Library/PT 107/Sec 2/Reading Comp
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Reading Comprehension

Passage Breakdown

Many tribal communities want to save their traditional languages, but these languages can be lost when the dominant culture changes how people live. To teach children, communities first record the grammar and make lessons that go from simple to harder— the Northern Utes spent two years doing this. Writing an oral language is hard because some sounds don’t match letters and different dialects exist; the Northern Utes allowed varied spellings as long as the meaning was clear, and children learned quickly. Some say writing languages down isn’t needed because they were always spoken, but others do it now because oral traditions are fading.

Logic Breakdown

Scan the passage for its overall sequence: identify where the problem is stated, where a solution and its implementation are proposed, where obstacles are discussed, and where an objection/challenge is introduced and answered.

Passage Stimulus

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12.

Which one of the following most accurately describes the organization of the passage?

Correct Answer
C
The passage first identifies the problem of language loss ("Tribal communities in North America believe that their traditional languages are valuable resources that must be maintained... these traditional languages can fall into disuse when some of the effects of the majority culture on tribal life serve as barriers"). It then proposes a solution and describes how to implement it ("Before any community can systematically and formally teach a traditional language to its younger members, it must first document the language's grammar"; "The grammatical information is then arranged in sequence from the simpler to the more complex types of usage, and methods are devised to present the sequence in ways that will be most useful and appropriate to the culture"). The passage next discusses obstacles to implementing this solution ("Certain obstacles can stand in the way of developing these teaching methods... One is the difficulty... when it attempts to write down elements (particularly the spellings of words) of a language that has been primarily oral for centuries"; "Another obstacle is dialect"). Finally, the passage introduces a challenge to the practice of writing languages down and then counters it ("It has been argued that the attempt to write down traditional languages is misguided and unnecessary..." followed by "Defenders of the practice counter that they are writing down their languages precisely because of a general decline in oral traditions, but they concede that languages could be preserved in their oral form if a community made every effort..."). This sequence—problem, solution, implementation method, obstacles, challenge and rebuttal—matches choice C.
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