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Questions
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Unit
Exams
100

What is a common phrase that contains the word paradigm?

  • paradigm cause
  • paradigm effect
  • paradigm shift 
  • paradigm move

Paradigm Shift

100

“When I say it is imperative, I mean that you _[blank]_ do it.”


are allowed to

must

can

are going to

must

100

If you want to get more information about carcinogenic substances, what is the best type of reference to use?

  • legal volume
  • history textbook
  • medical dictionary,
  • auto manual


medical dictionary

100

Which word shares a root with the word commemorate?

  • Memory and commemorate both come from memor, meaning “mindful.”
  • Mortal and commemorate both come from mor, which means “death.
  • Communicate and commemorate both come from comm, which means “common.”
  • Ratio and commemorate both come from rat, which means “amount.”
  • Memory and commemorate both come from memor, meaning “mindful.”
100

Which sentence uses gibe correctly?

  • An unhappy spectator yelled a gibe at the goalkeeper.,
  • Years ago, musicians talked about gibe more than they do now.
  • Your ideas about the party do not gibe with mine.
  • It is important that Mona’s plans for the picnic gibe with ours.
  • An unhappy spectator yelled a gibe at the goalkeeper.,
200

How does this section develop the author’s claim that today’s Eastern US forests look very little like they did in the past?

(Select all that apply.)

Natural Beauty at Risk

  • The author mentions that sugar maple and eastern hemlock trees will lose habitat as climates change.
  • The author contrasts the amounts and locations of the tree cover in the past with the amounts and locations of present tree cover.
  • The author discusses causes of damage to forests done from the time of the first European settlers forward to today.
  • The author predicts that precipitation may increase yet become more variable, increasing the probability of drought.
  • The author contrasts the amounts and locations of the tree cover in the past with the amounts and locations of present tree cover.
  • The author discusses causes of damage to forests done from the time of the first European settlers forward to today.
200

Warmer winters and longer, more intense melt seasons have increased the rate of glacial retreat in Alaska’s Glacier Bay and Kenai Fjords National Parks. It is estimated by scientists with the U.S. Geological Survey that by 2030, many of the glaciers in Montana’s Glacier National Park will be completely gone.

At parks like Bandelier National Monument, higher temperatures and drought have brought high mortality to the pinon pines as infestations of bark beetles have expanded to higher elevations and new ranges. At Everglades National Park, increasing sea level may overwhelm the mangrove communities that filter out saltwater and maintain the freshwater wetlands. At Canyon de Chelly National Monument, Mesa Verde and Rocky Mountain National Parks, floods and fires have damaged historic structures and are threatening the loss of archeological sites.

Which options show cause-and-effect structure?

(Select all that apply.)

Climate Change in National Parks

  • At parks like Bandelier National Monument, higher temperatures and drought have brought high mortality to the pinon pines as infestations of bark beetles have expanded to higher elevations and new ranges.
  • Warmer winters and longer, more intense melt seasons have increased the rate of glacial retreat in Alaska’s Glacier Bay and Kenai Fjords National Parks.
  • It is estimated by scientists with the U.S. Geological Survey that by 2030, many of the glaciers in Montana’s Glacier National Park will be completely gone.
  • At Everglades National Park, increasing sea level may overwhelm the mangrove communities that filter out saltwater and maintain the freshwater wetlands.
  • Warmer winters and longer, more intense melt seasons have increased the rate of glacial retreat in Alaska’s Glacier Bay and Kenai Fjords National Parks.
  • Warmer winters and longer, more intense melt seasons have increased the rate of glacial retreat in Alaska’s Glacier Bay and Kenai Fjords National Parks.
200

Which options best identify effective strategies to assess the credibility of your resources?

(Select all that apply.)

  • Determine the consistency of the information presented in the online resources to determine if there are any errors in the writing.
  • Ask questions about the material presented in the online resources to decide if they accurately address the topic of interest.
  • Do research about the authors of the online resources to decide if their expertise relates directly to the topic of interest.
  • Analyze the sources referenced in the online resources to determine if they are from reputable authors.
  • Do research about the authors of the online resources to decide if their expertise relates directly to the topic of interest.
  • Analyze the sources referenced in the online resources to determine if they are from reputable authors.
200

Which statement best describes how Figure 3 and the information in “Natural Beauty at Risk” show the impact of climate change on Yellowstone National Park?

Natural Beauty at Risk

  • Special graphical maps show changes in some parks, like Yellowstone National Park. Using these maps shows that climate change will cause temperatures to keep increasing, altering the types of trees found in Yellowstone, including new forests made up of Rocky Mountain Subalpine and Montane Conifer Forest, and Great Basin Montane Scrub.
  • High-resolution images show that forests in Yellowstone National Park consisting of spruce and fir trees adapted to warmer summertime temperatures. However, as temperatures begin to rise, these forests will be replaced by Subalpine and Montane Conifer forests, woodlands, and shrub grasslands.
  • High-resolution images show changes within individual sections of Yellowstone National Park. These images show that climate changes will cause Rocky Mountain Subalpine Conifer Forest to be replaced with Great Basin Conifer Woodland within the next 100 years. This is a huge change to the primary vegetation in Yellowstone.
  • In national parks, such as Yellowstone National Park, high-resolution maps show how warmer temperatures are impacting the makeup of the forests and landscape. Because of climate change, Great Basin Conifer Woodland and Desert Scrub will be replaced, within the next decade, by Rocky Mountain Subalpine and Montane Conifer Forest. This will change Yellowstone forever.
  • High-resolution images show changes within individual sections of Yellowstone National Park. These images show that climate changes will cause Rocky Mountain Subalpine Conifer Forest to be replaced with Great Basin Conifer Woodland within the next 100 years. This is a huge change to the primary vegetation in Yellowstone.
200

In Yellowstone National Park, for example, spruce and fir forests have adapted to and thrived in a climate where summertime temperatures rarely surpass 90 degrees Fahrenheit (32° Celsius). But 30 years from now, if climate models are right, the park will see an average of two weeks every summer with temperatures surpassing 90°F. Will the spruce and fir trees suffer? Will they adapt and thrive? Will they migrate, seedling by seedling, up to higher altitudes and cooler temperatures? If trees that are already adapted to warmer temperatures take hold, will spruce and fir be able to compete?

What are the author’s purposes for including the four rhetorical questions at the end of the excerpt? 

(Select all that apply.)

Natural Beauty at Risk

  • The author wants readers to see exactly what is in store for the spruce and fir in Yellowstone National Park.
  • The author wants readers to feel the frustration that scientists feel about the uncertain future of the spruce and fir in Yellowstone National Park.
  • The author wants readers to understand the complexity of the issues relating to the spruce and fir in Yellowstone National Park.
  • The author wants readers to know that the answers to the questions about the spruce and fir in Yellowstone National Park will be addressed in later paragraphs.
  • The author wants readers to feel the frustration that scientists feel about the uncertain future of the spruce and fir in Yellowstone National Park.
  • The author wants readers to understand the complexity of the issues relating to the spruce and fir in Yellowstone National Park.
300

Read the excerpt from the TED Talks presentation “I Am the Son of a Terrorist.”

Another major turning point came when I found a summer job at Busch Gardens, an amusement park. There, I was exposed to people from all sorts of faiths and cultures, and that experience proved to be fundamental to the development of my character. Most of my life, I’d been taught that homosexuality was a sin, and by extension, that all gay people were a negative influence. As chance would have it, I had the opportunity to work with some of the gay performers at a show there, and soon found that many were the kindest, least judgmental people I had ever met.

Which option identifies the rhetorical feature used to highlight Zak Ebrahim’s misconception about being homosexual?

irony

antithesis

diction

understatement 

antithesis

300

So why would I out myself and potentially put myself in danger? Well, that’s simple. I do it in the hopes that perhaps someone someday who is compelled to use violence may hear my story and realize that there is a better way, that although I had been subjected to this violent, intolerant ideology, that I did not become fanaticized.

Which option most accurately explains Zak Ebrahim’s purpose in including this passage?

I Am the Son of a Terrorist

to explain his viewpoint that even people who commit violent crimes are not truly evil

to share with the public the idea that people must take responsibility for the actions of those in their family if their crimes could have been prevented

to provide a balanced viewpoint about his father’s life by sharing his side of the story and what could have been done to save his father

to share with the public the idea that those raised with violence can choose to reject it and to act with tolerance

to share with the public the idea that those raised with violence can choose to reject it and to act with tolerance

300

Denial, which psychologists call the “incredulity response,” is almost universal, even among individuals with excellent training. David Klinger, a retired Los Angeles police officer, describes in his book Into the Kill Zone that while moonlighting as a bank guard he saw “three masked figures with assault rifles run through the foyer of the bank.” His first thought was that the local SWAT team was practicing. His second was that they were dressed up for Halloween.

How does the author use this story as a rhetorical strategy to support his perspective?

  • to demonstrate his own expertise in having done extensive research into the concept of denial
  • to explain why police officers always respond to emergency situations as they should  ,
  • to describe a tragic situation that will appeal to his readers’ emotions
  • to show his readers that denial is such a common human response that it even occurs in experienced emergency personnel

to demonstrate his own expertise in having done extensive research into the concept of denial

to show his readers that denial is such a common human response that it even occurs in experienced emergency personnel  

300

Which sections of “Everyday Survival” convey the author’s attitude by citing real-life experiences and expert findings and research?

(Select all that apply.)

Everyday Survival

  • 11. Know Plan B
  • 5. Think Positive,
  • 2. Control Your Destiny
  • 7. Don’t Celebrate the Summit
  • 11. Know Plan B
  • 5. Think Positive,
  • 2. Control Your Destiny
300

Be careful who you go into the backcountry with. Some people just have it stamped on their foreheads: “I am going to die in a wilderness accident.” But to recognize this stamp, you must pay attention to some very subtle signals. Researchers such as Elaine Hatfield at the University of Hawaii and Paul Ekman at the National Institutes of Health have studied nonverbal communication since the 1960s and concluded that it conveys essential information, which we ignore at our peril. It can be anything from a gesture to a slight change in facial expression. Most people will respond to such signals by feeling either comfortable or ill at ease with someone for no known reason. In a culture like ours, which puts more emphasis on logic and reason, nonverbal signs are easy to dismiss.

Which information in the excerpt could be seen as irrelevant?

“Most people will respond to such signals by feeling either comfortable or ill at ease with someone for no known reason” is irrelevant to the rest of the paragraph, which is about the ability to dismiss feelings.

“But to recognize this stamp, you must pay attention to some very subtle signals” is irrelevant to the rest of the paragraph, which is about being aware of obvious signs of danger.

“In a culture like ours, which puts more emphasis on logic and reason, nonverbal signs are easy to dismiss” is irrelevant to the rest of the paragraph, which is about reading facial expressions.

“Be careful who you go into the backcountry with” is irrelevant to the rest of the paragraph, which is about detecting nonverbal signs.

“Be careful who you go into the backcountry with” is irrelevant to the rest of the paragraph, which is about detecting nonverbal signs.

400

The Canary Islands are a popular vacation spot for people from Finland, a chain of seven islands off the coast of Africa.

What is the best way to rewrite the sentence?

The Canary Islands are a chain of seven islands off the coast of Africa, a popular vacation spot for people from Finland.

A popular vacation spot for people from Finland, a chain of seven islands off the coast of Africa are the Canary Islands.

The Canary Islands, a chain of seven islands off the coast of Africa, are a popular vacation spot for people from Finland.

A chain of islands off the coast of Africa, a popular vacation spot for people from Finland, are the Canary Islands. 

The Canary Islands, a chain of seven islands off the coast of Africa, are a popular vacation spot for people from Finland.

400

Read the Deny Denial section of “Everyday Survival.”

How is the word denial used in this section of the text?

Everyday Survival

  • It is used to explain why individuals tend to look at the positive rather than the negative even in a stressful or dangerous situation.
  • It is used to describe the different circumstances people get themselves into so that they can avoid making logical decisions.
  • It is used to illustrate the various environments that affect the decision-making of people trying to survive a potentially disastrous event.
  • It is used to convey why individuals want things to improve even though their actions are exactly the opposite of what they should be doing in a bad situation.
  • It is used to explain why individuals tend to look at the positive rather than the negative even in a stressful or dangerous situation.
400

Although I still believe that equipment and training are good to have, most survival writing leaves out the essential human element in the equation. That’s why I’ve concentrated my efforts on learning about the hearts and minds of survivors.

Which options show connotative phrases from the excerpt?

(Select all that apply.)

Everyday Survival

  • I still believe
  • equipment and training
  • hearts and minds
  • essential human element
  • hearts and minds
  • essential human element
400

As a black person, I am no stranger to race prejudice. But the truth is that in the political world I have been far oftener discriminated against because I am a woman than because I am black.

Prejudice against blacks is becoming unacceptable although it will take years to eliminate it. But it is doomed because, slowly, white America is beginning to admit that it exists. Prejudice against women is still acceptable. There is very little understanding yet of the immorality involved in double pay scales and the classification of most of the better jobs as “for men only.”

The Fourteenth Amendment states

All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the state wherein they reside. No state shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States; nor shall any state deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.

How does Chisholm incorporate the constitutional principle based on the Fourteenth Amendment in the excerpt?

Equal Rights for Women

by explaining how life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness are not shared by all citizens

by comparing the unequal treatment shared by African Americans and women

by conveying the idea that everyone must live by the words stated in the Constitution

by showing that the government has made no effort to enforce the rights of all people

by comparing the unequal treatment shared by African Americans and women

400

What textual evidence from “Virtual Reality Gets Real” best supports the idea that virtual reality can change people’s perceptions?

(Select all that apply.)

Virtual Reality Gets Real

  • Of course, there could be unintended consequences. Already people are developing vision problems and vitamin‑D deficiencies—not to mention obesity and diabetes—because they spend too much time in front of screens. What might a flawlessly rendered virtual world mean for our health?
  • Much of the excitement about virtual reality has come from the gaming community. Who wouldn’t want to experience a game so completely? But gaming is just the start. At Sony, Marks has worked with NASA to conjure the experience of standing on Mars—a view that could help scientists better understand the planet.
  • … [I]f your avatar is taller than you are in real life, you become more confident. If you have a particularly attractive avatar, you become friendlier. If you’re young and you have an avatar that is a senior citizen, you save more money. These changes last even after you leave the virtual realm.… 
  • … [O]ur brains are easily fooled when what we see on a display tracks our head movements. “We have a reptilian instinct that responds as if it’s real: Don’t step off that cliff; this battle is scary,” Jeremy Bailenson, the founding director of Stanford’s Virtual Human Interaction Lab, told me. “The brain hasn’t evolved to tell you it’s not real.”
  • … [I]f your avatar is taller than you are in real life, you become more confident. If you have a particularly attractive avatar, you become friendlier. If you’re young and you have an avatar that is a senior citizen, you save more money. These changes last even after you leave the virtual realm.… 
  • … [O]ur brains are easily fooled when what we see on a display tracks our head movements. “We have a reptilian instinct that responds as if it’s real: Don’t step off that cliff; this battle is scary,” Jeremy Bailenson, the founding director of Stanford’s Virtual Human Interaction Lab, told me. “The brain hasn’t evolved to tell you it’s not real.”
500

What textual evidence from “This Virtual Lab Will Revolutionize Science Class” supports the inference that virtual simulation can prompt young students to realize their potential?

This Virtual Lab Will Revolutionize Science Class

  • And who, exactly, is going to help us solve all of these great challenges? Well, to a very last degree, it is these young students. This is the next generation of young, bright scientists. And in many ways, we all rely on them for coming up with new, great innovations to help us solve all these challenges ahead of us.
  • And what they did is split the students into two groups. One group would only use the virtual laboratory simulations, the other group would only use traditional teaching methods, and they had the same amount of time. Then, interestingly, they gave the students a test before and after the experiment, so they could clearly measure the learning impact of the students.
  • Now, imagine if we could bring Ivy League, million-dollar virtual laboratories out to all these students just like Jack, all over the world, and give them the latest, greatest, most fancy machines you can imagine that would quite literally make any scientist in here jump up and down out of pure excitement. And then imagine how that would empower and inspire a whole new generation of young and bright scientists, ready to innovate and change the world.
  • And what I just did is literally shrunk myself a million times into the size of a molecule—and it really feels like it, you have to try this. So now it feels like I’m standing inside the machine and I’m seeing all the DNA, and I see the molecules. I see the polymerase and the enzymes and so forth. And I can see how in this case, DNA is being replicated millions of times, just like it’s happening inside your body right now. And I can really feel and understand how all of this works.
  • Now, imagine if we could bring Ivy League, million-dollar virtual laboratories out to all these students just like Jack, all over the world, and give them the latest, greatest, most fancy machines you can imagine that would quite literally make any scientist in here jump up and down out of pure excitement. And then imagine how that would empower and inspire a whole new generation of young and bright scientists, ready to innovate and change the world.
500

Which excerpt from “Virtual Reality Gets Real” provides the best evidence for the claim that virtual reality faces pitfalls?

Virtual Reality Gets Real

  • Virtual reality has advanced rapidly in the past couple of years—the much-anticipated Oculus Rift headset is expected to arrive in stores in early 2016, followed closely by several other devices. Yet the technology is still very new, and Sutherland’s vision seems little closer to, well, actual reality.
  • Of course, there could be unintended consequences. Already people are developing vision problems and vitamin‑D deficiencies—not to mention obesity and diabetes—because they spend too much time in front of screens.
  • Virtual reality could then become akin to the Singularity, a concept described by Ray Kurzweil, a futurist and Google engineer, among others: a way for our minds to separate from our bodies and, uploaded into a digital realm, live on even as our physical selves grow old and die.
  • “We have a reptilian instinct that responds as if it’s real: Don’t step off that cliff; this battle is scary,” Jeremy Bailenson, the founding director of Stanford’s Virtual Human Interaction Lab, told me. “The brain hasn’t evolved to tell you it’s not real.”
  • Of course, there could be unintended consequences. Already people are developing vision problems and vitamin‑D deficiencies—not to mention obesity and diabetes—because they spend too much time in front of screens.
500

And yet almost any organized action can help you recover the ability to think clearly and aid in your survival. For example, Pvt. Giles McCoy was aboard the U.S.S. Indianapolis when it was torpedoed and sank at the end of World War II, tossing some 900 men into the black of night and the shark-infested Pacific. McCoy, a young Marine, was sucked under the boat and nearly drowned. He surfaced into a two-inch-thick slick of fuel oil, which soaked his life vest and kept him from swimming—although he could see a life raft, he couldn’t reach it. So he tore off his vest and swam underwater, surfacing now and then, gasping, swallowing oil, and vomiting. After getting hoisted onto the raft, he saw a group of miserable young sailors covered in oil and retching. One was “so badly burned that the skin was stripped from his arms,” Doug Stanton writes in his gripping account of the event, In Harm’s Way. McCoy’s response to this horrific situation was telling. “He resolved to take action: He would clean his pistol.” Irrelevant as that task may sound, it was exactly the right thing to do: organized, directed action. He made each one of the sailors hold a piece of the pistol as he disassembled it. This began the process of letting him think clearly. Forcing your brain to think sequentially—in times of crisis and in day-to-day life—can quiet dangerous emotions.

What kinds of evidence are used in the excerpt, and how does this evidence support the excerpt’s point?

(Select all that apply.)

Everyday Survival

  • A quotation from an expert establishes a credible source for the story of one individual surviving a horrific situation by committing to organized action.
  • A definition of sequential thinking explains how one individual survived a horrific situation by committing to organized action.
  • Data and statistics show how one individual survived a horrific situation by committing to organized action.
  • An example demonstrates a detailed account of how one individual survived a horrific situation by committing to organized action.
  • A quotation from an expert establishes a credible source for the story of one individual surviving a horrific situation by committing to organized action.
  • A quotation from an expert establishes a credible source for the story of one individual surviving a horrific situation by committing to organized action.
500

Examine the way you handle yourself under pressure: Do you blow up when you’re stuck in traffic or when someone cuts you off? Are you able to accept failure philosophically and move on with resolve to do better next time? If you’re rejected—in love, in business, in sports—do you stew over it? Practice being calm in the face of small emergencies and you’ll be more prepared to deal with large ones.

Which options correctly describe how the author uses rhetoric in the excerpt to influence the audience?

(Select all that apply.)

Everyday Survival



  • By using the commands “Examine” and “Practice,” the author makes himself sound like an authority.
  • By avoiding the pronoun “we,” the author puts himself above the audience as if he were superior to them.
  • By providing realistic, everyday examples, the author helps his readers see the relevance of his topic.
  • By addressing the reader using the pronoun “you,” the author creates an inclusive tone that helps the audience feel more closely connected to the text.
  • By providing realistic, everyday examples, the author helps his readers see the relevance of his topic.
  • By addressing the reader using the pronoun “you,” the author creates an inclusive tone that helps the audience feel more closely connected to the text.
500

In 1965, Ivan Sutherland, a computer-graphics pioneer, addressed an international meeting of techies on the subject of virtual reality. The ultimate virtual-reality display, he told the audience, would be “a room within which the computer can control the existence of matter. A chair displayed in such a room would be good enough to sit in. Handcuffs displayed in such a room would be confining, and a bullet displayed in such a room would be fatal. With appropriate programming, such a display could literally be the Wonderland into which Alice walked.”

Based on this paragraph, which option best outlines a discomforting aspect of virtual reality?

Virtual Reality Gets Real

  • It is uncertain why a simulated reality would be beneficial to anyone but a thrill seeker.
  • It is unknown why a simulated reality would be essential to anyone but a game designer.
  • It is inevitable that a simulated reality scenario would cause people to question their physical realities.
  • It is unknown how people might react psychologically to a simulated reality that would appear to be real and scary.
  • It is unknown how people might react psychologically to a simulated reality that would appear to be real and scary.
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