources, human resources, capital goods).
Progressive tax
A tax for which the percentage of income paid in taxes increases as income increases.
Proportional tax
A tax for which the percentage of income paid in taxes remains the same for all income levels.
Public sector
The part of the economy that involves the transactions of the government.
Pull factor
A social, political, economic or environmental attraction of a new area that drew people away from their previous location.
Push factor
A social, political, economic or environmental force that drove people from their previous location to search for a new one.
Racism
The belief that members of one's own race are superior physically, mentally, culturally and morally to members of other races.
Referendum
The process in which a measure passed by a legislature is submitted (referred) to the voters for final approval or rejection or a petition process by which a certain percentage of electors (voters) can order recently passed legislation be submitted to the electors (voters) for approval or rejection.
Region
An area with one or more common characteristics or features, which give it a measure of homogeneity and make it different from surrounding areas.
Regressive tax
A tax for which the percentage of income paid in taxes decreases as income increases.
Relative location
The location of a place in relation to other places (e.g., northwest, downstream).
Reliability
The degree to which something is trustworthy or is suitable to be depended upon.
Renewable resource
A natural resource that can be regenerated if used carefully (e.g., fish, timber).
Representative democracy (republic)
A democratic system of government in which the people exercise political control and participate through elected representatives responsible for promoting the common welfare.
Responsibilities
The conditions or tasks for which a person is accountable or answerable.
Rights
Just claims that belong to a person by law, nature or tradition.
Scale
The relationship or ratio between a linear measurement on a map and the corresponding distance on the Earth's surface.
Scarcity
The lack of sufficient resources to produce all the goods and services that people desire.
Secondary source
An account of an event by someone who was not present at the event.
Services
Actions that are capable of satisfying people's wants.
Specialization
The concentration of production on fewer kinds of goods and services than are consumed.
Standard of living
A person's or group's level of material well-being, as measured by education, housing, health care and nutrition.
Supply
The quantities of a good or service that producers are willing and able to provide at various prices during a given time period.
Territory
An area of land; the land and waters under the jurisdiction of a state, nation or sovereign.
Thematic map
A portrayal on a flat surface of geographic topic (e.g., migration routes, resource locations, population densities).
Theocracy
A system of government headed by one or more religious leaders who claim to rule by divine authority.
Trade-off
The sacrifice of one option for another when a decision is made.
Traditional economy
An economic system in which decisions on production and consumption are based upon customs, beliefs, rituals and habits.
Want
A psychological or physical desire that can be fulfilled through the consumption of goods and services.