AP Human Geography Unit #7 REVIEW

AP Human Geography Unit #7 REVIEW

9th - 12th Grade

42 Qs

quiz-placeholder

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AP Human Geography Unit #7 REVIEW

AP Human Geography Unit #7 REVIEW

Assessment

Quiz

Geography

9th - 12th Grade

Practice Problem

Medium

Created by

Anne Printz

Used 3K+ times

FREE Resource

About this resource

This AP Human Geography Unit #7 review quiz comprehensively covers industrial location theory and global development patterns, making it appropriate for advanced high school students in grades 11-12. The questions assess students' understanding of Weber's least cost theory, including situation costs, transportation factors, and the relationship between bulk-gaining versus bulk-reducing industries. Students must demonstrate knowledge of economic sectors (primary, secondary, tertiary, quaternary), industrial location factors like break-of-bulk points and agglomeration benefits, and modern practices such as outsourcing. The development geography portion requires mastery of key theories including Rostow's stages of development and Wallerstein's world systems theory, along with critical analysis of development indicators like HDI, GNI, GDP per capita, and the Gender Inequality Index. Students need strong analytical skills to distinguish between core, semi-periphery, and periphery countries, understand regional development patterns, and evaluate how factors like infant mortality, life expectancy, and literacy rates reflect quality of life across different world regions. Created by Anne Printz, a Geography teacher in the US who teaches grades 9-12. This comprehensive review quiz serves multiple instructional purposes throughout the industrial and development geography unit, functioning effectively as a pre-assessment tool to gauge student readiness, a structured review session before the AP exam, or a formative assessment to identify knowledge gaps requiring additional instruction. Teachers can deploy individual question sets as daily warm-ups focusing on specific concepts like Weber's theory or development indicators, while the complete quiz works excellently as homework reinforcement or exam preparation. The questions align with AP Human Geography Course and Exam Description standards, specifically addressing Topic 7.1 (Industrial Location Factors), Topic 7.2 (Industrial Revolution and Economic Sectors), Topic 7.3 (Measures of Development), Topic 7.4 (Women and Development), and Topic 7.5 (Theories of Development), supporting the essential knowledge statements regarding spatial patterns of industrial production, development theory applications, and global economic interdependence that students must master for college-level success.

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42 questions

Show all answers

1.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

30 sec • 1 pt

1.  Situation costs are critical to a firm that wishes to

 avoid skilled laborers.
minimize production costs inside the plant.
 minimize transport costs.
identify unique characteristics of a particular industry.

2.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

1 min • 1 pt

1.  Soda bottling is an example of a

 perishable industry.
 labor intensive industry.
 bulk-gaining industry.
 communications-oriented industry.

3.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

1 min • 1 pt

 The Chicago area became a significant asset for the Western Great Lakes region owing to its steel industries and its

 large market area.

access to the nation's transportation network.
greater distance from raw materials essential for the steel industry.
 skilled labor force.

4.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

1 min • 1 pt

A company which uses more than one mode of transport will often locate near what?

Factory
Consumer Products 
Raw materials 
Break-of-bulk Point

5.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

30 sec • 1 pt

According to Alfred Weber, which one of the following costs of production is the most important factor in locating a new industry?

Labor
Transportation
Raw Materials
Agglomeration Costs

6.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

1 min • 1 pt

AT&T having their call centers stationed in India and China is known as what industry practice? 

Agglomerations
Outsourcing
NAFTA
Special Economic Zones

7.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

1 min • 1 pt

If a product is heavier when it arrives at the factory than when it leaves (trees--> paper, potatoes-->chips) then the factory will be ____________ to the market

closer
farther 

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