Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
Both passages say that training in history and law tends to make writing dry and removes real human stories. Historians force students to read formal, abstract books that kill the emotional side of history, and their recent use of the word “narrative” often stays just academic talk rather than true storytelling. Law schools teach a strict, linear style that hides the human story in each case, and talk of adding narrative may change rhetoric more than actual teaching. Still, simply recognizing that stories matter could help make writing in both fields more lively.
Logic Breakdown
Look for explicit, first-person statements that reveal each author's role (e.g., references to teaching or participating in the profession); infer membership from those statements.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage8.The passages most strongly support which one of the following inferences regarding the authors' relationships to the professions they discuss?
Correct Answer
B
Passage A: the author states, 'The perniciousness of the historiographic approach became fully evident to me when I started teaching' and refers to historians' classroom practices—showing the author is a history teacher. Passage B: the author writes, 'Writing is at the heart of the lawyer's craft, and so, like it or not, we who teach the law inevitably teach aspiring lawyers,' and discusses law students and how 'we... impose' constraints—showing the author is a law teacher. Both statements indicate each author is an active member of the profession discussed.
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