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US History Regents Past Papers 2023-2026 | RevisionTown

Download official NY United States History & Government Regents past papers (2023-2026) with scoring keys, rating guides & essays. Free exam prep.

🇺🇸 New York United States History and Government Regents Exam Past Papers (2023-2026)

Access the complete collection of official New York State United States History and Government Regents examination past papers, scoring keys, comprehensive rating guides (Volume 1 and Volume 2), and conversion charts from June 2023 to January 2026. Essential resources for students studying American history from colonization to the present day.

📋 Exam Format: The US History and Government Regents consists of four parts completed over 3 hours. Part I includes 28 multiple-choice questions (28 credits). Part II contains two Short Essay Questions chosen from two sets (12 credits total). Part IIIA has Short-Answer Scaffold Questions (10 credits). Part IIIB is a Civic Literacy Essay (20 credits). Total: 70 credits.

📚 Complete Past Papers Collection

January 2026
📄 Scoring Materials PDF Scoring Key Excel Scoring Key
⭐ Rating Guide (All Parts) Complete Rating Guide
📊 Conversion Chart PDF Chart Excel Chart
August 2025
📝 Examination Papers Regular Size Large Type
📄 Scoring Materials PDF Scoring Key Excel Scoring Key
⭐ Rating Guide Complete Rating Guide
📊 Conversion Chart PDF Chart Excel Chart
June 2025
📝 Examination Papers Regular Size Large Type
📄 Scoring Materials PDF Scoring Key Excel Scoring Key
⭐ Rating Guide (2 Volumes) Vol 1: Part II Essays Vol 2: Part IIIA & IIIB
📊 Conversion Chart PDF Chart Excel Chart
January 2025
📝 Examination Papers Regular Size Large Type
📄 Scoring Materials PDF Scoring Key Excel Scoring Key
⭐ Rating Guide (2 Volumes) Vol 1: Part II Essays Vol 2: Part IIIA & IIIB
📊 Conversion Chart PDF Chart Excel Chart
August 2024
📝 Examination Papers Regular Size Large Type
📄 Scoring Materials PDF Scoring Key Excel Scoring Key
⭐ Rating Guide (2 Volumes) Vol 1: Part II Essays Vol 2: Part IIIA & IIIB
📊 Conversion Chart PDF Chart Excel Chart
June 2024
📝 Examination Papers Regular Size Large Type
📄 Scoring Materials PDF Scoring Key Excel Scoring Key
⭐ Rating Guide (2 Volumes) Vol 1: Part II Essays Vol 2: Part IIIA & IIIB
📊 Conversion Chart PDF Chart Excel Chart
⚠️ Bengali Edition Scoring Clarification (Q35)
January 2024
📝 Examination Papers Regular Size Large Type
📄 Scoring Materials PDF Scoring Key Excel Scoring Key
⭐ Rating Guide (2 Volumes) Vol 1: Part II Essays Vol 2: Part IIIA & IIIB
📊 Conversion Chart PDF Chart Excel Chart
⚠️ Multiple Language Editions Notice (Essay Directions)
August 2023
📝 Examination Papers Regular Size Large Type
📄 Scoring Materials PDF Scoring Key Excel Scoring Key
⭐ Rating Guide (2 Volumes) Vol 1: Part II Essays Vol 2: Part IIIA & IIIB
📊 Conversion Chart PDF Chart Excel Chart
June 2023
📝 Examination Papers Regular Size Large Type
📄 Scoring Materials PDF Scoring Key Excel Scoring Key
⭐ Rating Guide (2 Volumes) Vol 1: Part II Essays Vol 2: Part IIIA & IIIB
📊 Conversion Chart & Info PDF Chart Excel Chart Info Booklet

🎯 Key Content Areas in US History

Colonial Period & Revolution (1607-1789)

10-15% of content

Colonial development, causes of the American Revolution, Declaration of Independence, Revolutionary War, Articles of Confederation, Constitutional Convention, and ratification debates (Federalists vs. Anti-Federalists).

Constitution & Early Republic (1789-1848)

15-20% of content

Constitutional principles (federalism, separation of powers, checks and balances), Bill of Rights, Washington's precedents, political parties, territorial expansion, Manifest Destiny, Jacksonian democracy, and reform movements.

Civil War & Reconstruction (1848-1877)

15-20% of content

Sectional tensions over slavery, Missouri Compromise, Compromise of 1850, Kansas-Nebraska Act, Dred Scott decision, Lincoln's election, Civil War causes and consequences, Emancipation Proclamation, and Reconstruction policies.

Industrialization & Progressive Era (1865-1920)

15-20% of content

Industrial growth, immigration, urbanization, labor movements, Populism, imperialism, Spanish-American War, Progressive reforms, trust-busting, women's suffrage, and World War I involvement.

Prosperity, Depression & WWII (1920-1945)

15-20% of content

Roaring Twenties, Great Depression causes, New Deal programs, isolationism vs. interventionism, Pearl Harbor, World War II home front and military campaigns, Holocaust, and atomic weapons.

Cold War & Civil Rights (1945-1990)

20-25% of content

Containment policy, Korean and Vietnam Wars, McCarthyism, Civil Rights Movement (Brown v. Board, MLK, Civil Rights Acts), Great Society, counterculture, Watergate, Reagan era, and Cold War end.

Contemporary America (1990-Present)

10-15% of content

Post-Cold War foreign policy, globalization, technological revolution, 9/11 and War on Terror, economic challenges, political polarization, and ongoing debates over civil liberties and government roles.

Constitutional Principles & Civic Literacy

Critical throughout exam

Understanding federalism, checks and balances, separation of powers, Bill of Rights applications, Supreme Court landmark cases, civic participation, constitutional amendments, and analyzing primary source documents.

📖 How to Use These Past Papers Effectively

  1. Practice under timed conditions: Complete full exams within the 3-hour time limit, allocating appropriate time for each part to build pacing skills.
  2. Master both essay formats: Study rating guides to understand the Short Essay format (Part II) and the Civic Literacy Essay format (Part IIIB), noting rubric requirements and scoring criteria.
  3. Practice document analysis skills: Work on interpreting various primary sources (speeches, laws, cartoons, graphs, photographs) and incorporating evidence into written responses.
  4. Create chronological timelines: Organize major events, presidencies, legislation, and Supreme Court cases by era to understand cause-effect relationships and historical connections.
  5. Review rating guide exemplars: Study sample student responses at different score levels to identify what distinguishes high-scoring essays from lower-scoring ones.
  6. Focus on constitutional principles: Understand how core constitutional concepts (federalism, checks and balances, individual rights) apply across different time periods and events.
  7. Build a Supreme Court cases bank: Create flashcards for landmark decisions (Marbury v. Madison, Brown v. Board, Roe v. Wade, etc.) with dates, key facts, and constitutional significance.
  8. Practice scaffold questions: Work through Part IIIA short-answer questions to develop skills in brief, focused responses that directly address the question using document evidence.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

What is the passing score for the US History Regents?
Students need a scaled score of 65 or higher (out of 100) to pass the United States History and Government Regents exam. The conversion from raw score (out of 70 credits) to scaled score varies by administration and is shown in the conversion chart.
How long is the US History Regents examination?
The United States History and Government Regents exam is 3 hours long. Students have the full three hours to complete all four parts: Part I (multiple-choice), Part II (short essays), Part IIIA (scaffold questions), and Part IIIB (civic literacy essay).
What is the difference between Part II and Part IIIB essays?
Part II contains two Short Essay Questions (6 credits each) where you analyze a historical issue using provided documents. Part IIIB is a longer Civic Literacy Essay (20 credits) where you develop an extended argument about constitutional or civic principles using multiple documents and outside knowledge.
Can I choose which Short Essay questions to answer?
Yes, in Part II you choose ONE essay from Set 1 and ONE essay from Set 2. Each set typically contains 2-3 questions covering different historical topics, allowing you to select questions where you feel most confident.
What are scaffold questions in Part IIIA?
Scaffold questions are short-answer questions (1-3 sentences each) based on provided documents. They help "scaffold" or build toward the Part IIIB essay by guiding your analysis of documents and introducing the civic literacy topic you'll write about.
Do I need to memorize dates for the US History Regents?
While exact dates aren't always required, you should know approximate time periods and chronological order of major events. Understanding when events occurred relative to each other helps demonstrate cause-effect relationships and historical context in essays.
Should I use outside information in my essays?
Yes, especially in Part IIIB. While you must cite evidence from provided documents, incorporating relevant outside historical information (events, people, laws, court cases) strengthens your arguments and can earn you higher scores on the rubric.
What should I write about in the Civic Literacy Essay?
The Civic Literacy Essay typically asks you to analyze how constitutional principles, rights, or democratic processes have been applied, challenged, or changed throughout US history. Use the documents provided in Part IIIA to develop your argument, supported by outside historical knowledge.
How are essays scored on the US History Regents?
Essays are scored using rubrics that evaluate your thesis/argument, use of document evidence, incorporation of outside information, analysis quality, and writing organization. Part II essays are worth 6 credits each; Part IIIB is worth 20 credits (divided into content and writing subcategories).
Can I write essays in pencil?
No, all constructed responses and essays must be written in dark blue or black ink pen. Only Part I multiple-choice answers should be completed in pencil. Essays written in pencil may not be scored.

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