Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
Amelia Wallace Vernon found strong evidence that Africans brought rice and rice-growing skills to early America and that African Americans kept growing rice into the early 1900s. She says that during slavery owners ate rice and let or made enslaved people grow it on land not used for cotton, and that rice work gave enslaved people some independent time. After slavery, growing rice didn’t make much money, so Vernon argues people cleared and cared for land mainly because working the land made it feel like home and maybe to symbolically claim land they had been promised.
Logic Breakdown
Scan the passage for the author's evaluative language about Vernon's work (look for praise, acceptance, or skepticism). Note words and phrases the author uses to describe Vernon's discoveries and theories to determine overall attitude.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage23.Which one of the following most completely and accurately describes the author's attitude toward Vernon's study?
Correct Answer
B
The author presents Vernon's work positively and accepts her conclusions as plausible. The passage says Vernon's study "helps to dispel this notion" and calls one finding "especially compelling," indicating approval of Vernon’s evidence and results. The author also reports that Vernon "proposes two intriguing answers" and recounts her documentary and interview evidence without criticizing it. Although the author uses cautious verbs like "suggests" and "speculates" when discussing some explanations, that wording signals careful reporting rather than rejection. Altogether these passages support that the author is admiring of Vernon's accomplishments and generally receptive to her theories.
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