Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
The passage compares traditional communities—people who live near each other and rely on one another—with online discussion groups called computer conferences. Supporters say these online groups can act like communities because members share interests, follow simple polite rules, and sometimes give real emotional support. Critics counter that they’re not full communities because they exclude people without computer access and are made up of people who choose to join, so they lack the accidental variety of neighborhoods and might weaken local ties.
Logic Breakdown
Treat this as a function question: note the sentence opens the final paragraph as a concession acknowledging similarity, then the paragraph explains why conferences nonetheless fall short.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage3.The author's statement that "conferences can be both respectful and supportive " (first sentence of the last paragraph) serves primarily to
Correct Answer
E
The sentence is a concession that acknowledges a similarity between conferences and communities: it literally states "conferences can be both respectful and supportive." This acknowledgment is supported by earlier text where advocates claim conferences "function as communities" and where the passage notes that "people often form genuine, trusting relationships, even offering advice and support during personal crises." Therefore the sentence primarily acknowledges that computer conferences can involve interactions similar to those in an actual community.
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