Library/PT 115/Sec 1/Reading Comp
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Reading Comprehension

Passage Breakdown

Thurgood Marshall’s victory in Brown v. Board of Education came after sixteen years of earlier Supreme Court cases that tested legal tactics and gradually weakened racial discrimination. When he joined the NAACP in 1936, the group was split between suing to make unequal facilities fairer and arguing that the idea of separate but equal was impossible; Marshall thought the latter would eventually win but first brought practical equality cases to show how segregation caused real harm. His 1948 win in Shelley v. Kraemer used social-science evidence to show that many private acts added up to systemic discrimination, and that approach helped convince the Court to reject segregation in Brown.

Logic Breakdown

Approach: Ask what role paragraph 3 plays in the passage—does it give an example that supports the claim in paragraph 1 that earlier cases were forerunners of Brown? Relevant supporting sentences: "Some legal scholars claim that the cases he presented to the court in the sixteen years before his successful argument for desegregation of public schools were necessary forerunners of that case: preliminary tests of legal strategies and early erosions of the foundations of discrimination against African Americans that paved the way for success in Brown." and "Marshall later used this strategy when arguing against individual schools' enrollment restrictions in Brown; scholars argue that his successful use of the strategy in Shelley prepared the court to accept such data as convincing evidence for finding \"separate but equal\" insupportable on its face."

Passage Stimulus

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11.

The function of the third paragraph is to

Correct Answer
A
Paragraph 3 supplies a concrete example (Shelley v. Kraemer) and explicitly links that example to Brown: it reports that Marshall "convinced the court to outlaw housing discrimination" in Shelley and that "his successful use of the strategy in Shelley prepared the court to accept such data ... for finding \"separate but equal\" insupportable on its face." This directly supports the paragraph-1 claim that Marshall's earlier cases were forerunners that helped pave the way for Brown, so the third paragraph's function is to provide support for the view presented in the first paragraph.
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