6. Integration was the rule in the Northern states. FALSE
-While the North was always more open and progressive in its policies towards African-Americans, it was far from being inclusive. Discrimination and segregation, although attenuated, were also lived in the north.
7. Jim Crow laws kept African Americans from any kind of real equality. TRUE
-These laws advocated racial segregation in all public facilities by de jure mandate under the slogan "separate but equal" and applied to African-Americans and other non-white ethnic groups in the aforementioned states of the United States.
8. Making school attendance mandatory helped more people become literate. TRUE
-By establishing a compulsory education system, it was guaranteed that all the population had access to elementary education, which meant that more people, even the lower classes, could be literate.
9. People in America shared a mass culture when they were able to see the same movies, sporting events, and entertainment. TRUE
-The American culture is the result of a mixture of many migratory currents that came to the country from its very creation. African Americans, English, Italians, Irish, Germans, Mexicans, Asians, all have contributed to the creation of an American culture, shared in large part by the population of the country.
10. African Americans were the only people who were discriminated against. FALSE
-Discrimination in the United States has been manifested mostly among Americans of Anglo-Saxon origin against people of African, Asian, Italian, Polish, Native American, Latin American, and other immigrants in general.