Library/PT 105/Sec 3/Reading Comp
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Reading Comprehension

Passage Breakdown

People once said Renaissance women had new intellectual freedom, but scholars like Joan Gibson show a different picture: wealthy girls learned more grammar and literature, yet were kept out of rhetoric and dialectic—the training for public speaking, debate, and professional life—which was mostly taught to men at universities. Women’s schooling aimed to make them good listeners and private companions, not public speakers or political thinkers, so even princesses lacked political training. Because educated women had few public roles, those who were learned were often called odd or masculine or praised only if modest; most of their work was literary (translations, poems, stories, letters) rather than philosophy or political writing.

Logic Breakdown

Identify the passage's explicit contrast—grammar = passive 'audience'/understanding; dialectic and rhetoric = active speaking/argument—and choose the option that shows grammar also teaches productive/expressive skills.

Passage Stimulus

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25.

Which one of the following, if true, would most weaken the distinction between training in grammar and training in dialectic and rhetoric that is drawn in the second-to-last sentence of the second paragraph?

Correct Answer
D
The passage states: Unlike either dialectic or rhetoric, grammar training cast students in the role of an audience, striving to understand authors and teachers. And: Women were to form an audience, not seek one; for them, instruction in speaking was confined to books of courtesy. Choice D (grammar training included exercises designed to improve a student's skill at articulating his or her own ideas) would directly undermine that contrast by showing grammar also taught students to produce and articulate their own ideas, thereby blurring the passage's claimed distinction between passive audience training (grammar) and active speaking/argument training (dialectic and rhetoric).
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