Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
Most people note Thurgood Marshall’s court opinions, but this passage explains that when he led the NAACP he changed how public-interest law works: he planned coordinated legal campaigns instead of taking cases at random, picked test cases and sympathetic plaintiffs on purpose, and used social-science testimony to show segregation harmed people. Those simple, practical methods were later copied by many kinds of public-interest groups, though some critics say using nonlegal evidence lets judges justify rulings when legal arguments are weak.
Logic Breakdown
Find the author's overall claim about Marshall's NAACP work—look for statements that describe what he did in the 1940s–50s and the long-term effect of those tactics on public-interest law.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage1.Which one of the following most accurately expresses the main point of the passage?
Correct Answer
B
B restates the passage's main point: Marshall's litigation strategies in the 1940s and 1950s were significant innovations that later became standard tactics for public-interest lawyers. Support from the passage: "he and the NAACP developed innovations that forever changed the landscape of public interest law" and "they have widely adopted his combination of strategies for litigation...the techniques that he honed...have become the norm for U.S. public interest litigation today." These sentences express the central claim about the development and widespread adoption of his strategies.
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