The
U.S. Citizenship Test Just Got Harder. Would You Pass?
LAist: 12.02.2020 by Gina Pollack
Is
there a better, more appropriate way to end 2020 than by making the U.S.
naturalization test just a little more punishing?
That's
what the Trump Administration did last month, when U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services
(USCIS) announced it was revising the civics portion of the test to add 28 more
potential questions — questions that are slightly more subjective, and
therefore more difficult to answer, than before.
Those questions went into effect Tuesday, Dec. 1.
Here's
how it works: Applicants are given a list of 128 potential questions in
advance. When they sit down for the test, a USCIS officer will ask them 20
questions from that list. The whole process is verbal — no multiple choice, no
writing down your answers. You need to get 12 answers right to pass.U S Citizenship Test
How
is that different than before? The old version of the test had 100 potential
questions — meaning 28 fewer flashcards to study. The officer would ask 10
questions and you'd have to get six right to pass.
"The
new test increases the number of questions that applicants must study from 100
to 128, it doubles the number of questions they must answer correctly to pass
the test, and it requires a much higher level of English language fluency to
pass," said Rosalind Gold, Chief Public Policy Officer for the National Association of Latino Elected and Appointed
Officials (NALEO) Educational Fund, an L.A.-based non-profit that works on
immigration and naturalization issues.
The
questions are also more slightly more subjective than before. It's subtle, but
makes a difference. For example, one of the new questions is:
═════════►
Who does a U.S. Senator represent?
If
you're thinking the answer is "the people in their state" or
"all of the people in their state," you'd be right ... on the
previous version of the test.
If
you gave that answer today, you'd get the question wrong (!!).
That's
because the Trump Administration changed the correct answer to "citizens
of their state," which, Gold from NALEO says, is factually incorrect.
"Senators represent everyone in the state, not just citizens," she told LAist. READ MORE ➤➤
1 comment:
@ProLiteracy 6h
This week, the USCIS announced it will reinstate the 2008 version of the citizenship civics test, effective March 1, 2021.
This reverses the changes implemented at the end of last year that made the process lengthier and more difficult. Flag of United States
Learn more https://hubs.la/H0Hglw40
Post a Comment