Library/PT 127/Sec 4/Reading Comp
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Reading Comprehension

Passage Breakdown

For most of the 1800s French girls were taught in traditional, often religious ways and not given equal schooling. After the 1789 Revolution, two reform plans tried to change this: one wanted public schools for both sexes but made girls leave at age eight to learn household skills, and the other pushed equal, mixed schools but still defined women mainly as mothers. Neither plan became law because of strong cultural and political resistance, but politicians in the 1880s used those early ideas to justify real reforms—creating public secondary schools for women, removing school fees, and making attendance compulsory.

Logic Breakdown

Look to the passage's description of the 1880s reforms (public secondary schools for women; abolished fees; compulsory attendance) and infer what those specific measures imply about the legislators' priorities.

Passage Stimulus

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22.

It can be inferred from the passage that the French legislators who passed new educational laws in the early 1880s were

Correct Answer
C
'Nearly a century later, in the early 1880s, French legislators recalled the earlier proposals in their justification of new laws that founded public secondary schools for women, abolished fees for education, and established compulsory attendance for all students.' Founding public schools for women indicates concern with sex equality, while abolishing fees and instituting compulsory attendance show an effort to broaden access across economic classes, supporting inference C.
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