Library/PT 153/Sec 4/Reading Comp
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Reading Comprehension

Passage Breakdown

Many Native American languages have disappeared or are close to disappearing because past U.S. policies forced people to use English, but recently there has been a comeback through university programs, recordings, and especially native-language radio. Radio is helpful because these cultures pass language on by speaking, yet the Internet pushes people toward English, so radio must do more than air boring lessons. Programs that use elders’ speech, word games that mix English and the native tongue, songs, and other culturally rooted material are most effective, and where stations use these methods they have helped revive some languages.

Logic Breakdown

Check the fourth paragraph for the author's explicit list of 'effective programming' (recordings of elders; word games mixing English and native languages; speeches by fluent speakers; integrating traditional songs). The correct choice will be the option that does NOT match that list and instead describes lesson-style rule-teaching the author criticizes.

Passage Stimulus

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13.

Each of the following is an example of the kind of native language radio programming advocated by the author in the fourth paragraph except:

Correct Answer
D
D is correct because the author explicitly rejects lesson-style programming as often 'tak[ing] the form of lessons, which can be unengaging and distant from the cultural contexts that give necessary and subtle meaning to the words.' By contrast the author recommends programs that 'include things like recordings of elders speaking the native language, word games that mix English and native languages, and speeches by fluent speakers' and also endorses 'integrating traditional songs into the presentation of a native language.' Option D ('a program that teaches the rules of both grammar and idiomatic usage') describes didactic rule-based lessons rather than the oral-tradition–based programming the author advocates, so it is the exception.
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