Reading comp PrepTest 115 · Section 1 · Question 6
Passage
Passage walkthrough
Topic: Legal Studies
Paragraph 1
- Paragraph note
- Legal scholars' conclusion (cases before Brown necessary to Marshall's success in Brown)
- Views, minor Meta-Structures, and the author's attitude
- Legal scholars' view:
- Marshall's cases in the sixteen years before Brown v. Board of Education were necessary, as they allowed Marshall to test legal strategies and erode the discriminatory foundation of segregation (last sentence)
- Author's attitude: "landmark" (first sentence)
- Legal scholars' view:
Paragraph 2
- Paragraph note
- Marshall's hybrid approach (show facilities not equal first, then show SBE is legally unsound)
- Views, minor Meta-Structures, and the author's attitude
- List of approaches in the NAACP:
- The "practical approach" toward overturning SBE, focused on showing that the facilities weren't equal and improving opportunities/facilities for African Americans (second sentence)
- The "theoretical approach" toward overturning SBE, focused on arguing that SBE is self-contradictory and legally unsound (third sentence)
- Marshall's hybrid approach toward overturning SBE, which used the "practical approach" first and the "theoretical approach" to finally overturn SBE (last sentence)
- Author's attitude: "more theoretical" (third sentence); "correctly believed" (last sentence)
- List of approaches in the NAACP:
Paragraph 3
- Paragraph note
- Support for legal scholars (early cases like Shelley contributed to success in Brown)
- Views, minor Meta-Structures, and the author's attitude
- Examples of Marshall's successes using the "practical approach":
- Voting practices, grad students cases (first sentence)
- Cause-and-effect relationship:
- Early cases allowed Marshall to create a strategy that caused him to be able to make a broader social argument to overturn SBE (first sentence)
- Example of an early case that prepared the court to overturn SBE, according to legal scholars:
- Shelley v. Kraemer, which prepared courts to accept sociological data in Brown (second through last sentences)
- Author's attitude: "several successes" (first sentence)
- Examples of Marshall's successes using the "practical approach":
Main Point: Legal scholars claim that Thurgood Marshall's early cases before the Supreme Court were necessary for Marshall to develop a successful legal argument in Brown v. Board of Education.
Meta-Structure?Reporting a Viewpoint: This passage uses the "Reporting a Viewpoint" Meta-Structure*, as the author simply outlines another group's view without offering any commentary, support, or criticism. When a passage uses this structure, the main point is simply the viewpoint the author recounts. In this passage, that view is the legal scholars': that Marshall needed early cases in front of the Supreme Court to test out his argumentative strategies, erode some of the discriminatory foundations of the "separate but equal" doctrine, and prepare the court to hear his successful argument in Brown v. Board of Education.
*That said, you don't need Thurgood Marshall's gifts of persuasion to convincingly argue that this passage uses a different Meta-Structure. You could call this a Problem/Solution (problem: the separate-but-equal doctrine; solution: Marshall's approach), Innovative [Subject] (focusing on Marshall's innovations), or even a Generalization/Example passage (with Shelley illustrating how Marshall used early cases to prepare the court to overturn the separate-but-equal doctrine).
Examples: There's a key example discussed at length in the third paragraph: the Shelley v. Kraemer case (P3, S2-4). Given the length at which the example was discussed and the importance of that example in supporting the legal scholars' main point, we should certainly anticipate getting at least one question about it. We should, therefore, have the example highlighted or noted on our scratch paper and understand what the example was (a case in which Marshall used sociological data to get the court to rule against the practice of private housing discrimination) and the broader point it illustrates (these early cases allowed Marshall to test out arguments and prepare the courts to hear certain arguments, and were thus necessary to Marshall's success in Brown).
Lists: Three items in a list are discussed throughout the second paragraph. We'll likely get at least one question about at least one of the items, so it's important to understand each item on the list and its location. We can track this by highlighting or noting each item on our scratch paper.
Last Thoughts?There's very little authorial voice in this passage. The author never supports or questions the legal scholars' view. There are no strong adjectives or adverbs that betray the author's beliefs. The closest phrases we get to typical tonal phrases ("landmark" (P1, S1), "more theoretical" (P2, S3), "correctly believed" (P2, S4)) convey facts more than opinions. Therefore, we should not anticipate getting any questions about the author's attitude. Instead, we'll likely get questions about the legal scholars' view, the passage's structure, and the supporting details (including at least one question about Shelley, an important example the legal scholars cite and that the author dedicates a large part of the passage to).
Question prompt
Why the credited answer is right
Credited answer: C
The notes below walk through why it fits the stem and how to eliminate the rest.
Question Type
Strategy Overview
Answer Anticipation
Answer choices
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A"Broader Social Patterns: Theoretical Remaining source text redacted.
Why choice A is not credited
(A) Does this title convey the same ideas as our anticipated main point?
No, this answer choice does not reflect the main point. The main point is focused on the development of only one theoretical argument the Supreme Court heard, not about all the theoretical arguments the Court heard from 1946-1952. And, to nitpick, the time frame this passage discusses is the 16 years prior to 1952, so the dates should be 1936-1952.
Some test takers are enticed by this answer choice because the passage states Marshall made many arguments to the Supreme Court during these years, but it's important to remember that (1) many of those arguments were practical, not theoretical, in nature (P3, S1), and (2) this answer choice omits why those cases were discussed at all — to show how they helped Marshall build one successful legal argument in Brown.
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B"Thurgood Marshall: The Growth Remaining source text redacted.
Why choice B is not credited
(B) Does this title convey the same ideas as our anticipated main point?
Not quite. This answer choice ignores a very important part of the main point: that Marshall's early cases prepared him and the courts for Brown v. Board of Education. The passage is less about the development of Thurgood Marshall's career, as this answer choice suggests, and more about the development of one of his successful legal arguments.
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C"Toward Change: The Development Remaining source text redacted.
Why choice C matches the stem
(C) Does this title convey the same ideas as our anticipated main point?
Yes! This answer choice best encapsulates the main point of the passage. The scholars concluded that Marshall needed the cases he argued in the 16 years before Brown in 1952 to develop the legal argument made in Brown. This answer choice accurately reflects that time frame ("1936-1952") and argument by including "Development of Thurgood Marshall's Argument against 'Separate but Equal.'" And "Toward Change" conveys how Marshall changed his approach (P3, S1), how the Court changed and became more receptive to his argument in Brown (P3, S3-S4), and how Marshall's argument changed public schools (P1, S1). Since the answer choice hits the mark so accurately, we can justifiably select it and advance straight to the next question.
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D"Separate but Not Equal: Remaining source text redacted.
Why choice D is not credited
(D) Does this title convey the same ideas as our anticipated main point?
No. This passage is all about what came before Brown v. Board of Education, not what happened after Brown v. Board of Education, as this title suggests.
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E"Conflict and Compromise: Early Remaining source text redacted.
Why choice E is not credited
(E) Does this title convey the same ideas as our anticipated main point?
Nope. This would be a good title for paragraph two of this passage, but this passage's main point reflects much more than what was discussed in paragraph two. In fact, paragraph two discussed the "Early Divisions in the NAACP's Attack on School Segregation" just to provide background information and context to the approach Marshall developed and implemented over the 16 years prior to Brown.
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Discussion
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Question (J) 2 replies
Started by hassay18
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why is a wrong? 1 reply
Started by help
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Explain 1 reply
Started by RayJ