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Career DevelopmentObjective Test

Political Science

US government, political theory, comparative politics, and international relations.

About this event

Political Science covers US government, political theory, and the basics of comparative politics and international relations. Expect questions on the Constitution, the three branches of government, civil liberties and civil rights, elections and political parties, foundational political theory, and how the US interacts with other nations. It overlaps closely with an AP US Government course and suits members interested in law, public policy, or government careers.

Test day

What to expect

60 minutes, 100 questions

You have 60 minutes to answer 100 multiple-choice questions. Each question has four options (A, B, C, D) with exactly one correct answer. There is no penalty for wrong answers -- always fill in your best guess.

Computer-graded, instant results

Tests are machine-scored. Questions are drawn from the official FBLA topic outline for this event, distributed proportionally across all topic areas. Expect a mix of recall (definitions, formulas), application (scenario-based), and analysis questions.

Top scorers advance

The highest-scoring competitors at each regional advance to the state competition. State winners compete at the National Leadership Conference (NLC). Study the official FBLA topic outline -- it lists the exact subject areas and their approximate weight on the test.

What's on the test

US ConstitutionBranches of governmentCivil liberties & rightsElections & partiesPolitical theoryInternational relations basics

Study resources

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